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+Project Gutenberg's George Washington, Vol. II, by Henry Cabot Lodge
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: George Washington, Vol. II
+
+Author: Henry Cabot Lodge
+
+Release Date: June 19, 2004 [EBook #12653]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK GEORGE WASHINGTON, VOL. II ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Juliet Sutherland, Tim Koeller and PG Distributed
+Proofreaders
+
+
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: MARTHA WASHINGTON]
+
+American Statesmen
+
+STANDARD LIBRARY EDITION
+
+
+[Illustration: Mount Vernon]
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+GEORGE WASHINGTON
+
+ BY
+
+HENRY CABOT LODGE
+
+ IN TWO VOLUMES
+ VOL. II.
+
+ 1899
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+CHAPTER.
+
+ I. WORKING FOR UNION
+ II. STARTING THE GOVERNMENT
+ III. DOMESTIC AFFAIRS
+ IV. FOREIGN RELATIONS
+ V. WASHINGTON AS A PARTY MAN
+ VI. THE LAST YEARS
+ VII. GEORGE WASHINGTON
+
+ INDEX
+
+
+
+
+ILLUSTRATIONS
+
+
+MARTHA WASHINGTON
+
+From the painting by Gilbert Stuart in the Museum of Fine Arts,
+Boston. This painting is owned by the Boston Athenĉum and is known as
+the Athenĉum portrait.
+
+Autograph from letter written from Valley Forge, March 7, 1778, now in
+the possession of Hon. Winslow Warren.
+
+
+The vignette of Mount Vernon is from a photograph.
+
+
+WASHINGTON RESIGNING HIS COMMISSION AT ANNAPOLIS
+
+From the original painting by Trumbull in the Art Gallery of Yale
+University.
+
+
+LAFAYETTE
+
+From a contemporary French folio engraving in the Emmet collection,
+New York Public Library, Lenox Building.
+
+
+HENRY KNOX
+
+From the original portrait by Gilbert Stuart in the Museum of Fine
+Arts, Boston.
+
+Autograph from Winsor's "America."
+
+
+NATHANAEL GREENE
+
+From the original painting by C.W. Peale, by kind permission of its
+present owner, Mrs. Wm. Brenton Greene, Jr., Princeton, N.J.
+
+Autograph from Winsor's "America."
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+GEORGE WASHINGTON
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+WORKING FOR UNION
+
+
+Having resigned his commission, Washington stood not upon the order of
+his going, but went at once to Virginia, and reached Mount Vernon the
+next day, in season to enjoy the Christmas-tide at home. It was with
+a deep sigh of relief that he sat himself down again by his own
+fireside, for all through the war the one longing that never left his
+mind was for the banks of the Potomac. He loved home after the fashion
+of his race, but with more than common intensity, and the country life
+was dear to him in all its phases. He liked its quiet occupations and
+wholesome sports, and, like most strong and simple natures, he loved
+above all an open-air existence. He felt that he had earned his rest,
+with all the temperate pleasures and employments which came with it,
+and he fondly believed that he was about to renew the habits which he
+had abandoned for eight weary years. Four days after his return he
+wrote to Governor Clinton: "The scene is at last closed. I feel myself
+eased of a load of public care. I hope to spend the remainder of my
+days in cultivating the affections of good men and in the practice of
+the domestic virtues." That the hope was sincere we may well suppose,
+but that it was more than a hope may be doubted. It was a wish, not a
+belief, for Washington must have felt that there was still work which
+he would surely be called to do. Still for the present the old life
+was there, and he threw himself into it with eager zest, though age
+and care put some of the former habits aside. He resumed his hunting,
+and Lafayette sent him a pack of splendid French wolf-hounds. But they
+proved somewhat fierce and unmanageable, and were given up, and after
+that the following of the hounds was never resumed. In other respects
+there was little change. The work of the plantation and the affairs of
+the estate, much disordered by his absence, once more took shape and
+moved on successfully under the owner's eye. There were, as of old,
+the long days in the saddle, the open house and generous hospitality,
+the quiet evenings, and the thousand and one simple labors and
+enjoyments of rural life. But with all this were the newer and deeper
+cares, born of the change which had been wrought in the destiny of the
+country. The past broke in and could not be pushed aside, the future
+knocked at the door and demanded an answer to its questionings.
+
+He had left home a distinguished Virginian; he returned one of the
+most famous men in the world, and such celebrity brought its usual
+penalties. Every foreigner of any position who came to the country
+made a pilgrimage to Mount Vernon, and many Americans did the same.
+Their coming was not allowed to alter the mode of life, but they were
+all hospitably received, and they consumed many hours of their host's
+precious time. Then there were the artists and sculptors, who came
+to paint his portrait or model his bust. "_In for a penny, in for
+a pound_ is an old adage," he wrote to Hopkinson in 1785. "I am so
+hackneyed to the touches of painters' pencils that I am now altogether
+at their beck, and sit 'like patience on a monument,' whilst they are
+delineating the lines of my face. It is a proof, among many others, of
+what habit and custom can accomplish." Then there were the people who
+desired to write his memoirs, and the historians who wished to have
+his reminiscences, in their accounts of the Revolution. Some of these
+inquiring and admiring souls came in person, while others assailed him
+by letter and added to the vast flood of correspondence which poured
+in upon him by every post. His correspondence, in fact, in the
+needless part of it, was the most formidable waste of his time. He
+seems to have formed no correct idea of his own fame and what it
+meant, for he did not have a secretary until he found not only that he
+could not arrange his immense mass of papers, but that he could not
+even keep up with his daily letters. His correspondence came from all
+parts of his own country, and of Europe as well. The French officers
+who had been his companions in arms wrote him with affectionate
+interest, and he was urged by them, one and all, and even by the king
+and queen, to visit France. These were letters which he was only too
+happy to answer, and he would fain have crossed the water in response
+to their kindly invitation; but he professed himself too old, which
+was a mere excuse, and objected his ignorance of the language, which
+to a man of his temperament was a real obstacle. Besides these letters
+of friendship, there were the schemers everywhere who sought his
+counsel and assistance. The notorious Lady Huntington, for example,
+pursued him with her project of Christianizing the Indians by means of
+a missionary colony in our western region, and her persistent ladyship
+cost him a good deal of time and thought, and some long and careful
+letters. Then there was the inventor Kumsey, with his steamboat, to
+which he gave careful attention, as he did to everything that seemed
+to have merit. Another class of correspondents were his officers, who
+wanted his aid with Congress and in a thousand other ways, and to
+these old comrades he never turned a deaf ear. In this connection also
+came the affairs of the Society of the Cincinnati. He took an active
+part in the formation of the society, became its head, steered it
+through its early difficulties, and finally saved it from the wreck
+with which it was threatened by unreasoning popular prejudice. All
+these things were successfully managed, but at much expense of time
+and thought.
+
+[Illustration: WASHINGTON RESIGNING HIS COMMISSION AT ANNAPOLIS]
+
+Then again, apart from this mass of labor thrust upon him by
+outsiders, there were his own concerns. His personal affairs required
+looking after, and he regulated accounts, an elaborate business always
+with him, put his farms in order, corresponded with his merchants
+in England, and introduced agricultural improvements, which always
+interested him deeply. He had large investments in land, of which from
+boyhood he had been a bold and sagacious purchaser. These investments
+had been neglected and needed his personal inspection; so in
+September, 1784, he mounted his horse, and with a companion and a
+servant rode away to the western country to look after his property.
+He camped out, as in the early days, and heartily enjoyed it, although
+reports that the Indians were moving in a restless and menacing manner
+shortened his trip, and prevented his penetrating beyond his settled
+lands to the wild tracts which he owned to the westward. Still he
+managed to ride some six hundred and eighty miles and get a good taste
+of that wild life which he never ceased to love, besides gathering a
+stock of information on many points of deeper and wider interest than
+his own property.
+
+In the midst of all these employments, too, he attended closely to his
+domestic duties. At frequent intervals he journeyed to Fredericksburg
+to visit his mother, who still lived, and to whom he was always a
+dutiful and affectionate son. He watched over Mrs. Washington's
+grandchildren, and two or three nephews of his own, whose education
+he had undertaken, with all the solicitude of a father, and at the
+expense again of much thought and many wise letters of instruction and
+advice.
+
+Even from this brief list it is possible to gain some idea of the
+occupations which filled Washington's time, and the only wonder is
+that he dealt with them so easily and effectively. Yet the greatest
+and most important work, that which most deeply absorbed his mind, and
+which affected the whole country, still remains to be described. With
+all his longing for repose and privacy, Washington could not separate
+himself from the great problems which he had solved, or from the
+solution of the still greater problems which he had done more than any
+man to bring into existence. In reality, despite his reiterated wish
+for the quiet of home, he never ceased to labor at the new questions
+which confronted the country, and the old issues which were the legacy
+of the Revolution.
+
+In the latter class was the peace establishment, on which he advised
+Congress, much in vain; for their idea of a peace establishment was
+to get rid of the army as rapidly as possible, and retain only a
+corporal's guard in the service of the confederation. Another question
+was that concerning the western posts. As has been already pointed
+out, Washington's keen eye had at once detected that this was the
+perilous point in the treaty, and he made a prompt but unavailing
+effort to secure these posts in the first flush of good feeling when
+peace had just been made. After he had retired he observed with regret
+the feebleness of Congress in this matter, and he continued to write
+about it. He wrote especially to Knox, who was in charge of the war
+department, and advised him to establish posts on our side, since we
+could not obtain the withdrawal of the British. This deep anxiety as
+to the western posts was due not merely to his profound distrust of
+the intention of England, but to his extreme solicitude as to the
+unsettled regions of the West. He repeatedly referred to the United
+States, even before the close of the war, as an infant empire, and he
+saw before any one else the destined growth of the country.
+
+No man of that time, with the exception of Hamilton, ever grasped and
+realized as he did the imperial future which stretched before the
+United States. It was a difficult thing for men who had been born
+colonists to rise to a sense of national opportunities, but Washington
+passed at a single step from being a Virginian to being an American,
+and in so doing he stood alone. He was really and thoroughly national
+from the beginning of the war, at a time when, except for a few
+oratorical phrases, no one had ever thought of such a thing as a
+practical and living question. In the same way he had passed rapidly
+to an accurate conception of the probable growth and greatness of
+the country, and again he stood alone. Hamilton, born outside the
+colonies, unhampered by local prejudices and attachments, and living
+in Washington's family, as soon as he turned his mind to the subject,
+became, like his chief, entirely national and imperial in his views;
+but the other American statesmen of that day, with the exception
+of Franklin, only followed gradually and sometimes reluctantly in
+adopting their opinions. Some of them never adopted them at all, but
+remained imbedded in local ideas, and very few got beyond the region
+of words and actually grasped the facts with the absolutely clear
+perception which Washington had from the outset. Thus it was that when
+the war closed, one of the two ruling ideas in Washington's mind was
+to assure the future which he saw opening before the country. He
+perceived at a glance that the key and the guarantee of that future
+were in the wild regions of the West. Hence his constant anxiety as to
+the western posts, as to our Indian policy, and as to the maintenance
+of a sufficient armed force upon our borders to check the aggressions
+of Englishmen or of savages, and to secure free scope for settlement.
+In advancing these ideas on a national scale, however, he was rendered
+helpless by the utter weakness of Congress, which even his influence
+was powerless to overcome. He therefore began, immediately after his
+retreat to private life, to formulate and bring into existence such
+practical measures as were possible for the development of the West,
+believing that if Congress could not act, the people would, if any
+opportunity were given to their natural enterprise.
+
+The scheme which he proposed was to open the western country by means
+of inland navigation. The thought had long been in his mind. It had
+come to him before the Revolution, and can be traced back to the early
+days when he was making surveys, buying wild lands, and meditating
+very deeply, but very practically, on the possible commercial
+development of the colonies. Now the idea assumed much larger
+proportions and a much graver aspect. He perceived in it the first
+step toward the empire which he foresaw, and when he had laid down
+his sword and awoke in the peaceful morning at Mount Vernon, "with
+a strange sense of freedom from official cares," he directed his
+attention at once to this plan, in which he really could do something,
+despite an inert Congress and a dissolving confederation. His first
+letter on the subject was written in March, 1784, and addressed
+to Jefferson, who was then in Congress, and who sympathized with
+Washington's views without seeing how far they reached. He told
+Jefferson how he despaired of government aid, and how he therefore
+intended to revive the scheme of a company, which he had started in
+1775, and which had been abandoned on account of the war. He showed
+the varying interests which it was necessary to conciliate, asked
+Jefferson to see the governor of Maryland, so that that State might
+be brought into the undertaking, and referred to the danger of being
+anticipated and beaten by New York, a chord of local pride which he
+continued to touch most adroitly as the business proceeded. Very
+characteristically, too, he took pains to call attention to the fact
+that by his ownership of land he had a personal interest in the
+enterprise. He looked far beyond his own lands, but he was glad to
+have his property developed, and with his usual freedom from anything
+like pretense, he drew attention to the fact of his personal
+interests.
+
+On his return from his tour in the autumn, he proceeded to bring
+the matter to public attention and to the consideration of the
+legislature. With this end in view he addressed a long letter to
+Governor Harrison, in which he laid out his whole scheme. Detroit was
+to be the objective point, and he indicated the different routes by
+which inland navigation could thence be obtained, thus opening the
+Indian trade, and affording an outlet at the same time for the
+settlers who were sure to pour in when once the fear of British
+aggression was removed. He dwelt strongly upon the danger of Virginia
+losing these advantages by the action of other States, and yet at the
+same time he suggested the methods by which Maryland and Pennsylvania
+could be brought into the plan. Then he advanced a series of arguments
+which were purely national in their scope. He insisted on the
+necessity of binding to the old colonies by strong ties the Western
+States, which might easily be decoyed away if Spain or England had the
+sense to do it. This point he argued with great force, for it was now
+no longer a Virginian argument, but an argument for all the States.
+
+The practical result was that the legislature took the question up,
+more in deference to the writer's wishes and in gratitude for his
+services, than from any comprehension of what the scheme meant. The
+companies were duly organized, and the promoter was given a hundred
+and fifty shares, on the ground that the legislature wished to take
+every opportunity of testifying their sense of "the unexampled merits
+of George Washington towards his country." Washington was much touched
+and not a little troubled by this action. He had been willing, as he
+said, to give up his cherished privacy and repose in order to forward
+the enterprise. He had gone to Maryland even, and worked to engage
+that State in the scheme, but he could not bear the idea of taking
+money for what he regarded as part of a great public policy. "I would
+wish," he said, "that every individual who may hear that it was a
+favorite plan of mine may know also that I had no other motive for
+promoting it than the advantage of which I conceived it would be
+productive to the Union, and to this State in particular, by cementing
+the eastern and western territory together, at the same time that it
+will give vigor and increase to our commerce, and be a convenience to
+our citizens."
+
+"How would this matter be viewed, then, by the eye of the world, and
+what would be the opinion of it, when it comes to be related that
+George Washington has received twenty thousand dollars and five
+thousand pounds sterling of the public money as an interest therein?"
+He thought it would make him look like a "pensioner or dependent"
+to accept this gratuity, and he recoiled from the idea. There is
+something entirely frank and human in the way in which he says "George
+Washington," instead of using the first pronoun singular. He always
+saw facts as they were; he understood the fact called "George
+Washington" as perfectly as any other, and although he wanted
+retirement and privacy, he had no mock modesty in estimating his own
+place in the world. At the same time, while he wished to be rid of the
+kindly gift, he shrank from putting on what he called the appearance
+of "ostentatious disinterestedness" by refusing it. Finally he took
+the stock and endowed two charity schools with the dividends. The
+scheme turned out successfully, and the work still endures, like the
+early surveys and various other things of a very different kind to
+which Washington put his hand. In the greater forces which were
+presently set in motion for the preservation of the future empire,
+the inland navigation, started in Virginia, dropped out of sight, and
+became merely one of the rills which fed the mighty river. But it was
+the only really practical movement possible at the precise moment when
+it was begun, and it was characteristic of its author, who always
+found, even in the most discouraging conditions, something that could
+be done. It might be only a very little something, but still that was
+better than nothing to the strong man ever dealing with facts as they
+actually were on this confused earth, and not turning aside because
+things were not as they ought to be. Thus many a battle and campaign
+had been saved, and so inland navigation played its part now. It
+helped, among other things, to bring Maryland and Virginia together,
+and their combination was the first step toward the Constitution of
+the United States. There is nothing fanciful in all this. No one would
+pretend that the Constitution of the United States was descended from
+Washington's James River and Potomac River companies. But he worked at
+them with that end in view, and so did what was nearest to his hand
+and most practical toward union, empire, and the development of
+national sentiment.
+
+Ah, says some critic in critic's fashion, you are carried away by your
+subject; you see in a simple business enterprise, intended merely to
+open western lands, the far-reaching ideas of a statesman. Perhaps
+our critic is right, for as one goes on living with this Virginian
+soldier, studying his letters and his thoughts, one comes to believe
+many things of him, and to detect much meaning in his sayings and
+doings. Let us, however, show our evidence at least. Here is what he
+wrote to his friend Humphreys a year after his scheme was afoot: "My
+attention is more immediately engaged in a project which I think big
+with great political as well as commercial consequences to the
+States, especially the middle ones;" and then he went on to argue the
+necessity of fastening the Western States to the Atlantic seaboard
+and thus thwarting Spain and England. This looks like more than a
+money-making scheme; in fact, it justifies all that has been said,
+especially if read in connection with certain other letters of this
+period. Great political results, as well as lumber and peltry, were
+what Washington intended to float along his rivers and canals.
+
+In this same letter to Humphreys he touched also on another point
+in connection with the development of the West, which was of vast
+importance to the future of the country, and was even then agitating
+men's minds. He said: "I may be singular in my ideas, but they are
+these: that, to open a door to, and make easy the way for those
+settlers to the westward (who ought to advance regularly and
+compactly), before we make any stir about the navigation of the
+Mississippi, and before our settlements are far advanced towards that
+river, would be our true line of policy." Again he wrote: "However
+singular the opinion may be, I cannot divest myself of it, that the
+navigation of the Mississippi, _at this time_ [1785], ought to be no
+object with us. On the contrary, until we have a little time allowed
+to open and make easy the ways between the Atlantic States and the
+western territory, the obstructions had better remain." He was right
+in describing himself as "singular" in his views on this matter, which
+just then was exciting much attention.
+
+At that time indeed much feeling existed, and there were many sharp
+divisions about the Mississippi question. One party, for the sake of a
+commercial treaty with Spain, and to get a troublesome business out of
+the way, was ready to give up our claims to a free navigation of
+the great river; and this was probably the prevalent sentiment in
+Congress, for to most of the members the Mississippi seemed a very
+remote affair indeed. On the other side was a smaller and more violent
+party, which was for obtaining the free navigation immediately and
+at all hazards, and was furious at the proposition to make such a
+sacrifice as its opponents proposed. Finally, there was Spain herself
+intriguing to get possession of the West, holding out free navigation
+as a bait to the settlers of Kentucky, and keeping paid agents in that
+region to foster her schemes. Washington saw too far and too
+clearly to think for one moment of giving up the navigation of the
+Mississippi, but he also perceived what no one else seems to have
+thought of, that free navigation at that moment would give the western
+settlements "the habit of trade" with New Orleans before they had
+formed it with the Atlantic seaboard, and would thus detach them from
+the United States. He wished, therefore, to have the Mississippi
+question left open, and all our claims reserved, so that trade by
+the river should be obstructed until we had time to open our inland
+navigation and bind 'the western people to us by ties too strong to
+be broken. The fear that the river would be lost by waiting did not
+disturb him in the least, provided our claims were kept alive. He
+wrote to Lee in June, 1786: "Whenever the new States become so
+populous, and so extended to the westward, as really to need it,
+there will be no power which can deprive them of the use of the
+Mississippi." Again, a year later, while the convention was sitting in
+Philadelphia, he said: "My sentiments with respect to the navigation
+of the Mississippi have been long fixed, and are not dissimilar to
+those which are expressed in your letter. I have ever been of opinion
+that the true policy of the Atlantic States, instead of contending
+prematurely for the free navigation of that river (which eventually,
+and perhaps as soon as it will be our true interest to obtain it, must
+happen), would be to open and improve the natural communications
+with the western country." The event justified his sagacity in all
+respects, for the bickerings went on until the United States were able
+to compel Spain to give what was wanted to the western communities,
+which by that time had been firmly bound to those of the Atlantic
+coast.
+
+Much as Washington thought about holding fast the western country,
+there was yet one idea that overruled it as well as all others. There
+was one plan which he knew would be a quick solution of the dangers
+and difficulties for which inland navigation and trade connections
+were at best but palliatives. He had learned by bitter experience, as
+no other man had learned, the vital need and value of union. He felt
+it as soon as he took command of the army, and it rode like black care
+behind him from Cambridge to Yorktown. He had hoped something from the
+confederation, but he soon saw that it was as worthless as the utter
+lack of system which it replaced, and amounted merely to substituting
+one kind of impotence and confusion for another. Others might be
+deceived by phrases as to nationality and a general government, but
+he had dwelt among hard facts, and he knew that these things did not
+exist. He knew that what passed for them, stood in their place and
+wore their semblance, were merely temporary creations born of the
+common danger, and doomed, when the pressure of war was gone, to fall
+to pieces in imbecility and inertness. To the lack of a proper
+union, which meant to his mind national and energetic government, he
+attributed the failures of the campaigns, the long-drawn miseries, and
+in a word the needless prolongation of the Revolution. He saw, too,
+that what had been so nearly ruinous in war would be absolutely so in
+peace, and before the treaty was actually signed he had begun to call
+attention to the great question on the right settlement of which the
+future of the country depended.
+
+To Hamilton he wrote on March 4, 1783: "It is clearly my opinion,
+unless Congress have powers competent to all general purposes, that
+the distresses we have encountered, the expense we have incurred, and
+the blood we have spilt, will avail us nothing." Again he wrote to
+Hamilton, a few weeks later: "My wish to see the union of these States
+established upon liberal and permanent principles, and inclination
+to contribute my mite in pointing out the defects of the present
+constitution, are equally great. All my private letters have teemed
+with these sentiments, and whenever this topic has been the subject
+of conversation, I have endeavored to diffuse and enforce them." His
+circular letter to the governors of the States at the close of the
+war, which was as eloquent as it was forcible, was devoted to urging
+the necessity of a better central government. "With this conviction,"
+he said, "of the importance of the present crisis, silence in me would
+be a crime. I will therefore speak to your Excellency the language of
+freedom and of sincerity without disguise.... There are four things
+which I humbly conceive are essential to the well-being, I may
+even venture to say, to the existence, of the United States, as an
+independent power:--
+
+"First. An indissoluble union of the States under one federal head.
+
+"Second. A regard to public justice.
+
+"Third. The adoption of a proper peace establishment; and,
+
+"Fourth. The prevalence of that pacific and friendly disposition among
+the people of the United States, which will induce them to forget
+their local prejudices and policies; to make those mutual concessions
+which are requisite to the general prosperity; and in some instances
+to sacrifice their individual advantages to the interest of the
+community." The same appeal went forth again in his last address to
+the army, when he said: "Although the general has so frequently given
+it as his opinion, in the most public and explicit manner, that unless
+the principles of the federal government were properly supported, and
+the powers of the Union increased, the honor, dignity, and justice of
+the nation would be lost forever; yet he cannot help repeating on
+this occasion so interesting a sentiment, and leaving it as his last
+injunction to every soldier, who may view the subject in the same
+serious point of light, to add his best endeavors to those of his
+worthy fellow-citizens towards effecting those great and valuable
+purposes on which our very existence as a nation so materially
+depends."
+
+These two papers were the first strong public appeals for union. The
+letter to the governors argued the question elaborately, and was
+intended for the general public. The address to the army was simply a
+watchword and last general order; for the army needed no arguments to
+prove the crying need of better government. Before this, Hamilton had
+written his famous letters to Duane and Morris, and Madison was
+just beginning to turn his thoughts toward the problem of federal
+government; but with these exceptions Washington stood alone. In
+sending out these two papers he began the real work that led to the
+Constitution. What he said was read and heeded throughout the country,
+for at the close of the war his personal influence was enormous, and
+with the army his utterances were those of an oracle. By his appeal he
+made each officer and soldier a missionary in the cause of the Union,
+and by his arguments to the governors he gave ground and motive for
+a party devoted to procuring better government. Thus he started the
+great movement which, struggling through many obstacles, culminated in
+the Constitution and the union of the States. No other man could
+have done it, for no one but Washington had a tithe of the influence
+necessary to arrest public attention; and, save Hamilton, no other
+man then had even begun to understand the situation which Washington
+grasped so easily and firmly in all its completeness.
+
+He sent out these appeals as his last words to his countrymen at the
+close of their conflict; but he had no intention of stopping there.
+He had written and spoken, as he said, to every one on every occasion
+upon this topic, and he continued to do so until the work was done. He
+had no sooner laid aside the military harness than he began at once to
+push on the cause of union. In the bottom of his heart he must have
+known that his work was but half done, and with the same pen with
+which he reiterated his intention to live in repose and privacy, and
+spend his declining years beneath his own vine and fig-tree, he wrote
+urgent appeals and wove strong arguments addressed to leaders in
+every State. He had not been at home five days before he wrote to the
+younger Trumbull, congratulating him on his father's vigorous message
+in behalf of better federal government, which had not been very well
+received by the Connecticut legislature. He spoke of "the jealousies
+and contracted temper" of the States, but avowed his belief that
+public sentiment was improving. "Everything," he concluded, "my dear
+Trumbull, will come right at last, as we have often prophesied.
+My only fear is that we shall lose a little reputation first." A
+fortnight later he wrote to the governor of Virginia: "That the
+prospect before us is, as you justly observe, fair, none can deny; but
+what use we shall make of it is exceedingly problematical; not but
+that I believe all things will come right at last, but like a young
+heir come a little prematurely to a large inheritance, we shall wanton
+and run riot until we have brought our reputation to the brink of
+ruin, and then like him shall have to labor with the current of
+opinion, when compelled, perhaps, to do what prudence and common
+policy pointed out as plain as any problem in Euclid in the first
+instance." The soundness of the view is only equaled by the accuracy
+of the prediction. He might five years later have repeated this
+sentence, word for word, only altering the tenses, and he would have
+rehearsed exactly the course of events.
+
+While he wrote thus he keenly watched Congress, and marked its sure
+and not very gradual decline. He did what he could to bring about
+useful measures, and saw them one after the other come to naught. He
+urged the impost scheme, and felt that its failure was fatal to the
+financial welfare of the country, on which so much depended. He
+always was striving to do the best with existing conditions, but the
+hopelessness of every effort soon satisfied him that it was a waste of
+time and energy. So he turned again in the midst of his canal schemes
+to renew his exhortations to leading men in the various States on the
+need of union as the only true solution of existing troubles.
+
+To James McHenry, of Maryland, he wrote in August, 1785: "I confess to
+you candidly that I can foresee no evil greater than disunion; than
+those unreasonable jealousies which are continually poisoning our
+minds and filling them with imaginary evils for the prevention of real
+ones." To William Grayson of Virginia, then a member of Congress,
+he wrote at the same time: "I have ever been a friend to adequate
+congressional powers; consequently I wish to see the ninth article of
+the confederation amended and extended. Without these powers we cannot
+support a national character, and must appear contemptible in the eyes
+of Europe. But to you, my dear Sir, I will candidly confess that in
+my opinion it is of little avail to give them to Congress." He was
+already clearly of opinion that the existing system was hopeless, and
+the following spring he wrote still more sharply as to the state of
+public affairs to Henry Lee, in Congress. "My sentiments," he said,
+"with respect to the federal government are well known. Publicly and
+privately have they been communicated without reserve; but my opinion
+is that there is more wickedness than ignorance in the conduct of the
+States, or, in other words, in the conduct of those who have too
+much influence in the government of them; and until the curtain is
+withdrawn, and the private views and selfish principles upon which
+these men act are exposed to public notice, I have little hope of
+amendment without another convulsion."
+
+He did not confine himself, however, to letters, important as the work
+done in this way was, but used all his influence toward practical
+measures outside of Congress, of whose action he quite despaired. The
+plan for a commercial agreement between Maryland and Virginia was
+concerted at Mount Vernon, and led to a call to all the States to
+meet at Annapolis for the same object. This, of course, received
+Washington's hearty approval and encouragement, but he evidently
+regarded it, although important, as merely a preliminary step to
+something wider and better. He wrote to Lafayette describing the
+proposed gathering at Annapolis, and added: "A general convention
+is talked of by many for the purpose of revising and correcting the
+defects of the federal government; but whilst this is the wish of
+some, it is the dread of others, from an opinion that matters are
+not yet sufficiently ripe for such an event." This expressed his own
+feeling, for although he was entirely convinced that only a radical
+reform would do, he questioned whether the time had yet arrived, and
+whether things had become bad enough, to make such a reform either
+possible or lasting. He was chiefly disturbed because he felt that
+there was "more wickedness than ignorance mixed in our councils,"
+and he grew more and more anxious as public affairs declined without
+apparently producing a reaction. The growing contempt shown by foreign
+nations and the arrogant conduct of Great Britain especially alarmed
+him, while the rapid sinking of the national reputation stung him to
+the quick. "I do not conceive," he wrote to Jay, in August, 1786, "we
+can exist long as a nation without having lodged somewhere a power
+which will pervade the whole Union in as energetic a manner as the
+authority of the state governments extends over the several States."
+Thus with unerring judgment he put his finger on the vital point in
+the whole question, which was the need of a national government that
+should deal with the individual citizens of the whole country and
+not with the States. "To be fearful," he continued, "of investing
+Congress, constituted as that body is, with ample authorities for
+national purposes, appears to me the very climax of popular absurdity
+and madness.... Requisitions are actually little better than a jest
+and a byword throughout the land. If you tell the legislatures they
+have violated the treaty of peace, and invaded the prerogatives of the
+confederacy, they will laugh in your face.... It is much to be feared,
+as you observe, that the better kind of people, being disgusted with
+the circumstances, will have their minds prepared for any revolution
+whatever.... I am told that even respectable characters speak of
+a monarchical government without horror. From thinking proceeds
+speaking; thence to acting is often but a single step. But how
+irrevocable and tremendous! What a triumph for our enemies to verify
+their predictions!... It is not my business to embark again upon a sea
+of troubles. Nor could it be expected that my sentiments and opinions
+would have much weight on the minds of my countrymen. They have been
+neglected, though given as a last legacy in the most solemn manner. I
+had then perhaps some claims to public attention. I consider myself as
+having none at present."
+
+It is interesting to observe the ease and certainty with which, in
+dealing with the central question, he grasped all phases of the
+subject and judged of the effect of the existing weakness with regard
+to every relation of the country and to the politics of each State.
+He pointed out again and again the manner in which we were exposed
+to foreign hostility, and analyzed the designs of England, rightly
+detecting a settled policy on her part to injure and divide where she
+had failed to conquer. Others were blind to the meaning of the
+English attitude as to the western posts, commerce, and international
+relations. Washington brought it to the attention of our leading men,
+educating them on this as on other points, and showing, too, the
+stupidity of Great Britain in her attempt to belittle the trade of a
+country which, as he wrote Lafayette in prophetic vein, would one day
+"have weight in the scale of empires."
+
+He followed with the same care the course of events in the several
+States. In them all he resisted the craze for issuing irredeemable
+paper money, writing to his various correspondents, and urging
+energetic opposition to this specious and pernicious form of public
+dishonesty. It was to Massachusetts, however, that his attention was
+most strongly attracted by the social disorders which culminated in
+the Shays rebellion. There the miserable condition of public affairs
+was bearing bitter fruit, and Washington watched the progress of the
+troubles with profound anxiety. He wrote to Lee: "You talk, my
+good sir, of employing influence to appease the present tumults in
+Massachusetts. I know not where that influence is to be found, or,
+if attainable, that it would be a proper remedy for the disorders.
+_Influence_ is not _government_. Let us have a government by which our
+lives, liberties, and properties will be secured, or let us know the
+worst at once." Through "all this mist of intoxication and folly,"
+however, Washington saw that the Shays insurrection would probably be
+the means of frightening the indifferent, and of driving those who
+seemed impervious to every appeal to reason into an active support
+of some better form of government. He rightly thought that riot and
+bloodshed would prove convincing arguments.
+
+In order to understand the utter demoralization of society, politics,
+and public opinion at that time, the offspring of a wasting civil war
+and of colonial habits of thought, it is interesting to contrast the
+attitude of Washington with that of another distinguished American in
+regard to the Shays rebellion. While Washington was looking solemnly
+at this manifestation of weakness and disorder, and was urging strong
+measures with passionate vehemence, Jefferson was writing from Paris
+in the flippant vein of the fashionable French theorists, and uttering
+such ineffable nonsense as the famous sentence about "once in twenty
+years watering the tree of liberty with the blood of tyrants." There
+could be no better illustration of what Washington was than this
+contrast between the man of words and the man of action, between the
+astute leader of a party, the shrewd manager of men, and the silent
+leader of armies, the master builder of states and governments.
+
+I have followed Washington through the correspondence of this time
+with some minuteness, because it is the only way by which his work in
+overcoming the obstacles in the path to good government can be seen.
+He held no public office; he had no means of reaching the popular ear.
+He was neither a professional orator nor a writer of pamphlets, and
+the press of that day, if he had controlled it, had no power to mould
+or direct public thought. Yet, despite these obstacles, he set himself
+to develop public opinion in favor of a better government, and he
+worked at this difficult and impalpable task without ceasing, from
+the day that he resigned from the army until he was called to the
+presidency of the United States. He did it by means of private
+letters, a feeble instrument to-day, but much more effective then.
+Jefferson never made speeches nor published essays, but he built up a
+great party, and carried himself into power as its leader by means
+of letters. In the same fashion Washington started the scheme for
+internal waterways, in order to bind the East and the West together,
+set on foot the policy of commercial agreements between the States,
+and argued on the "imperial theme" with leading men everywhere. A
+study of these letters reveals a strong, logical, and deliberate
+working towards the desired end. There was no scattering fire. Whether
+he was writing of canals, or the Mississippi, or the Western posts,
+or paper money, or the impost, or the local disorders, he always was
+arguing and urging union and an energetic central government. These
+letters went to the leaders of thought and opinion, and were quoted
+and passed from hand to hand. They brought immediately to the cause
+all the soldiers and officers of the army, and they aroused and
+convinced the strongest and ablest men in every State. Washington's
+personal influence was very great, something we of this generation,
+with a vast territory and seventy millions of people, cannot readily
+understand. To many persons his word was law; to all that was best in
+the community, everything he said had immense weight. This influence
+he used with care and without waste. Every blow he struck went home.
+It is impossible to estimate just how much he effected, but it is safe
+to say that it is to Washington, aided first by Hamilton and then
+by Madison, that we owe the development of public opinion and the
+formation of the party which devised and carried the Constitution.
+Events of course worked with them, but they used events, and did not
+suffer the golden opportunities, which without them would have been
+lost, to slip by.
+
+When Washington wrote of the Shays rebellion to Lee, the movement
+toward a better union, which he had begun, was on the brink of
+success. That ill-starred insurrection became, as he foresaw, a
+powerful spur to the policy started at Mount Vernon, and adopted by
+Virginia and Maryland. From this had come the Annapolis convention,
+and thence the call for another convention at Philadelphia. As soon
+as the word went abroad that a general convention was to be held, the
+demand for Washington as a delegate was heard on all sides. At first
+he shrank from it. Despite the work which he had been doing, and which
+he must have known would bring him once more into public service, he
+still clung to the vision of home life which he had brought with him
+from the army. November 18, 1786, he wrote to Madison, that from a
+sense of obligation he should go to the convention, were it not that
+he had declined on account of his retirement, age, and rheumatism to
+be at a meeting of the Cincinnati at the same time and place. But
+no one heeded him, and Virginia elected him unanimously to head
+her delegation at Philadelphia. He wrote to Governor Randolph,
+acknowledging the honor, but reiterating what he had said to Madison,
+and urging the choice of some one else in his place. Still Virginia
+held the question open, and on February 3 he wrote to Knox that his
+private intention was not to attend. The pressure continued, and, as
+usual when the struggle drew near, the love of battle and the sense of
+duty began to reassert themselves. March 8 he again wrote to Knox that
+he had not meant to come, but that the question had occurred to him,
+"Whether my non-attendance in the convention will not be considered
+as dereliction of republicanism; nay, more, whether other motives may
+not, however injuriously, be ascribed for my not exerting myself
+on this occasion in support of it;" and therefore he wished to be
+informed as to the public expectation on the matter. On March 28 he
+wrote again to Randolph that ill-health might prevent his going, and
+therefore it would be well to appoint some one in his place. April 2
+he said that if representation of the States was to be partial, or
+powers cramped, he did not want to be a sharer in the business. "If
+the delegates assemble," he wrote, "with such powers as will enable
+the convention to probe the defects of the constitution to the bottom
+and point out radical cures, it would be an honorable employment;
+otherwise not." This idea of inefficiency and failure in the
+convention had long been present to his mind, and he had already said
+that, if their powers were insufficient, the convention should go
+boldly over and beyond them and make a government with the means of
+coercion, and able to enforce obedience, without which it would be, in
+his opinion, quite worthless. Thus he pondered on the difficulties,
+and held back his acceptance of the post; but when the hour of action
+drew near, the rheumatism and the misgivings alike disappeared before
+the inevitable, and Washington arrived in Philadelphia, punctual as
+usual, on May 13, the day before the opening of the convention.
+
+The other members were by no means equally prompt, and a week elapsed
+before a bare quorum was obtained and the convention enabled to
+organize. In this interval of waiting there appears to have been some
+informal discussion among the members present, between those who
+favored an entirely new Constitution and those who timidly desired
+only half-way measures. On one of these occasions Washington is
+reported by Gouverneur Morris, in a eulogy delivered twelve years
+later, to have said: "It is too probable that no plan we propose will
+be adopted. Perhaps another dreadful conflict is to be sustained. If,
+to please the people, we offer what we ourselves disapprove, how can
+we afterwards defend our work? Let us raise a standard to which the
+wise and honest can repair. The event is in the hand of God." The
+language is no doubt that of Morris, speaking from memory and in a
+highly rhetorical vein, but we may readily believe that the quotation
+accurately embodied Washington's opinion, and that he took this high
+ground at the outset, and strove from the beginning to inculcate upon
+his fellow-members the absolute need of bold and decisive action.
+The words savor of the orator who quoted them, but the noble and
+courageous sentiment which they express is thoroughly characteristic
+of the man to whom they were attributed.[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: It is necessary to say a few words in regard to this
+quotation of Washington's words made by Morris, because both Mr.
+Bancroft (_History of the Constitution_, ii. 8) and Mr. John Fiske
+(_The Critical Period of American History_, p. 232) quote them as if
+they were absolutely and verbally authentic. It is perfectly certain
+that from May 25 to September 17 Washington spoke but once; that
+is, he spoke but once in the convention after it became such by
+organization. This point is determined by Madison's statement (Notes,
+in. 1600), that when Washington took the floor in behalf of Gorham's
+amendment, "it was the only occasion on which the president entered _at
+all_ into the discussions of the convention." (The italics are mine.)
+I have examined the manuscript at the State Department, and these
+words are written in Madison's own hand in the body of the text and
+inclosed in brackets. Madison was the most accurate of men. His notes
+are only abstracts of what was said, but he was never absent from
+the convention, and there can be no question that if Washington had
+uttered the words attributed to him by Morris, a speech so important
+would have been given as fully as possible, and Madison would not have
+said distinctly that the Gorham amendment was the only occasion when
+the president entered into the discussions of the convention.
+
+It is, therefore, certain that Washington said nothing in the
+convention except on the occasion of the Gorham amendment, and Mr.
+Bancroft rightly assigns the Morris quotation to some time during the
+week which elapsed between the date fixed for the assembling of the
+convention and that on which a quorum of States was obtained. The
+words given by Morris, if uttered at all, must have been spoken
+informally in the way of conversation before there was any convention,
+strictly speaking, and of course before Washington was chosen
+president. Mr. Fiske, who devotes a page to these sentences from the
+eulogy, describes Washington as rising from his president's chair and
+addressing the convention with great solemnity. There is no authority
+whatever to show that he rose from the chair to address the other
+delegates, and, if he used the words quoted by Morris, he was
+certainly not president of the convention when he did so. The latter
+blunder, however, is Morris's own, and in making it he contradicts
+himself. These are his words: "He is their president. It is a question
+previous to their first meeting what course shall be pursued." In
+other words, he was their president before they had met and chosen a
+president. This is a fair illustration of the loose and rhetorical
+character of the passage in which Washington's admonition is quoted.
+The entire paragraph, with its mixture of tenses arising from the use
+of the historical present which Morris's classical fancies led him to
+employ, is, in fact, purely rhetorical, and has only the authority
+due to performances of that character. It seems to me impossible,
+therefore, to fairly suppose that the words quoted by Morris were
+anything more than his own presentation of a sentiment which he, no
+doubt, heard Washington urge frequently and forcibly. Even in this
+limited acceptation his account is both interesting and valuable,
+as indicating Washington's opinion and the tone he took with his
+fellow-members; but this, I think, is the utmost weight that can be
+attached to it. I have discussed the point thus minutely because two
+authorities so distinguished as Mr. Bancroft and Mr. Fiske have laid
+so much stress on the words given by Morris, and have seemed to me to
+accord to them a greater weight and a higher authenticity than the
+facts warrant. Morris's eulogy on Washington was delivered in New
+York, and may be found most readily in a little volume entitled
+_Washingtoniana_ (p. 110), published at Lancaster in 1802.]
+
+When a quorum was finally obtained, Washington was unanimously chosen
+to preside over the convention; and there he sat during the sessions
+of four months, silent, patient, except on a single occasion,[1]
+taking no part in debate, but guiding the business, and using all his
+powers with steady persistence to compass the great end. The debates
+of that remarkable body have been preserved in outline in the full and
+careful notes of Madison. Its history has been elaborately written,
+and the arguments and opinions of its members have been minutely
+examined and unsparingly criticised. We are still ignorant, and shall
+always remain ignorant, of just how much was due to Washington for the
+final completion of the work. His general views and his line of action
+are clearly to be seen in his letters and in the words attributed to
+him by Morris. That he labored day and night for success we know, and
+that his influence with his fellow-members was vast we also know, but
+the rest we can only conjecture. There came a time when everything
+was at a standstill, and when it looked as if no agreement could
+be reached by the men representing so many conflicting interests.
+Hamilton had made his great speech, and, finding the vote of his State
+cast against him by his two colleagues on every question, had gone
+home in a frame of mind which we may easily believe was neither very
+contented nor very sanguine. Even Franklin, most hopeful and buoyant
+of men, was nearly ready to despair. Washington himself wrote to
+Hamilton, on July 10: "When I refer you to the state of the counsels
+which prevailed at the period you left this city, and add that they
+are now, if possible, in a worse train than ever, you will find but
+little ground on which the hope of a good establishment can be formed.
+In a word, I almost despair of seeing a favorable issue to the
+proceedings of our convention, and do therefore repent having had any
+agency in the business." Matters were certainly in a bad state when
+Washington could write in this strain, and when his passion for
+success was so cooled that he repented of agency in the business.
+There was much virtue, however, in that little word "almost." He did
+not quite despair yet, and, after his fashion, he held on with grim
+tenacity. We know what the compromises finally were, and how they were
+brought about, but we can never do exact justice to the iron will
+which held men together when all compromises seemed impossible, and
+which even in the darkest hour would not wholly despair. All that can
+be said is, that without the influence and the labors of Washington
+the convention of 1787, in all probability, would have failed of
+success.
+
+[Footnote 1: Just at the close of the convention, when the
+Constitution in its last draft was in the final stage and on the eve
+of adoption, Mr. Gorham of Massachusetts moved to amend by reducing
+the limit of population in a congressional district from forty to
+thirty thousand. Washington took the floor and argued briefly and
+modestly in favor of the change. His mere request was sufficient, and
+the amendment was unanimously adopted.]
+
+At all events it did not fail, and after much tribulation the work was
+done. On September 17, 1787, a day ever to be memorable, Washington
+affixed his bold and handsome signature to the Constitution of the
+United States. Tradition has it that as he stood by the table, pen in
+hand, he said: "Should the States reject this excellent Constitution,
+the probability is that opportunity will never be offered to cancel
+another in peace; the next will be drawn in blood." Whether the
+tradition is well or ill founded, the sentence has the ring of truth.
+A great work had been accomplished. If it were cast aside, Washington
+knew that the sword and not the pen would make the next Constitution,
+and he regarded that awful alternative with dread. He signed first,
+and was followed by all the members present, with three notable
+exceptions. Then the delegates dined together at the city tavern, and
+took a cordial leave of each other. "After which," the president of
+the convention wrote in his diary, "I returned to my lodgings, did
+some business with, and received the papers from, the secretary of the
+convention, and retired to meditate upon the momentous work which had
+been executed." It is a simple sentence, but how much it means! The
+world would be glad to-day to know what the thoughts were which
+filled Washington's mind as he sat alone in the quiet of that summer
+afternoon, with the new Constitution lying before him. But he was then
+as ever silent. He did not go alone to his room to exhibit himself on
+paper for the admiration of posterity. He went there to meditate for
+his own guidance on what had been done for the benefit of his country.
+The city bells had rung a joyful chime when he arrived four months
+before. Ought they to ring again with a new gladness, or should they
+toll for the death of bright hopes, now the task was done? Washington
+was intensely human. In that hour of silent thought his heart must
+have swelled with a consciousness that he had led his people through
+a successful Revolution, and now again from the darkness of political
+confusion and dissolution to the threshold of a new existence. But at
+the same time he never deceived himself. The new Constitution was but
+an experiment and an opportunity. Would the States accept it? And
+if they accepted it, would they abide by it? Was this instrument of
+government, wrought out so painfully, destined to go to pieces after
+a few years of trial, or was it to prove strong enough to become the
+charter of a nation and hold the States together indissolubly against
+all the shocks of politics and revolution? Washington, with his
+foresight and strong national instinct, plainly saw these momentous
+questions, somewhat dim then, although clear to all the world to-day.
+We can guess how solemnly he thought about them as he meditated alone
+in his room on that September afternoon. Whatever his reflections, his
+conclusions were simple. He made up his mind that the only chance for
+the country lay in the adoption of the new scheme, but he was sober
+enough in his opinions as to the Constitution itself. He said of it to
+Lafayette the day after the signing: "It is the result of four months'
+deliberation. It is now a child of fortune, to be fostered by some and
+buffeted by others. What will be the general opinion or the reception
+of it is not for me to decide; nor shall I say anything for or against
+it. If it be good, I suppose it will work its way; if bad, it will
+recoil on the framers." We catch sight here of the old theory that his
+public life was at an end, and now, when this exceptional duty had
+been performed, that he would retire once more to remote privacy. This
+fancy, as well as the extremely philosophical mood about the fate of
+the Constitution, apparent in this letter, soon disappeared. Within a
+week he wrote to Henry, in whom he probably already suspected the
+most formidable opponent of the new plan in Virginia: "I wish the
+Constitution, which is offered, had been more perfect; but I sincerely
+believe it is the best that could be obtained at this time, and as a
+constitutional door is opened for amendments hereafter, the adoption
+of it under the present circumstances of the Union is, in my opinion,
+desirable." Copies of this letter were sent to Harrison and Nelson,
+and the correspondence thus started soon increased rapidly. He wrote
+to Hamilton and Madison to counsel with them as to the prospects of
+the Constitution, and to Knox to supply him with arguments and
+urge him to energetic work. By January of the new year the tone of
+indifference and doubt manifested in the letter to Lafayette had quite
+gone, and we find him writing to Governor Randolph, in reply to that
+gentleman's objections: "There are some things in the new form, I will
+readily acknowledge, which never did, and I am persuaded never will,
+obtain my cordial approbation, but I did then conceive and do now most
+firmly believe that in the aggregate it is the best Constitution that
+can be obtained at this epoch, and that this or a dissolution of the
+Union awaits our choice, and is the only alternative before us. Thus
+believing, I had not, nor have I now, any hesitation in deciding on
+which to lean."
+
+Thus the few letters to a few friends extended to many letters to many
+friends, and traveled into every State. They all urged the necessity
+of adopting the Constitution as the best that could be obtained. What
+Washington's precise objections to the Constitution were is not clear.
+In a general way it was not energetic enough to come up to his ideal,
+but he never particularized in his criticisms. He may have admitted
+the existence of defects in order simply to disarm opposition, and
+doubtless he, like most of the framers, was by no means completely
+satisfied with his work. But he brushed all faults aside, and drove
+steadily forward to the great end in view. He was as far removed as
+possible from that highly virtuous and very ineffective class of
+persons who will not support anything that is not perfect, and who
+generally contrive to do more harm than all the avowed enemies of
+sound government. Washington did not stop to worry over and argue
+about details, but sought steadily to bring to pass the main object
+at which he aimed. As he had labored for the convention, so he now
+labored for the Constitution, and his letters to his friends not
+only had great weight in forming a Federal party and directing its
+movements, but extracts from them were quoted and published, thus
+exerting a direct and powerful influence on public opinion.
+
+He made himself deeply felt in this way everywhere, but of course more
+in his own State than anywhere else. His confidence at first in regard
+to Virginia changed gradually to an intense and well-grounded anxiety,
+and he not only used every means, as the conflict extended, to
+strengthen his friends and gain votes, but he received and circulated
+personally copies of "The Federalist," in order to educate public
+opinion. The contest in the Virginia convention was for a long time
+doubtful, but finally the end was reached, and the decision was
+favorable. Without Washington's influence, it is safe to say that the
+Constitution would have been lost in Virginia, and without Virginia
+the great experiment would probably have failed. In the same spirit he
+worked on after the new scheme had secured enough States to insure
+a trial. The Constitution had been ratified; it must now be made to
+work, and Washington wrote earnestly to the leaders in the various
+States, urging them to see to it that "Federalists," stanch friends
+of the Constitution, were elected to Congress. There was no vagueness
+about his notions on this point. A party had carried the Constitution
+and secured its ratification, and to that party he wished the
+administration and establishment of the new system to be intrusted.
+He did not take the view that, because the fight was over, it was
+henceforth to be considered that there had been no fight, and that all
+men were politically alike. He was quite ready to do all in his power
+to conciliate the opponents of union and the Constitution, but he did
+not believe that the momentous task of converting the paper system
+into a living organism should be confided to any hands other than
+those of its tried and trusty friends.
+
+But while he was looking so carefully after the choice of the right
+men to fill the legislature of the new government, the people of the
+country turned to him with the universal demand that he should stand
+at the head of it, and fill the great office of first President of the
+Republic. In response to the first suggestion that came, he recognized
+the fact that he was likely to be again called upon for another
+great public service, and added simply that at his age it involved a
+sacrifice which admitted of no compensation. He maintained this tone
+whenever he alluded to the subject, in response to the numerous
+letters urging him to accept. But although he declined to announce any
+decision, he had made up his mind to the inevitable. He had put his
+hand to the plough, and he would not turn back. His only anxiety was
+that the people should know that he shrank from the office, and would
+only leave his farm to take it from a sense of overmastering duty.
+Besides his reluctance to engage in a fresh struggle, and his fear
+that his motives might be misunderstood, he had the same diffidence in
+his own abilities which weighed upon him when he took command of the
+armies. His passion for success, which determined him to accept the
+presidency, if it was deemed indispensable that he should do so, made
+him dread failure with an almost morbid keenness, although his courage
+was too high and his will too strong ever to draw back. Responsibility
+weighed upon his spirits, but it could not daunt him. He wrote to
+Trumbull in December, 1788, that he saw "nothing but clouds and
+darkness before him," but when the hour came he was ready. The
+elections were favorable to the Federalists. The electoral colleges
+gave Washington their unanimous vote, and on April 16, having been
+duly notified by Congress of his election, he left Mount Vernon for
+New York, to assume the conduct of the government, and stand at the
+head of the new Union in its first battle for life.
+
+From the early day when he went out to seek Shirley and win redress
+against the assumptions of British officers, Washington's journeys
+to the North had been memorable in their purposes. He had traveled
+northward to sit in the first continental congress, to take command of
+the army, and to preside over the constitutional convention. Now
+he went, in the fullness of his fame, to enter upon a task less
+dangerous, perhaps, than leading armies, but more beset with
+difficulties, and more perilous to his reputation and peace of mind,
+than any he had yet undertaken. He felt all this keenly, and noted in
+his diary: "About ten o'clock I bade adieu to Mount Vernon, to private
+life, and to domestic felicity; and with a mind oppressed with more
+anxious and painful sensations than I have words to express, set
+out for New York, with the best disposition to render service to my
+country, in obedience to its call, but with less hope of answering its
+expectations."
+
+The first stage of his journey took him only to Alexandria, a few
+miles from his home, where a public dinner was given to him by his
+friends and neighbors. He was deeply moved when he rose to reply to
+the words of affection addressed to him by the mayor as spokesman of
+the people. "All that now remains for me," he said, "is to commit
+myself and you to the care of that beneficent Being who, on a former
+occasion, happily brought us together after a long and distressing
+separation. Perhaps the same gracious Providence will again indulge
+me. But words fail me. Unutterable sensations must then be left to
+more expressive silence, while from an aching heart I bid all my
+affectionate friends and kind neighbors farewell."
+
+So he left his home, sad at the parting, looking steadily, but not
+joyfully, to the future, and silent as was his wont. The simple dinner
+with his friends and neighbors at Alexandria was but the beginning of
+the chorus of praise and Godspeed which rose higher and stronger as he
+advanced. The road, as he traveled, was lined with people, to see him
+and cheer him as he passed. In every village the people from the farm
+and workshop crowded the streets to watch for his carriage, and the
+ringing of bells and firing of guns marked his coming and his going.
+At Baltimore a cavalcade of citizens escorted him, and cannon roared a
+welcome. At the Pennsylvania line Governor Mifflin, with soldiers and
+citizens, gathered to greet him. At Chester he mounted a horse, and
+in the midst of a troop of cavalry rode into Philadelphia, beneath
+triumphal arches, for a day of public rejoicing and festivity. At
+Trenton, instead of snow and darkness, and a sudden onslaught upon
+surprised Hessians, there was mellow sunshine, an arch of triumph,
+and young girls walking before him, strewing flowers in his path, and
+singing songs of praise and gratitude. When he reached Elizabethtown
+Point, the committees of Congress met him, and he there went on board
+a barge manned by thirteen pilots in white uniform, and was rowed to
+the city of New York. A long procession of barges swept after him with
+music and song, while the ships in the harbor, covered with flags,
+fired salutes in his honor. When he reached the landing he declined
+to enter a carriage, but walked to his house, accompanied by Governor
+Clinton. He was dressed in the familiar buff and blue, and, as the
+people caught sight of the stately figure and the beloved colors, hats
+went off and the crowd bowed as he went by, bending like the ripened
+grain when the summer wind passes over it, and breaking forth into
+loud and repeated cheers.
+
+From Mount Vernon to New York it had been one long triumphal march.
+There was no imperial government to lend its power and military
+pageantry. There were no armies, with trophies to dazzle the eyes
+of the beholders; nor were there wealth and luxury to give pomp and
+splendor to the occasion. It was the simple outpouring of popular
+feeling, untaught and true, but full of reverence and gratitude to a
+great man. It was the noble instinct of hero-worship, always keen
+in humanity when the real hero comes to awaken it to life. Such an
+experience, rightly apprehended, would have impressed any man, and it
+affected Washington profoundly. He was deeply moved and touched, but
+he was neither excited nor elated. He took it all with soberness,
+almost with sadness, and when he was alone wrote in his diary:--
+
+"The display of boats which attended and joined us on this occasion,
+some with vocal and some with instrumental music on board; the
+decorations of the ships, the roar of cannon and the loud acclamations
+of the people, which rent the skies as I passed along the wharves,
+filled my mind with sensations as painful (considering the reverse of
+this scene, which may be the case after all my labors to do good) as
+they were pleasing."
+
+In the very moment of the highest personal glory, the only thought is
+of the work which he has to do. There is neither elation nor cynicism,
+neither indifference nor self-deception, but only deep feeling and a
+firm, clear look into the future of work and conflict which lay silent
+and unknown beyond the triumphal arches and the loud acclaim of the
+people.
+
+On April 30 he was inaugurated. He went in procession to the hall, was
+received in the senate chamber, and thence proceeded to the balcony
+to take the oath. He was dressed in dark brown cloth of American
+manufacture, with a steel-hilted sword, and with his hair powdered and
+drawn back in the fashion of the time. When he appeared, a shout went
+up from the great crowd gathered beneath the balcony. Much overcome,
+he bowed in silence to the people, and there was an instant hush over
+all. Then Chancellor Livingston administered the oath. Washington laid
+his hand upon the Bible, bowed, and said solemnly when the oath was
+concluded, "I swear, so help me God," and, bending reverently, kissed
+the book. Livingston stepped forward, and raising his hand cried,
+"Long live George Washington, President of the United States!" Then
+the cheers broke forth again, the cannon roared, and the bells rang
+out. Washington withdrew to the hall, where he read his inaugural
+address to Congress, and the history of the United States of America
+under the Constitution was begun.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+STARTING THE GOVERNMENT
+
+
+Washington was deeply gratified by his reception at the hands of the
+people from Alexandria to New York. He was profoundly moved by the
+ceremonies of his inauguration, and when he turned from the balcony to
+the senate chamber he showed in his manner and voice how much he felt
+the meaning of all that had occurred. His speech to the assembled
+Congress was solemn and impressive, and with simple reverence he
+acknowledged the guiding hand of Providence in the fortunes of the
+States. He made no recommendations to Congress, but expressed his
+confidence in their wisdom and patriotism, adjured them to remember
+that the success of republican government would probably be finally
+settled by the success of their experiment, reminded them that
+amendments to the Constitution were to be considered, and informed
+them that he could not receive any pecuniary compensation for his
+services, and expected only that his expenses should be paid as in the
+Revolution. This was all. The first inaugural of the first President
+expressed only one thought, but that thought was pressed home with
+force. Washington wished the Congress to understand as he understood
+the weight and meaning of the task which had been imposed upon them,
+for he felt that if he could do this all would be well. How far he
+succeeded it would be impossible to say, but there can be no doubt as
+to the wisdom of his position. To have attempted to direct the first
+movements of Congress before he had really grasped the reins of the
+government would have given rise, very probably, to jealousy and
+opposition at the outset. When he had developed a policy, then it
+would be time to advise the senators and representatives how to carry
+it out. Meanwhile it was better to arouse their patriotism, awaken
+their sense of responsibility, and leave them free to begin their work
+under the guidance of these impressions.
+
+As for himself, his feelings remained unchanged. He had accepted the
+great post with solemn anxiety, and when the prayers had all been
+said, and the last guns fired, when the music had ceased and the
+cheers had died away, and the illuminations had flickered and gone
+out, he wrote that in taking office he had given up all expectation
+of private happiness, but that he was encouraged by the popular
+affection, as well as by the belief that his motives were appreciated,
+and that, thus supported, he would do his best. In a few words,
+written some months later, he tersely stated what his office meant to
+him, and what grave difficulties surrounded his path.
+
+"The establishment of our new government," he said, "seemed to be the
+last great experiment for promoting human happiness by a reasonable
+compact in civil society. It was to be, in the first instance, in
+a considerable degree, a government of accommodation as well as
+a government of laws. Much was to be done by prudence, much by
+conciliation, much by firmness. Few who are not philosophical
+spectators can realize the difficult and delicate part which a man in
+my situation had to act. All see, and most admire, the glare which
+hovers round the external happiness of elevated office. To me there
+is nothing in it beyond the lustre which may be reflected from its
+connection with a power of promoting human felicity. In our progress
+towards political happiness my station is new, and, if I may use the
+expression, I walk on untrodden ground. There is scarcely an action
+the motive of which may not be subject to a double interpretation.
+There is scarcely any part of my conduct which may not hereafter be
+drawn into precedent. If, after all my humble but faithful endeavors
+to advance the felicity of my country and mankind, I may indulge a
+hope that my labors have not been altogether without success, it will
+be the only real compensation I can receive in the closing scenes of
+life."
+
+There is nothing very stimulating to the imagination in this soberness
+of mind and calmness of utterance. The military conquerors and the
+saviors of society, with epigrammatic sayings, dramatic effects and
+rhythmic proclamations, are much more exciting and dazzle the fancy
+much better. But it is this seriousness of mind, coupled with
+intensity of purpose and grim persistence, which has made the
+English-speaking race spread over the world and carry successful
+government in its train. The personal empire of Napoleon had crumbled
+before he died an exile in St. Helena, but the work of Washington
+still endures. Just what that work was, and how it was achieved, is
+all that still remains to be considered.
+
+The policies set on foot and carried through under the first federal
+administration were so brilliant and so successful that we are apt
+to forget that months elapsed before the first of them was even
+announced. When Washington, on May 1, 1789, began his duties, there
+was absolutely nothing of the government of the United States in
+existence but a President and a Congress. The imperfect and broken
+machinery of the confederation still moved feebly, and performed some
+of the absolutely necessary functions of government. But the new
+organization had nothing to work with except these outworn remnants of
+a discarded system. There were no departments, and no arrangements for
+the collection of revenue or the management of the postal service. A
+few scattered soldiers formed the army, and no navy existed. There
+were no funds and no financial resources. There were not even
+traditions and forms of government, and, slight as these things may
+seem, settled methods of doing public business are essential to its
+prompt and proper transaction. These forms had to be devised and
+adopted first, and although they seem matters of course now, after
+a century of use, they were the subject of much thought and of some
+sharp controversy in 1789. The manner in which the President was to be
+addressed caused some heated discussion even before the inauguration.
+America had but just emerged from the colonial condition, and the
+colonial habits were still unbroken. In private letters we find
+Washington referred to as "His Highness," and in some newspapers as
+"His Highness the President-General," while the Senate committee
+reported in favor of addressing him as "His Highness the President of
+the United States and Protector of their Liberties." In the House,
+however, the democratic spirit was strong, there was a fierce attack
+upon the proposed titles, and that body ended by addressing Washington
+simply as the "President of the United States," which, as it happened,
+settled the question finally. Washington personally cared little for
+titles, although, as John Adams wrote to Mrs. Warren, he thought them
+appropriate to high office. But in this case he saw that there was a
+real danger lurking in the empty name, and so he was pleased by the
+decision of the House. Another matter was the relation between the
+President and the Senate. Should he communicate with them in writing
+or orally, being present during their deliberations as if they formed
+an executive council? It was promptly decided that nominations should
+be made in writing; but as to treaties, it was at first thought best
+that the President should deliver them to the Senate in person, and
+it was arranged with minute care where he should sit, beside
+the Vice-President, while the matter was under discussion. This
+arrangement, however, was abandoned after a single trial, and it was
+agreed that treaties, like nominations, should come with written
+messages.
+
+Last and most important of all was the question of the mode of conduct
+and the etiquette to be established with regard to the President
+himself. In this, as in the matter of titles, Washington saw a real
+importance in what many persons might esteem only empty forms, and he
+proceeded with his customary thoroughness in dealing with the subject.
+What he did would be a precedent for the future as well as a target
+for present criticism, and he determined to devise a scheme which
+would resist attack, and be worthy to stand as an example for his
+successors. He therefore wrote to Madison: "The true medium, I
+conceive, must lie in pursuing such a course as will allow him (the
+President) time for all the official duties of his station. This
+should be the primary object. The next, to avoid as much as may be the
+charge of superciliousness, and seclusion from information, by too
+much reserve and too great a withdrawal of himself from company on
+the one hand, and the inconveniences, as well as a diminution of
+respectability, from too free an intercourse and too much familiarity
+on the other." This letter, with a set of queries, was also sent to
+the Vice-President, to Jay, and to Hamilton. They all agreed in the
+general views outlined by Washington. Adams, fresh from Europe, was
+inclined to surround the office, of which he justly had a lofty
+conception, with a good deal of ceremony, because he felt that these
+things were necessary in our relations with foreign nations. In the
+main, however, the advice of all who were consulted was in favor
+of keeping the nice line between too much reserve and too much
+familiarity, and this line, after all the advising, Washington of
+course drew for himself. He did it in this way. He decided that he
+would return no calls, and that he would receive no general visits
+except on specified days, and official visitors at fixed hours.
+The third point was in regard to dinner parties. The presidents of
+Congress hitherto had asked every one to dine, and had ended by
+keeping a sort of public table, to the waste of both time and dignity.
+Many persons, disgusted with this system, thought that the President
+ought not to ask anybody to dinner. But Washington, never given to
+extremes, decided that he would invite to dinner persons of official
+rank and strangers of distinction, but no one else, and that he would
+accept no invitations for himself. After a time he arranged to have a
+reception every Tuesday, from three to four in the afternoon, and Mrs.
+Washington held a similar levee on Fridays. These receptions, with a
+public dinner every week, were all the social entertainments for which
+the President had either time or health.
+
+By these sensible and apparently unimportant arrangements, Washington
+managed to give free access to every one who was entitled to it, and
+yet preserved the dignity and reserve due to his office. It was one
+of the real although unmarked services which he rendered to the new
+government, and which contributed so much to its establishment, for it
+would have been very easy to have lowered the presidential office by a
+false idea of republican simplicity. It would have been equally easy
+to have made it odious by a cold seclusion on the one hand, or by pomp
+and ostentation on the other. With his usual good judgment and perfect
+taste, Washington steered between the opposing dangers, and yet
+notwithstanding the wisdom of his arrangements, and in spite of
+their simplicity, he did not escape calumny on account of them. One
+criticism was that at his reception every one stood, which was thought
+to savor of incipient monarchy. To this Washington replied, with the
+directness of which he was always capable, that it was not usual to
+sit on such occasions, and, if it were, he had no room large enough
+for the number of chairs that would be required, and that, as the
+whole thing was perfectly unceremonious, every one could come and go
+as he pleased. Fault was also found with the manner in which he bowed,
+an accusation to which he answered with an irony not untinged with
+bitterness and contempt: "That I have not been able to make bows to
+the taste of poor Colonel B. (who, by the by, I believe never saw one
+of them) is to be regretted, especially too, as, upon those occasions,
+they were indiscriminately bestowed, and the best I was master of.
+Would it not have been better to throw the veil of charity over
+them, ascribing their stiffness to the effects of age, or to the
+unskillfulness of my teacher, rather than to pride and dignity of
+office, which God knows has no charms for me?"
+
+As party hostility developed, these attacks passed from the region of
+private conversation to the columns of newspapers and the declamation
+of mob orators, and an especial snarl was raised over the circumstance
+that at some public ball the President and Mrs. Washington were
+escorted to a sofa on a raised platform, and that guests passed before
+them and bowed. Much monarchy and aristocracy were perceived in this
+little matter, and Jefferson carefully set it down in that collection
+of withered slanders which he gave to an admiring posterity, after the
+grave had safely covered both him and those whom he feared and hated
+in his lifetime. This incident, however, was but an example of
+the political capital which was sought for in the conduct of the
+presidential office. The celebration of the birthday, the proposition
+to put Washington's head upon the coins, and many other similar
+trifles, were all twisted to the same purpose. The dynasty of Cleon
+has been a long one, so long that even the succession of the Popes
+seems temporary beside it, and it flourished in Washington's time as
+rankly as it did in Athens, or as it does to-day. The object of the
+assault varies, but the motives and the purpose are as old and as
+lasting as human nature. Envy and malice will always find a convenient
+shelter in pretended devotion to the public weal, and will seek
+revenge for their own lack of success by putting on the cloak of the
+tribune of the people, and perverting the noblest of offices to the
+basest uses.
+
+But time sets all things even. The demagogues and the critics who
+assailed Washington's demeanor and behavior are forgotten, while the
+wise and simple customs which he established and framed for the great
+office that he honored, still prevail by virtue of their good sense.
+We part gladly with all remembrance of those bold defenders of liberty
+who saw in these slight forms forerunners of monarchy. We would even
+consent to drop into oblivion the precious legacy of Jefferson. But
+we will never part with the picture drawn by a loving hand of that
+stately figure, clad in black velvet, with the hand on the hilt of the
+sword, standing at one of Mrs. Washington's levees, and receiving with
+gentle and quiet dignity, full of kindliness but untinged by cheap
+familiarity, the crowd that came to pay their respects. It was well
+for the republic that at the threshold of its existence it had for
+President a man who, by the kindness of his heart, by his good sense,
+good manners, and fine breeding, gave to the office which he held and
+the government he founded the simple dignity which was part of himself
+and of his own high character.
+
+Thus the forms and shows, important in their way, were dealt with,
+while behind them came the sterner realities of government, demanding
+regulation and settlement. At the outset Washington knew about the
+affairs of the government, especially for the last six years, only
+in a general way. He felt it to be his first duty, therefore, to
+familiarize himself with all these matters, and, although he was in
+the midst of the stir and bustle of a new government, he nevertheless
+sent for all the papers of each department of the confederation
+since the signature of the treaty of peace, went through them
+systematically, and made notes and summaries of their contents. This
+habit he continued throughout his presidency in dealing with all
+official documents. The natural result followed. He knew more at the
+start about the facts in each and every department of the public
+business than any other one man, and he continued to know more
+throughout his administration. In this method and this capacity for
+taking infinite pains is to be found a partial explanation at least
+of the easy mastery of affairs which he always showed, whether on the
+plantation, in the camp, or in the cabinet. It was in truth a striking
+instance of that "long patience" which the great French naturalist
+said was genius.
+
+While he was thus regulating forms of business, and familiarizing
+himself with public questions, it became necessary to fix the manner
+of dealing with foreign powers. There were not many representatives of
+foreign nations present at the birth of the republic, but there was
+one who felt, and perhaps not without reason, that he was entitled
+to peculiar privileges. The Count de Moustier, minister of France,
+desired to have private access to the President, and even to discuss
+matters of business with him. Washington's reply to this demand was,
+in its way, a model. After saying that the only matter which could
+come up would relate to commerce, with which he was unfamiliar, he
+continued: "Every one, who has any knowledge of my manner of acting in
+public life, will be persuaded that I am not accustomed to impede
+the dispatch or frustrate the success of business by a ceremonious
+attention to idle forms. Any person of that description will also be
+satisfied that I should not readily consent to lose one of the most
+important functions of my office for the sake of preserving an
+imaginary dignity. But perhaps, if there are rules of proceeding which
+have originated from the wisdom of statesmen, and are sanctioned by
+the common consent of nations, it would not be prudent for a young
+state to dispense with them altogether, at least without some
+substantial cause for so doing. I have myself been induced to think,
+possibly from habits of experience, that in general the best mode of
+conducting negotiations, the detail and progress of which might be
+liable to accidental mistakes or unintentional misrepresentations, is
+by writing. This mode, if I was obliged by myself to negotiate with
+any one, I should still pursue. I have, however, been taught to
+believe that there is in most polished nations a system established
+with regard to the foreign as well as the other great departments,
+which, from the utility, the necessity, and the reason of the thing,
+provides that business should be digested and prepared by the heads of
+those departments."
+
+The Count de Moustier hastened to excuse himself on the ground that
+he expressed himself badly in English, which was over-modest, for he
+expressed himself extremely well. He also explained and defended his
+original propositions by trying to show that they were reasonable and
+usual; but it was labor lost. Washington's letter was final, and the
+French minister knew it. The count was aware that he was dealing with
+a good soldier, but in statecraft he probably felt he had to do with a
+novice. His intention was to take advantage of the position of France,
+secure for her peculiar privileges, and put her in the attitude of
+patronizing inoffensively but effectively the new government founded
+by the people she had helped to free. He found himself turned aside
+quietly, almost deferentially, and yet so firmly and decidedly that
+there was no appeal. No nation, he discovered, was to have especial
+privileges. France was the good friend and ally of the United States,
+but she was an equal, not a superior. It was also fixed by this
+correspondence that the President, representing the sovereignty of
+the people, was to have the respect to which that sovereignty was
+entitled. The pomp and pageant of diplomacy in the old world were
+neither desired nor sought in America; yet the President was not to be
+approached in person, but through the proper cabinet officer, and all
+diplomatic communications after the fashion of civilized governments
+were to be in writing. Thus within a month France, and in consequence
+other nations, were quietly given to understand that the new republic
+was to be treated like other free and independent governments, and
+that there was to be nothing colonial or subservient in her attitude
+to foreign nations, whether those nations had been friends or foes in
+the past.
+
+It required tact, firmness, and a sure judgment to establish proper
+relations with foreign ministers. But once done, it was done for all
+time. This was not the case with another and far more important
+class of people, whose relation to the new administration had to be
+determined at the very first hour of its existence. Indeed, before
+Washington left Mount Vernon he had begun to receive letters from
+persons who considered themselves peculiarly well fitted to serve the
+government in return for a small but certain salary. In a letter to
+Mrs. Wooster, for whom as the widow of an old soldier he felt the
+tenderest sympathy, he wrote soon after his arrival in New York: "As
+a public man acting only with reference to the public good, I must be
+allowed to decide upon all points of my duty, without consulting my
+private inclinations and wishes. I must be permitted, with the best
+lights I can obtain, and upon a general view of characters and
+circumstances, to nominate such persons alone to offices as in my
+judgment shall be the best qualified to discharge the functions of
+the departments to which they shall be appointed." This sentiment in
+varying forms has been declared since 1789 by many Presidents and many
+parties. Washington, however, lived up exactly to his declarations.
+At the same time he did not by any means attempt to act merely as an
+examining board.
+
+Great political organizations, as we have known them since, did not
+exist at the beginning of the government, but there were nevertheless
+two parties, divided by the issue which had been settled by the
+adoption of the Constitution. Washington took, and purposed to take,
+his appointees so far as he could from those who had favored the
+Constitution and were friends of the new system. It is also clear
+that he made every effort to give the preference to the soldiers
+and officers of the army, toward whom his affectionate thought ever
+turned. Beyond this it can only be said that he was almost nervously
+anxious to avoid any appearance of personal feeling in making
+appointments, as was shown in the letter refusing to make his nephew
+Bushrod a district attorney, and that he resented personal pressure
+of any kind. He preferred always to reach his conclusions so far as
+possible from a careful study of written testimony. These principles,
+rigidly adhered to, his own keen perception of character, and his
+knowledge of men, resulted in a series of appointments running through
+eight years which were really marvelously successful. The only
+rejection, outside the special case of John Rutledge, was that of
+Benjamin Fishbourn for naval officer of the port of Savannah, which
+was due apparently to the personal hostility of the Georgia senators.
+Washington, conscious of his own painstaking, was not a little
+provoked by this setting aside of an old soldier. He sent in a sharp
+message on the subject, pointing out the trouble he took to make sure
+of the fitness of an appointment, and intimated that the same effort
+would not come amiss in the Senate when they rejected one of his
+nominees. In view of the fact that it was a new government, the
+absence of mistakes in the appointments is quite extraordinary,
+and the value of such success can be realized by considering the
+disastrous consequences which would have come from inefficient
+officers or malfeasance in office when the great experiment was just
+put on trial, and was surrounded by doubters and critics ready and
+eager to pick flaws and find faults.
+
+The general tone of the government and its reputation at widely
+scattered points depended largely on the persons appointed to the
+smaller executive offices. Important, however, as these were, the
+fate of the republic under the new Constitution was infinitely more
+involved in the men whom Washington called about him in his cabinet,
+to decide with him as to the policies which were to be begun, and
+on which the living vital government was to be founded. Congress,
+troubled about many things, and struggling with questions of revenue
+and taxation, managed in the course of the summer to establish and
+provide for three executive departments and for an attorney-general.
+To the selection of the men to fill these high offices Washington
+gave, of course, the most careful thought, and succeeded in forming
+a cabinet which, in its aggregate ability, never has been equaled in
+this country.
+
+Edmund Randolph was appointed attorney-general. Losing his father at
+an early age, and entering the army, he had been watched over and
+protected by Washington with an almost paternal care, and at the time
+of his appointment he was one of the most conspicuous men in public
+life, as well as a leading lawyer at the bar of Virginia. He came from
+one of the oldest and strongest of the Virginian families, and had
+been governor of his State, and a leader in the constitutional
+convention, where he had introduced what was known as the Virginian
+plan. He had refused to sign the Constitution, but had come round
+finally to its support, largely through Washington's influence. There
+was then, and there can be now, no question as to Randolph's really
+fine talents, or as to his fitness for his post. His defect was a lack
+of force of character and strength of will, which was manifested by a
+certain timidity of action, and by an infirmity of purpose, such as
+had appeared in his course about the Constitution. He performed the
+duties of his office admirably, but in the decision of the momentous
+questions which came before the cabinet he showed an uncertainty of
+opinion which was felt by all his colleagues.[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: This passage was written before the recent appearance of
+Mr. Conway's _Life of Randolph_. That ample biography, in my opinion,
+confirms the view of Randolph here given. If, in the light of this new
+material, I have erred at all, it is, I think, on the charitable side.
+Mr. Conway, in order to vindicate Randolph, has sacrificed so far as
+he could nearly every conspicuous public man of that period. From
+Washington, whom he charges with senility, down, there is hardly a
+man who ever crossed Randolph's path whom he has not assailed. Yet he
+presents no reason, so far as I can see, to alter the present opinion
+of Randolph.]
+
+Henry Knox of Massachusetts was head of the War Department under the
+confederacy, and was continued in office by Washington, who appointed
+him secretary of war under the new arrangement. It was a natural and
+excellent selection. Knox was a distinguished soldier, he had served
+well through the Revolution, and Washington was warmly attached to
+him. He was not a statesman by training or habit of mind, nor was he
+possessed of commanding talents. But he was an able man, sound in his
+views and diligent in his office, devoted to his chief and unswerving
+in his loyalty to the administration and all its measures. There was
+never any doubt as to the attitude of Henry Knox, and Washington found
+him as faithful and efficient in the cabinet as he had always been in
+the field.
+
+Second in rank, but first in importance, was the secretaryship of the
+treasury. "Finance! Ah, my friend, all that remains of the American
+Revolution grounds there." So Gouverneur Morris had written to Jay. So
+might he have written again of the American Union, for the fate of the
+experiment rested at the outset on the Treasury Department. Yet there
+was probably less hesitation as to the proper man for this place than
+for any other. Washington no doubt would have been glad to give it to
+Robert Morris, whose great services in the Revolution he could never
+forget. But this could not be, and acting on his own judgment,
+fortified by that of Morris himself, he made Alexander Hamilton
+secretary of the treasury.
+
+It is one of the familiar marks of greatness to know how to choose the
+right men to perform the tasks which no man, either in war or peace,
+can complete single-handed. Napoleon's marshals were conspicuous
+proofs of his genius, and Washington had a similar power of selection.
+The generals whom he trusted were the best generals, the statesmen
+whom he consulted stand highest in history. He was fallible, as other
+mortals are fallible. He, too, had his Varus, and the time was coming
+when he could echo the bitter cry of the great emperor for his lost
+legions. But the mistakes were the exceptions. He chose with the
+sureness of a strong and penetrating mind, and the most signal example
+of this capacity was his secretary of the treasury. He knew Hamilton
+well. He had known him as his staff officer, active, accomplished, and
+efficient. He had seen him leave his side in a tempest of boyish rage,
+and he had watched him charging with splendid gallantry the Yorktown
+redoubts. He was familiar with Hamilton's extraordinary mastery of
+financial and political problems, and he had found him a powerful
+leader in the work of forming the Constitution. He understood
+Hamilton's strength, and he knew where his dangers lay. Now he called
+him to his cabinet, and gave into his hands the department on which
+the immediate success of the government hinged. It was a brilliant
+choice. The mark in his lifetime for all the assaults of his political
+opponents, the leader and the victim of the schism which rent his own
+party, Hamilton, after his death, was made the target for attack and
+reprobation by his political foes, who for nearly sixty years, with
+few intermissions, controlled the government. His work, however, could
+not be undone, and as passions have subsided his fame has proved to
+be of that highest and rarest kind which broadens and rises with the
+lapse of years, until in the light of history it overtops that of any
+of our statesmen, except of his own great chief and Abraham Lincoln.
+The work to which he was called was that of organizing a national
+government, and in the performance of this work he showed that he
+belonged to the highest type of constructive statesmen, and was one of
+the rare men who build, and whose building stands the test of time.
+
+Last to be mentioned, but first in rank, was the Department of State.
+For this high place Washington chose Thomas Jefferson, who was then
+our minister in Paris, and who did not return to take up his official
+duties until the following March. Of the four cabinet offices, this
+was the only one where Washington proceeded entirely on public
+grounds. He took Jefferson on account of his wide reputation, his
+unquestioned ability, his standing before the country, and his
+experience in our foreign relations. With the other three there was
+a strong element of personal friendship and familiarity. With the
+secretary of state his intercourse had been, so far as we can judge,
+almost wholly of a public character, and, so far as can be inferred
+from an expression of some years before, the selection was made by
+Washington in deference simply to what he believed to be the public
+interest. The only allusion to Jefferson in all the printed volumes of
+correspondence prior to 1789 occurs in a letter to Robert Livingston,
+of January 8, 1783. He there said: "What office is Mr. Jefferson
+appointed to that he has, you say, lately accepted? If it is that of
+commissioner of peace, I hope he will arrive too late to have any hand
+in it." There is no indication that their personal relations were then
+or afterwards other than pleasant. Yet this brief sentence is a
+strong expression of distrust, and especially so from the fact that
+Washington was not at all given to criticising other people in his
+letters. What he distrusted was not Jefferson's ability, for that
+no man could doubt, still less his patriotism. But Washington read
+character well, and he felt that Jefferson might be lacking in the
+qualities of boldness and determination, so needful in a negotiation
+like that which resulted in the acknowledgment of our independence.
+
+The truth was that the two men were radically different, and never
+could have been sympathetic. Washington was strong, direct, masculine,
+and at times fierce in anger. Jefferson was adroit, subtle, and
+feminine in his sensitiveness. Washington was essentially a fighting
+man, tamed by a stern self-control from the recklessness of his early
+days, but always a fighter. Jefferson was a lover of peace, given to
+quiet, hating quarrels and bloodshed, and at times timid in dealing
+with public questions. Washington was deliberate and conservative,
+after the fashion of his race. Jefferson was quick, impressionable,
+and always fascinated by new notions, even if they were somewhat
+fantastic. A thoroughly liberal and open-minded man, Washington never
+turned a deaf ear to any new suggestion, whether it was a public
+policy or a mechanical invention, but to all alike he gave careful
+consideration before he adopted them. To Jefferson, on the other hand,
+mere novelty had a peculiar charm, and he jumped at any device, either
+to govern a state or improve a plough, provided that it had the
+flavor of ingenuity. The two men might easily have thought the same
+concerning the republic, but they started from opposite poles, and no
+full communion of thought and feeling was possible between them. That
+Washington chose fitly from purely public and outside considerations
+can not be questioned, but he made a mistake when he put next to
+himself a man for whom he did not have the personal regard and
+sympathy which he felt for his other advisers. The necessary result
+finally came, after many troubles in the cabinet, in dislike and
+distrust, if not positive alienation.
+
+Looking at the cabinet, however, as it stood in the beginning, we can
+only admire the wisdom of the selection and the high abilities which
+were thus brought together for the administration and construction of
+a great national government. It has always been the fashion to speak
+of this first cabinet as made up without reference to party, but the
+idea is a mistaken one from any point of view. Washington himself gave
+it color, for he felt very rightly that he was the choice of the whole
+people and not of a party. He wished to rise above party, and in fact
+to have no party, but a devotion of all to the good of the country.
+The time came when he sorrowed for and censured party bitterness and
+party strife, but it is to be observed that the party feeling which he
+most deplored was that which grew up against his own policies and his
+own administration. The fact was that Washington, who rose above party
+more than any other statesman in our history, was nevertheless, like
+most men of strong will and robust mind, and like all great political
+leaders, a party man, as we shall have occasion to see further on.
+It is true that his cabinet contained the chiefs and founders of two
+great schools of political thought, which have ever since divided
+the country; but when these parties were once fairly developed, the
+cabinet became a scene of conflict and went to pieces, only to be
+reformed on party lines. When it was first made up, the two parties of
+our subsequent history, with which we are familiar, did not exist, and
+it was in the administration of Washington that they were developed.
+Yet the cabinet of 1789 was, so far as there were parties, a partisan
+body. The only political struggle that we had had was over the
+adoption of the Constitution. The parties of the first Congress were
+the Federalists and the anti-Federalists, the friends and the enemies
+of the Constitution. Among those who opposed the Constitution were
+many able and distinguished men, but Washington did not invite Sam
+Adams, or George Mason, or Patrick Henry, or George Clinton to enter
+his cabinet. On the contrary, he took only friends and supporters
+of the Constitution. Hamilton was its most illustrious advocate.
+Randolph, after some vacillation, had done very much to turn the
+wavering scale in Virginia in its favor. Knox was its devoted friend;
+and Jefferson, although he had carped at it and criticised it in
+his letters, was not known to have done so, and was considered, and
+rightly considered, to be friendly to the new system. In other words,
+the cabinet was made up exclusively of the party of the Constitution,
+which was the victorious party of the moment. This was of course
+wholly right, and Washington was too great and wise a leader to have
+done anything else. The cabinet was formed with regard to existing
+divisions, and, when those divisions changed, the cabinet which gave
+birth to them changed too.
+
+Outside the cabinet, the most weighty appointments were those of the
+Supreme Court. No one then quite appreciated, probably, the vast
+importance which this branch of the government was destined to assume,
+or the great part it was to play in the history of the country and the
+development of our institutions. At the same time no one could fail to
+see that much depended on the composition of the body which was to be
+the ultimate interpreter of the Constitution. The safety of the entire
+scheme might easily have been imperiled by the selection of men as
+judges who were lacking in ability or character. Washington chose with
+his wonted sureness. At the head of the court he placed John Jay, one
+of the most distinguished of the public men of the day, who gave to
+the office at once the impress of his own high character and spotless
+reputation. With him were associated Wilson of Pennsylvania, Cushing
+of Massachusetts, Blair of Virginia, Iredell of North Carolina, and
+Rutledge of South Carolina. They were all able and well-known
+men, sound lawyers, and also, be it noted, warm friends of the
+Constitution.
+
+Thus the business of organizing the government in the first great and
+essential points was completed. It was the work of the President, and,
+anxious and arduous as it was, it is worth remembering, too, that
+it was done, and thoroughly done, in the midst of severe physical
+suffering. Just after the inauguration, Washington was laid up with an
+anthrax or carbuncle in his thigh, which brought him at one time very
+near death. For six weeks he could lie only on one side, endured the
+most constant and acute pain, and was almost incapable of motion. He
+referred to his illness at the time in a casual and perfectly simple
+way, and mind and will so prevailed over the bodily suffering that
+the great task of organizing the government was never suspended nor
+interrupted.
+
+When the work was done and Congress had adjourned, Washington, feeling
+that he had earned a little rest and recreation, proceeded to carry
+out a purpose, which he had formed very early in his presidency, of
+visiting the Eastern States. This was the first part of a general plan
+which he had conceived of visiting while in office all portions of
+the Union. The personal appearance of the President, representing
+the whole people, would serve to bring home to the public mind the
+existence and reality of a central government, which to many if not to
+most persons in the outlying States seemed shadowy and distant. But
+General Washington was neither shadowy nor distant to any one. Every
+man, woman, and child had heard of and loved the leader of the
+Revolution. To his countrymen everywhere, his name meant political
+freedom and victory in battle; and when he came among them as the
+head of a new government, that government took on in some measure the
+character of its chief. His journey was a well-calculated appeal, not
+for himself but for his cause, to the warm human interest which a man
+readily excites, but which only gathers slowly around constitutions
+and forms of government. The world owes a good deal to the right kind
+of hero-worship, and the United States have been no exception.
+
+The journey itself was uneventful, and was carried out with
+Washington's usual precision. It served its purpose, too, and brought
+out a popular enthusiasm which spoke well for the prospects of the
+federal government, and which was the first promise of the loyal
+support which New England gave to the President, as she had already
+given it to the general. In the succession of crowds and processions
+and celebrations which marked the public rejoicing, one incident of
+this journey stands out as still memorable, and possessed of real
+meaning. Mr. John Hancock was governor of Massachusetts. There is
+no need to dwell upon him. He was a man of slender abilities,
+large wealth, and ready patriotism, with a great sense of his own
+importance, and a fine taste for impressive display. Every external
+thing about him, from his handsome house and his Copley portrait to
+his imposing gout and his immortal signature, was showy and effective.
+He was governor of Massachusetts, and very proud of that proud old
+commonwealth as well as of her governor. Within her bounds he was the
+representative of her sovereignty, and he felt that deference was due
+to him from the President of the United States when they both stood on
+the soil of Massachusetts. He did not meet Washington on his arrival,
+and Washington thereupon did not dine with the governor as he had
+agreed to do. It looked a little stormy. Here was evidently a man with
+some new views as to the sovereignty of States and the standing of the
+union of States. It might have done for Governor Hancock to allow the
+President of Congress to pass out of Massachusetts without seeing its
+governor, and thereby learn a valuable lesson, but it would never
+do to have such a thing happen in the case of George Washington, no
+matter what office he might hold. A little after noon on Sunday,
+October 26, therefore, the governor wrote a note to the President,
+apologizing for not calling before, and asking if he might call
+in half an hour, even though it was at the hazard of his health.
+Washington answered at once, expressing his pleasure at the prospect
+of seeing his excellency, but begging him, with a touch of irony, not
+to do anything to endanger his health. So in half an hour Hancock
+appeared. Picturesque, even if defeated, he was borne up-stairs on
+men's shoulders, swathed in flannels, and then and there made his
+call. The old house in Boston where this happened has had since then a
+series of successors, but the ground on which it stood has been duly
+remembered and commemorated. It is a more important spot than we are
+wont to think; for there it was settled, on that autumn Sunday, that
+the idea that the States were able to own and to bully the Union they
+had formed was dead, and that the President of the new United States
+was henceforth to be regarded as the official superior of every
+governor in the land. It was a mere question of etiquette, nothing
+more. But how the general government would have sunk in popular
+estimation if the President had not asserted, with perfect dignity and
+yet entire firmness, its position! Men are governed very largely by
+impressions, and Washington knew it. Hence his settling at once and
+forever the question of precedence between the Union and the States.
+Everywhere and at all times, according to his doctrine, the nation was
+to be first.[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: The most lately published contemporary account of
+this affair with Hancock can be found in the _Magazine of American
+History_, June, 1888, p. 508, entitled "Incidents in the Life of John
+Hancock, as related by Dorothy Quincy Hancock Scott (from the Diary of
+Gen. W.H. Sumner)."]
+
+So the President traveled on to the North, and then back by another
+road to New York, and that excellent bit of work in familiarizing the
+people with their federal government was accomplished. Meantime the
+wheels had started, the machine was in motion, and the chief officers
+were at their places. The preliminary work had been done, and the next
+step was to determine what policies should be adopted, and to find out
+if the new system could really perform the task for which it had been
+created.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+DOMESTIC AFFAIRS
+
+
+To trace in detail the events of Washington's administration would be
+to write the history of the country during that period. It is only
+possible here to show, without much regard to chronological sequence,
+the part of the President in developing the policy of the government
+at home, and his attitude toward each question as it arose. We are
+concerned here merely with the influence and effect of Washington in
+our history, and not with the history itself. What did he do, and what
+light do we get on the man himself from his words and deeds? These are
+the only questions that a brief study of a career so far-reaching can
+attempt to answer.
+
+Congress came together for the first time with the government actually
+organized on January 4, 1790. On the day when the session opened,
+Washington drove down to the hall where the Congress met, alone in his
+own coach drawn by four horses. He was preceded by Colonel Humphreys
+and Major Jackson, mounted on his two white horses, while immediately
+behind came his chariot with his private secretaries, and Mr. Lewis on
+horseback. Then followed in their own coaches the chief justice and
+the secretaries of war and of the treasury. When the President reached
+the hall he was met at the entrance by the doorkeeper of the Congress,
+and was escorted to the Senate chamber. There he passed between the
+members of each branch, drawn up on either hand, and took his seat by
+the Vice-President. When order and silence were obtained, he rose and
+spoke to the assembled representatives of the people standing before
+him. Having concluded his speech, he bowed and withdrew with his
+suite as he had come. Jefferson killed this simple ceremonial, and
+substituted for it the written message, sent by a secretary and read
+by a clerk in the midst of talk and bustle, which is the form we
+have to-day. Jefferson's change was made, of course, in the name of
+liberty, and also because he was averse to public speaking. From the
+latter point of view, it was reasonable enough, but the ostensible
+cause was as hollow and meaningless as any of the French notions to
+which it was close akin. It is well for the head of the state to meet
+face to face the representatives of the same people who elected him.
+For more than a century this has been the practice in Massachusetts,
+to take a single instance, and liberty in that commonwealth has not
+been imperiled, nor has the State been obliged to ask Federal aid to
+secure to her a republican form of government because of her adherence
+to this ancient custom.
+
+The forms adopted by Washington had the grave and simple dignity which
+marked all he did, and it was senseless to abandon what his faultless
+taste and patriotic feeling approved. Forms are in their way important
+things: they may conceal perils to liberty, or they may lend dignity
+and call forth respect to all that liberty holds most dear. The net
+result of all this business has been very curious. Jefferson's
+written message prevails; and yet at the same time we inaugurate
+our Presidents with a pomp and parade to which those of the dreaded
+Federalists seem poor and quiet, and which would make the hero of the
+message-in-writing fancy that the air was darkened by the shadows of
+monarchy and despotism. The author of the Declaration of Independence
+was a patriotic man and lover of freedom, but he who fought out the
+Revolution in the field was quite as safe a guardian of American
+liberty; and his clear mind was never confused by the fantasies of
+that Parisian liberty which confused facts with names, and ended in
+the Terror and the first Empire. The people of the United States
+to-day surround the first office of the land with a respect and
+dignity which they deem equal to the mighty sovereignty that it
+represents, and in this is to be found the genuine American feeling
+expressed by Washington in the plain and simple ceremonial which he
+adopted for his meetings with the Congress.
+
+In this first speech, thus delivered, Washington indicated the
+subjects to which he wished Congress to direct their attention, and
+which in their development formed the policies of his administration.
+His first recommendation was to provide for the common defense by a
+proper military establishment. His last and most elaborate was in
+behalf of education, for which he invoked the aid of Congress and
+urged the foundation of a national university, a scheme he had much at
+heart, and to which he constantly returned. The history of these
+two recommendations is soon told. Provision was made for the army,
+inadequate enough, as Washington thought, but still without dispute,
+and such additional provision was afterwards made from time to time as
+the passing exigency of the moment demanded. For education nothing
+was done, and the national university has never advanced beyond the
+recommendation of the first President.
+
+He also advised the adoption of a uniform standard of coinage,
+weights, and measures. In two years a mint was duly established after
+an able report from Hamilton, and out of his efforts and those of
+Jefferson came our decimal system. There was debate over the devices
+on the coins in which the ever-vigilant Jeffersonians scented
+monarchical dangers, but with this exception the country got its
+uniform coinage peacefully enough. The weights and measures did not
+fare so well. They obtained a long report from Jefferson, and a still
+longer and more learned disquisition from John Quincy Adams thirty
+years later. But that was all. We still use the rule of thumb systems
+inherited from our English ancestors, and Washington's uniform
+standard, except for the two reports, has gone no further than the
+national university.
+
+Another recommendation to the effect that invention ought to be
+encouraged and protected bore fruit in this same year in patent and
+copyright laws, which became the foundation of our present system. The
+same good fortune befell the recommendation for a uniform rule for
+naturalization, and the law of 1790 was quietly enacted, no one then
+imagining that its alteration less than ten years later was destined
+to form part of a policy which, after a fierce struggle, settled
+the fate of parties and decided the control of the government. The
+post-office was also commended to the care of Congress, and for that,
+as for the army, provision was duly made, insufficient at the outset,
+but growing steadily from this small beginning, as it was called upon
+to meet the spread and increase of population.
+
+Provision was also made gradually, and with much occasional conflict,
+for a diplomatic service such as the President advised. But this was
+merely the machinery to carry out our foreign policy on which, in a
+few years, our political history largely turned, and which will demand
+a chapter by itself.
+
+A paragraph devoted to Indian affairs informed Congress that measures
+were on foot to establish pacific relations with our savage neighbors,
+but that it would be well to be prepared to use force. This brief
+sentence was the beginning of an important policy, which, in its
+consequences and effects, played a large part in the history of the
+next eight years.
+
+These various matters thus disposed of, there remained only the
+request to the House to provide for the revenue and the public credit.
+From this came Hamilton's financial policy which created parties,
+and with it was interwoven in the body of the speech the general
+recommendation to make all proper effort for the advancement of
+manufactures, commerce, and agriculture.
+
+The speech as a whole, short though it was, drew the outline of
+a vigorous system, which aimed at the establishment of a strong
+government with enlarged powers. It cut at a blow all ties between the
+new government and the feeble strivings of the dead confederation. It
+displayed a broad conception of the duties of the government under
+the Constitution, and in every paragraph it breathed the spirit of a
+robust nationality, calculated to touch the people directly in every
+State of the Union.
+
+Before taking up the financial question, which became the great issue
+in our domestic affairs, it will be well to trace briefly the story of
+our relations with the Indians. The policy of the new administration
+in this respect was peculiarly Washington's own, and, although it
+affected more or less the general course of events at that period, it
+did not directly become the subject of party differences. The "Indian
+problem" is still with us, but it is now a very mild problem indeed.
+Within a few years, it is true, we have had Indian wars, conducted by
+the forces of the United States, and ever-recurring outbreaks between
+savages and frontiersmen. But it has been a very distant business. To
+the great mass of the American people it has been little more than
+interesting news, to be leisurely scanned in the newspaper without
+any sense of immediate and personal concern. Moreover, the popular
+conception of the Indian has for a long time been wildly inaccurate.
+We have known him in various capacities, as the innocent victim of
+corrupt agents and traders, and as the brutal robber and murderer with
+the vices and force of the Western frontiersman, but without any of
+the latter's redeeming virtues. Last and most important of all, we
+have known him as the rare hero and the conventional villain of
+romance, ranging from the admirable stories of Cooper to the last
+production of the "penny dreadful." The result has been to create in
+the public mind a being who probably never existed anywhere except in
+the popular imagination, and who certainly is not the North American
+Indian.
+
+We are always loath to admit that our conceptions are formed by
+fiction, but in the case of people remote from our daily observation
+it plays in nine instances out of ten a leading part, and it has
+certainly done so here. In this way we have been provided with two
+types simple and well defined, which represent the abnormally good on
+the one hand and the inconceivably bad on the other. The Indian hero
+is a person of phenomenal nobility of character, and of an
+ability which would do credit to the training of a highly refined
+civilization. He is the product of the orator, the novelist, or the
+philanthropist, and has but slight and distant relation to facts. The
+usual type, however, and the one which has entered most largely into
+the popular mind, is the Indian villain. He is portrayed invariably
+as cunning, treacherous, cruel, and cowardly, without any relieving
+quality. In this there is of course much truth. As a matter of fact,
+Indians are cunning, treacherous, and cruel, but they are also bold
+fighters. The leading idea of the Indian that has come down from
+Cooper's time, and which depicts him as a "cowardly redskin," unable
+to stand for a moment against a white man in fair fight, is a complete
+delusion designed to flatter the superior race. It has been in a large
+measure dissipated by Parkman's masterly histories, but the ideas born
+of popular fiction die hard. They are due in part to the theory that
+cruelty implies cowardice, just as we say that a bully must be a
+coward, another mistaken bit of proverbial wisdom.
+
+As a matter of fact, the records show that the North American Indian
+is one of the most remarkable savage warriors of whom we have any
+knowledge; and the number of white men killed for each Indian slain
+in war exhibits an astonishing disproportion of loss. Captain James
+Smith, for many years a captive, and who figured in most of the
+campaigns of the last century, estimated that fifty of our people were
+killed to one of theirs. This of course includes women and children;
+and yet even in the battle of the Big Kanawha, the Virginia riflemen,
+although they defeated the Indians with an inferior force, lost two
+to one, and a similar disproportion seems to have continued to the
+present day.
+
+The Indian, moreover, not only fought well and to the death, if
+surrounded, but he had a discipline and plan of battle which were
+most effective for the wilderness. It seems probable that, if the
+experiment had been properly tried, the Indians might have been turned
+into better soldiers than the famous Sikhs; and the French, who
+used the red men skillfully, if without much discipline, found them
+formidable and effective allies. They cut off more than one English
+and American army, and the fact that they resorted to ambush and
+surprise does not detract from their exploits. It was a legitimate
+mode of warfare, and was used by them with terrible effect. They have
+fought more than one pitched battle against superior numbers when the
+victory hung long in the balance, and they have carried on guerrilla
+wars for years against overwhelming forces with extraordinary
+persistence and success. There is no savage, except the Zulu or Maori,
+who has begun to exhibit the natural fighting quality of the American
+Indian; and although the Zulu appears to have displayed greater dash,
+the Indian, by his mastery of the tactics of surprise, has shown a
+far better head. In a word, the Indian has always been a formidable
+savage, treacherous, cruel, and cunning to an extreme degree, no
+doubt, but a desperate and dogged fighter, with a natural instinct for
+war. It must be remembered, too, that he was far more formidable
+in 1790 than he is to-day, with the ever-rising tide of civilized
+population flowing upon him and hemming him in. When the Constitution
+came into being, the Indians were pretty well out of the Atlantic
+States, but beyond the Alleghanies all was theirs, and they had the
+unbroken wilderness as their ally and their refuge. There they lay
+like a dark line on the near frontier, threatening war and pillage
+and severe check to the westward advance of our people. They were
+a serious matter to a new government, limited in resources and
+representing only three millions of people.
+
+Fortunately the President was of all men best fitted to deal with
+this grave question, for he knew the Indians thoroughly. His earliest
+public service had been to negotiate with them, and from that time on
+he had been familiar with them in peace and in diplomacy, while he had
+fought with them in war over and over again. He was not in the least
+confused in his notions about them, but saw them, as he did most
+facts, exactly as they were. He had none of the false sentimentality
+about the noble and injured red man, which in later days has been at
+times highly mischievous, nor on the other hand did he take the purely
+brutal view of the fighting scout or backwoodsman. He knew the Indian
+as he was, and understood him as a dangerous, treacherous,
+fighting savage. Better than any one else he appreciated
+the difficulties of Indian warfare when an army had to be
+launched into the wilderness and cut off from a base of supplies.
+He was well aware, too, that the western tribes were a constant
+temptation to England and Spain on either border, and might be used
+against us with terrible effect. In taking up the question for
+solution, he believed first, as was his nature, in justice, and he
+resolved to push every pacific measure, and strive unremittingly by
+fair dealing and binding treaties to keep a peace which was of great
+moment to the young republic. But he also felt that pacific measures
+were an uncertain reliance, and that sharp, decisive blows were often
+the only means of maintaining peace and quiet on the frontier, and
+of warding off English and Spanish intrigue. This was the policy he
+indicated in the brief sentences of his first speech, and it only
+remains to see how he carried it out.
+
+The outlook in regard to the Indians, when Washington assumed the
+presidency, was threatening enough. The Continental Congress had shown
+in this respect most honorable intention and some vigor, but their
+honest purposes had been in large measure thwarted by the action of
+the various States, which they were unable to control. In New York
+peace reigned, despite some grumbling; for the Six Nations had made a
+general treaty, and also two special treaties, not long before, which
+were on the whole just and satisfactory. At the same time a general
+treaty had been made with the western Indians, which modified some of
+the injustices of the treaties of 1785, and which were also fair and
+reasonable. In this treaty, however, the tribes of the Wabash were not
+included, and they therefore were engaged in war with the Kentucky
+people. Those hardy backwoodsmen were quick enough to retaliate, and
+they generally proceeded on the simple backwoods principle that tribal
+distinctions were futile, and that every Indian was an enemy. This
+view, it must be admitted, saved a good deal of thought, but it led
+the Kentuckians in their raids to kill many Indians who did not belong
+to the Wabash tribes, but to those protected by treaty. The result
+of this impartiality was, that, besides the chronic Wabash troubles,
+there was every probability that a general war with all the western
+and northwestern tribes might break out at any moment.
+
+South of the Ohio, matters were even worse. The Choctaws, it is
+true, owing to their distance from our frontier settlements, were on
+excellent terms with our government. But the Cherokees had just
+been beaten and driven back by Sevier and his followers from the
+short-lived state of Franklin, and had taken refuge with the Creeks.
+These last were a formidable people. Not only were they good fighters,
+but they were also well armed, thanks to their alliance with the
+Spaniards, from whom they obtained not only countenance, but guns,
+ammunition, and supplies. They were led also by a chief of remarkable
+ability, a Scotch half-breed, educated at Charlestown, and named
+Alexander McGillivray. With a tribe so constituted and commanded, it
+was not difficult to bring on trouble, as soon proved to be the case.
+Georgia had claimed and seized certain lands under treaties which she
+alleged had been made, whereupon the Creeks denied the validity of
+these treaties and went to war, in which they were highly successful.
+The Georgians had already asked assistance from their neighbors, and
+they now demanded it from the new general government. Thereupon, under
+an act of Congress, Washington appointed as commissioners to arrange
+the difficulties General Lincoln, Colonel Humphrey, and David Griffin
+of Virginia, all remote from the scene of conflict, and all judicious
+selections. The Creeks readily met the new commissioners, but when
+they found that no lands were to be given up, they declined to treat
+further, and said they would await a new negotiation.
+
+Washington attributed this failure, and no doubt correctly, to the
+intrigues and influence of Spain. On the day the report of the
+commissioners went to Congress, he wrote to Governor Pinckney of South
+Carolina: "For my own part I am entirely persuaded that the present
+general government will endeavor to lay the foundations for its
+proceedings in national justice, faith, and honor. But should the
+government, after having attempted in vain every reasonable pacific
+measure, be obliged to have recourse to arms for the defense of its
+citizens, I am also of opinion that sound policy and good economy will
+point to a prompt and decisive effort, rather than to defensive and
+lingering operations." "Lingering" had been the curse of our Indian
+policy, and it was this above all things that Washington was
+determined to be rid of. Whether peace or war, there was to be quick
+and decisive action. He therefore, in this spirit, at once sent
+southward another commissioner, Colonel Willett, who very shrewdly
+succeeded in getting McGillivray and his chiefs to agree to accompany
+him to New York. Thither they accordingly came in due time, the Scotch
+half-breed and twenty-eight of his chiefs. They were entertained and
+well treated at the seat of government, and there, with Knox acting
+for the United States, they made a treaty which involved concessions
+on both sides. The Creeks gave up all claims to lands north and east
+of the Oconee, and the United States, under a recent general act
+regulating trade and intercourse with the Indians, gave up all lands
+south and west of the same river, and agreed to make the tribes an
+annual present. Then Washington gave them wampum and tobacco, and
+shook hands with them, and the chiefs went home. There was grumbling
+on both sides, especially among the Georgians, but nevertheless the
+treaty held for a time at least, and there was peace.
+
+Washington's policy of justice had succeeded, and the Indians got an
+idea of the power and fair dealing of the new government, which was of
+real value. More valuable still was the lesson to the people of the
+United States that this central government meant to deal justly
+with the Indians, and would try to prevent any single State from
+frustrating by bad faith the policy designed to benefit the whole
+country. Trouble soon began again in this direction, and in later days
+States inflated with state-right doctrines carried this resistance in
+Indian affairs to a much greater extent, and flouted the acts of the
+federal government. This, however, does not detract from the wisdom of
+the President, who inaugurated the policy of acting justly toward
+the Indians, and of overruling the selfish injustice of the State
+immediately affected. If the policy of justice and firmness adopted by
+Washington had never been abandoned, it would have been better for the
+honor and the interest both of the nation and the separate States.
+
+The same pacific policy which had succeeded in the south was tried in
+the west and failed. The English, with their usual thoughtfulness,
+incited the Indians to claim the Ohio as their boundary, which meant
+war and murderous assaults on all our people traveling on the river.
+Retaliation, of course, followed, and in April, 1790, Colonel Harmer
+with a body of Kentucky militia invaded the Indian country, burned a
+deserted village, and returned without having accomplished anything
+substantial. The desultory warfare of murder and pillage went on for a
+time, and then Washington felt that the moment had come for the other
+branch of his policy. At all events there should be no lingering, and
+there should be action. Peaceful measures having failed, there should
+be war and a settlement in some fashion.
+
+Accordingly, in the fall of 1790, soon after his successful Creek
+negotiation, he ordered out some three hundred regulars and eleven
+hundred militia from Pennsylvania and Kentucky, and sent them under
+Harmer into the Miami country. The expedition burned a village on the
+Scioto; and then Colonel Hardin, detached with some hundred and
+fifty men in pursuit of the Indians, was caught in an ambush and
+his regulars cut off, the militia running away apparently quite
+successfully. Thereupon Harmer retreated; but, changing his mind in a
+day or two, advanced again, and again sent out Hardin with a larger
+force than before. Then the advance was again surprised, and the
+regulars nearly all killed, while the militia, who stood their ground
+better this time, lost about a hundred men. The end was the repulse
+of the whites after a pretty savage fight. Then Harmer withdrew
+altogether, declaring, with a strange absence of humor, if of no more
+important quality, that he had won a victory. After reaching home,
+this mismanaged expedition caused much crimination and heart-burning,
+followed by courts-martial on Hardin and Harmer, who were both
+acquitted, and by the resignation of the latter.
+
+This defeat of course simply made worse the state of affairs in
+general, and the Six Nations, who had hitherto been quiet, became
+uneasy and were kept so by the ever-kind incitement of the English.
+Various mediations with these powerful tribes failed; but Colonel
+Pickering, appointed a special commissioner, managed at last to
+appease their discontents. To the southward also the Cherokees began
+to move and threaten, but were pacified by the exertions of Governor
+Blount of the Southwest Territory. Meantime an act had been passed to
+increase the army, and Arthur St. Clair was appointed major-general.
+Washington, who had been greatly disturbed by the failure of Harmer,
+was both angered and disheartened by the conduct of the States and of
+the frontier settlers. "Land-jobbing, the intermeddling of the States,
+and the disorderly conduct of the borderers, who were indifferent as
+to the killing of an Indian," were in his opinion the great obstacles
+in the way of success. Yet these very men who shot Indians at sight
+and plundered them of their lands, as well as the States immediately
+concerned, were the first to cry out for aid from the general
+government when a war, brought about usually by their own violation of
+the treaties of the United States, was upon them. On the other hand,
+the Indians themselves were warlike and quarrelsome, and they were
+spurred on by England and Spain in a way difficult to understand at
+the present day.
+
+In all this perplexity, however, one thing was now clear to
+Washington. There could not longer be any doubt that the western
+troubles must be put down vigorously and by the armed hand. Even while
+he was negotiating in the north and south, therefore, he threw himself
+heart and soul into the preparation of St. Clair's expedition, pushing
+forward all necessary arrangements, and planning the campaign with a
+care and foresight made possible by his military ability and by his
+experience as an Indian fighter. While the main army was thus
+getting ready, two lesser expeditions, one under Scott and one under
+Wilkinson, were sent into the Indian country; but beyond burning some
+deserted villages and killing a few stray savages both were fruitless.
+
+At last all was ready. St. Clair had an interview with Washington, in
+which the whole plan of campaign was gone over, and especial warning
+given against ambuscades. He then took his departure at once for the
+west, and late in September left Cincinnati with some two thousand
+men. The plan of campaign was to build a line of forts, and
+accordingly one named Fort Hamilton was erected twenty-four miles
+north on the Miami, and then Fort Jefferson was built forty-four miles
+north of that point. Thence St. Clair pushed slowly on for twenty-nine
+miles until he reached the head-waters of the Wabash. He had been
+joined on the march by some Kentucky militia, who were disorderly
+and undisciplined. Sixty of them promptly deserted, and it became
+necessary to send a regiment after them to prevent their plundering
+the baggage trains. At the same time some Chickasaw auxiliaries, with
+the true rat instinct, deserted and went home. Nevertheless St. Clair
+kept on, and finally reached what proved to be his last camp, with
+about fourteen hundred men. The militia were on one side of the
+stream, the regulars on the other. At sunrise the next day the
+Indians surprised the militia, drove them back on the other camp, and
+shattered the first line of the regulars. The second line stood their
+ground, and a desperate fight ensued; but it was all in vain. The
+Indians charged up to the guns, and, though they were repulsed by the
+bayonet, St. Clair, who was ill in his tent, was at last forced to
+order a retreat. The retreat soon became a rout, and the broken army,
+leaving their artillery and throwing away their arms, fled back to
+Fort Jefferson, where they left their wounded, and hurried on to their
+starting-point at Fort Washington. It was Braddock over again. General
+Butler, the second in command, was killed on the field, while the
+total loss reached nine hundred men and fifty-nine officers, and of
+these six hundred were killed. The Indians do not appear to have
+numbered much more than a thousand. No excuse for such a disaster and
+such murderous slaughter is possible, for nothing but the grossest
+carelessness could have permitted a surprise of that nature upon
+an established camp. The troops, too, were not only surprised, but
+apparently utterly unprepared to fight, and the battle was merely a
+wild struggle for life.
+
+Washington was above all things a soldier, and his heart was always
+with his armies whenever he had one in the field. In this case
+particularly he hoped much, for he looked to this powerful expedition
+to settle the Indian troubles for a time, and give room for that
+great western movement which always was in his thoughts. He therefore
+awaited reports from St. Clair with keen anxiety, but in this case
+the ill tidings did not attain their proverbial speed. The battle was
+fought on November 4, and it was not until the close of a December
+day that the officer carrying dispatches from the frontier reached
+Philadelphia. He rode at once to the President's house, and Washington
+was called out from dinner, where he had company. He remained away
+some time, and on returning to the table said nothing as to what
+he had heard, talked with every one at Mrs. Washington's reception
+afterwards, and gave no sign. Through all the weary evening he was as
+calm and courteous as ever. When the last guest had gone he walked up
+and down the room for a few minutes and then suddenly broke out:
+"It's all over--St. Clair's defeated--routed; the officers nearly all
+killed, the men by wholesale; the rout complete--too shocking to think
+of--and a surprise into the bargain." He paused and strode up and down
+the room; stopped again and burst forth in a torrent of indignant
+wrath: "Here on this very spot I took leave of him; I wished him
+success and honor; 'You have your instructions,' I said, 'from the
+secretary of war; I had a strict eye to them, and will add but one
+word--Beware of a surprise! I repeat it--_beware of a surprise_! You
+know how the Indians fight us.' He went off with that as my last
+solemn warning thrown into his ears. And yet, to suffer that army to
+be cut to pieces, hacked, butchered, tomahawked, by a surprise, the
+very thing I guarded him against! O God, O God, he's worse than a
+murderer! How can he answer it to his country! The blood of the slain
+is upon him, the curse of widows and orphans, the curse of Heaven!"
+
+His secretary was appalled and silent, while Washington again strode
+fiercely up and down the room. Then he sat down, collected himself,
+and said, "This must not go beyond this room." Then a long silence.
+Then, "General St. Clair shall have justice. I looked hastily through
+the dispatches, saw the whole disaster, but not all the particulars;
+I will receive him without displeasure; I will hear him without
+prejudice; he shall have full justice." The description of this scene
+by an eye-witness has been in print for many years, and yet we find
+people who say that Washington was cold of heart and lacking in human
+sympathy. What could be more intensely human than this? What a warm
+heart is here, and what a lightning glimpse of a passionate nature
+bursting through silence into burning speech! Then comes the iron will
+which has mastered all the problems of his life. "He shall have full
+justice;" and St. Clair had justice. He had been an unfortunate
+choice, but as a Revolutionary soldier and governor of the Northwest
+Territory his selection had been natural. He had never been a
+successful general, for it was not in him to be so. Something he
+lacked, energy, decision, foresight, it matters not what. But at least
+he was brave. Broken by sickness, he had displayed the utmost personal
+courage on that stricken field; and for this Washington would always
+forgive much. He received the unfortunate general kindly. He could not
+order a court martial, for there were no officers of sufficient rank
+to form one; but he gave St. Clair every opportunity for vindication,
+and a committee of Congress investigated the campaign and exculpated
+the leader. His personal bravery saved him and his reputation, but
+nothing can alter the fact that the surprise was unpardonable and the
+disaster awful.
+
+Immediate results of the St. Clair defeat were not so bad as might
+have been expected. Panic, of course, ran rampant along the frontier,
+reaching even to Pittsburg; but the Indians failed to follow up
+their advantage, and did not come. Still the alarm was there, and
+Pennsylvania and Virginia ordered troops to be raised, while Congress
+also took action. Another increase of the army was ordered, with
+consequent increase of appropriation, so that this Indian victory
+entered at this point into the great current of the financial policy,
+and thus played its part in the events on which parties were dividing,
+and history was being made.
+
+No matter what happened, however, there was to be neither lingering
+nor delay in this business. The President set to work at once to
+organize a fresh army, and fight out a settlement of the troubles. His
+first thought for a new commander was of Henry Lee of Virginia, but
+considerations of rank deterred him. He then selected and appointed
+Wayne, who recently had got into politics and been deprived, on a
+contested election, of his seat in the House. No little grumbling
+ensued over this appointment, especially in Virginia, but it was
+unheeded by the President, and its causes now are not very clear.
+The event proved the wisdom of the choice, as so often happened with
+Washington, and it is easy to see the reason for it. Wayne was one
+of the shining figures of our Revolution, appealing strongly to the
+imagination of posterity. He was not a great general in the highest
+sense, but he was a brilliant corps-commander, capable of daring feats
+of arms like the storming of Stony Point. He was capable also of
+dashing with heedless courage into desperate places, and incurring
+thereby defeat and consequent censure, but escaping entire ruin
+through the same quickness of action which had involved him in
+trouble. He was well fitted for the bold and rapid movement
+required in Indian warfare, and with him Washington put well-chosen
+subordinates, selected evidently for their fighting capacity, for he
+clearly was determined that this should be at all events a fighting
+campaign.
+
+Wayne, after his appointment, betook himself to Pittsburg, and
+proceeded with characteristic energy to raise and organize his army,
+a work of no little difficulty because he wished to have picked men.
+Washington did all that could be done to help him, and at the same
+time pushed negotiations with admirable patience, but with very
+varying success. Kirkland brought chiefs of the Six Nations to
+Congress with good results, and the Cherokees were pacified by
+additional presents. On the other hand, the Creeks were restless,
+stirred up always by Spain, and two brave officers, sent to try
+for peace with the western tribes, were murdered in cold blood.
+Nevertheless, treaties were patched up with some of them, and a great
+council was held in the fall of 1792, the Six Nations acting as
+mediators, which resulted in a badly kept armistice, but in nothing of
+lasting value. The next year Congress passed a general act regulating
+trade and intercourse with the Indians, and Washington appointed yet
+another commission to visit the northwestern tribes, more to
+satisfy public opinion than with any hope of peace. Indeed, these
+commissioners never succeeded in even meeting the Indians, who
+rejected in advance all proposals which would not concede the Ohio as
+the boundary. English influence, it was said, was at the bottom of
+this demand, and there seems to be little doubt that such was the
+case, for England and France were now at war, and England thereupon
+had redoubled her efforts to injure the United States by every sort of
+petty outrage both on sea and land. This masterly policy had perhaps
+reasons for its existence which pass beyond the average understanding,
+but, so far as any one can now discover, it seems to have had no
+possible motive except to feed an ancient grudge and drive the country
+into the arms of France. Carried on for a long time in secret,
+this Indian intrigue came to the surface in a speech made by Lord
+Dorchester to the western tribes, in which he prophesied a speedy
+rupture with the United States and urged his hearers to continue war.
+It is worth remembering that for five years, covertly or openly,
+England did her best to keep an Indian war with all that it implied
+alive upon our borders,--the borders of a friendly nation with whom
+she was at peace.
+
+But while Washington persistently negotiated, he as persistently
+prepared to fight, not trusting overmuch either the savages or the
+English. Wayne, with similar views, moved his army forward in the
+autumn of 1793 to a point six miles beyond Fort Jefferson, and then
+went into winter quarters. Early in the spring of 1794 he was in
+motion again and advanced to St. Clair's battlefield, where he built
+Fort Recovery, and where he was attacked by the Indians, whom he
+repulsed after two days' fighting. He then marched in an unexpected
+direction and struck the central villages at the junction of the Au
+Glaize and Maumee. The surprised savages fled, and Wayne burned their
+village, laid waste their extensive fields, and built Fort Defiance.
+To the Indians, who had retreated thirty miles down the Maumee to the
+shelter of a British post, he sent word that he was ready to treat.
+The reply came back asking for a delay of ten days; but Wayne at once
+advanced, and found the Indians prepared for battle near the English
+fort. The ground was unfavorable, especially for cavalry, but Wayne
+made good arrangements and attacked. The Indians gave way before the
+bayonet, and were completely routed, the American loss being only one
+hundred and seven men. The army was not averse to storming the English
+fort; but Wayne, with unusual caution, contented himself with a sharp
+correspondence with the commandant, and then withdrew after a most
+successful campaign. The next year, strengthened by his victory and by
+the surrender of the British posts under the Jay treaty, Wayne made
+a treaty with the western tribes by which vast tracts of disputed
+territory were ceded to the United States, and peace was established
+in that long troubled region.
+
+On the southern frontier there were no such fortunate results. While
+Washington was negotiating and fighting in the north and west, all
+his patient efforts were frustrated in the south by the conduct of
+Georgia. The borderers kept assailing the Indians, peaceful tribes
+being generally chosen for the purpose; and the State itself broke
+through and disregarded all treaties and all arrangements made by the
+United States. The result was constant disquiet and chronic war, with
+the usual accompaniments of fire, murder, and pillage.
+
+On the whole, however, when Washington left the presidency, his
+Indian policy had been a marked success. In place of uncertainty and
+weakness, a definite general system had been adopted. The northern
+and western tribes had been beaten and pacified, and the southern
+incursions and disorders had been much checked. The British posts, the
+most dangerous centres of Indian intrigue, had been abandoned, and the
+great regions of the west and northwest had been opened to the tide of
+settlement. These results were due to a well-defined plan, and above
+all to the persistent vigor which pushed steadily forward to its
+object without swinging, as had been done before, between feverish and
+often misdirected activity on the one side and complete and
+feeble inaction on the other. They were achieved, too, amid many
+difficulties, for there was anything but a unanimous support of the
+government in its Indian affairs. The opposition grumbled at the
+expense, and said that money needlessly raised by taxation was
+squandered in Indian wars, while the great body of the people, living
+safely along the eastern coast, thought but little about the frontier.
+Some persons took the sentimental view and considered the government
+barbarous to make causeless war. Others believed that altogether
+too much of the public time and money were wasted in looking after
+outlying settlements. The borderers themselves, on the other hand,
+thought that the general government was in league with the savages,
+and broke through treaties, and destroyed so far as they could the
+national policy. St. Clair was hissed and jeered as he traveled home,
+but a wakeful opposition turned from the unsuccessful general to a
+vain attempt to prove that ambushed savages and sleeping sentries were
+due to a weak war department and a corrupt and inefficient treasury.
+The mass of moderate people, no doubt, desired tranquillity on the
+frontier, and sustained the President's labors for that end, but for
+the most part they were silent. The voices that Washington heard most
+loudly joined in a discordant chorus of disapproval around his Indian
+policy. No one understood that here was an important part of a scheme
+to build up a nation, to make all the movements of the United States
+broad and national, and to open the vast west to the people who were
+to make it theirs. Washington heard all the criticism and saw all the
+opposition, and still pressed forward to his goal, not attaining all
+he wished, but fighting in a very clear and manful spirit, and not
+laboring in vain.
+
+The Indian question in its management touched, as has been seen, at
+various points our financial policy and our foreign relations, on
+which the history of the country really turned in those years. The
+latter had not risen to their later importance when the government
+began, but the former was knocking importunately at the door of
+Congress when it first assembled. The condition of affairs is soon
+told. The Revolution narrowly escaped shipwreck on the financial
+reefs, and the shaky government of the confederation had there gone to
+pieces. The country, as a political organism, was bankrupt. It owed
+sums of money, which were vast in amount for those days, both at
+home and abroad, and it could not pay these debts, nor was there any
+provision for them. All interest was in arrears, there were no means
+provided for meeting it, and the national credit everywhere was
+dishonored and gone. The continental currency had disappeared, and the
+circulating medium was represented by a confused jumble of foreign
+coins and worthless scrip. Many of the States were up to their eyes in
+schemes of inflation, paper money, and repudiation. There was no money
+in the treasury to pay the ordinary charges of government; there was
+no revenue and no policy for raising one, or for funding the debt.
+This picture is darkly drawn, but it is not exaggerated. That high
+spirit of public honor, which seventy-five years later rose above the
+ravages of war and the temptings of dishonesty to pay the debt and the
+interest, dollar for dollar in gold, seemed in 1789 to be wellnigh
+extinct. But it was not dead. It was confused and overclouded in the
+minds of the people, but it was still there, and it was strong, clear,
+and determined in Washington and those who followed him.
+
+Congress grappled with the financial difficulties in the most
+courageous and honest way, but it struggled with them rather
+helplessly despite its good disposition. It could lay taxes in one way
+or another so as to get money, but this was plainly insufficient. It
+could not formulate a coherent policy, which was the one essential
+thing, nor could it settle the thousand and one perplexing questions
+which hedged the subject on every side. The members turned, therefore,
+with a sigh of relief to the new Secretary of the Treasury, asked him
+the questions which were troubling them, and having directed him to
+make various reports, adjourned.
+
+The result is well known. The great statesman to whom the task was
+confided assumed it with the boldness and ease of conscious power,
+and when Congress reassembled it listened to the first report on
+the public credit. In that great state paper all the confusions
+disappeared, and in terse sentences an entire scheme for funding the
+debt, disposing of the worthless currency, and raising the necessary
+revenue came out clear and distinct, so that all men could comprehend
+it. The provision for the foreign debt passed without resistance. That
+for the domestic debt excited much debate, and also passed. Last came
+the assumption of the state debts, and over that there sprang up
+a fierce struggle. It was carried by a narrow majority, and then
+defeated by the votes of the North Carolina members, who had just
+taken their seats. Washington strongly favored this hotly contested
+measure. He defended it in a letter to David Stuart, and again
+to Jefferson, at a later time, when that statesman was trying to
+undermine Hamilton by wailing about a "corrupt squadron" in Congress.
+
+To Washington, assumption seemed as obviously just as it does to
+posterity. All the debts had been incurred in a common cause, he said,
+why should they not be cared for by the common government? He had
+no patience with the sectional argument that assumption was unfair,
+because some States got more out of it than others. Some States had
+suffered more than others, but all shared in the freedom that had been
+won.[1] He saw in it, moreover, as Hamilton had seen, something far
+more important than a mere provision for the debts and for the payment
+of money to this community or to that. Assumption was essentially a
+union measure. The other debts were incurred by the central government
+directly, but the state debts were incurred by the States for a common
+cause. If the United States assumed them, it showed to the people and
+to the world that there were no state lines when the interests of the
+whole country were involved. It was therefore a national measure, a
+breeder of national sentiment, a new bond to fasten the States to each
+other and to the Union. This was enough to assure Washington's hearty
+approval; but the measure was saved and carried finally by the famous
+arrangement between Hamilton and Jefferson, which took the capital
+to the Potomac and made the war debts of the States a part of the
+national debt. Washington was more than satisfied with this solution,
+for both sides of the agreement pleased him, and there was nothing in
+the compromise which meant sacrifice on his part. He rejoiced in
+the successful adoption of the great financial policy of his
+administration, and he was much pleased to have the capital, in which
+he was intensely interested, placed near to his own Mount Vernon, in
+the very region he would have selected if he had had the power of
+fixing it.
+
+[Footnote 1: Sparks, _Writings of Washington_, x. 98.]
+
+The next great step in the development of the financial policy was the
+establishment of the national bank, and on this there arose another
+bitter contest in Congress and in the newspapers. A sharp opposition
+had developed by this time, and the supporters of the Secretary of the
+Treasury became on their side correspondingly ardent. In this debate
+much stress was laid on the constitutional point that Congress had no
+power to charter a bank. Nevertheless, the bill passed and went to the
+President, with the constitutional doubts following it and pressed
+home in this last resort. As has been seen from his letters written
+just after the Philadelphia convention, Washington was not a blind
+worshiper of the Constitution which he had helped so largely to make;
+but he believed it would work, and every day confirmed his belief. He
+felt, moreover, that one great element of its lasting success lay
+in creating a genuine reverence for it among the people, and it was
+therefore of the utmost importance that this reverence should begin
+among those to whom the management of the government had been
+intrusted. For this reason he exercised a jealous care in everything
+touching the organic law of the Union, and he was peculiarly sensitive
+to constitutional objections to any given measure. In the case of the
+national bank, the objections were strongly as well as vigorously
+urged, and Washington paused, before signing, to the utmost limit of
+the time allowed. He turned to Jefferson and Randolph, both opposed
+to the bill, and asked them for their objections to its
+constitutionality. They gave him in response two able reports. These
+he sent to Hamilton, who returned them with that most masterly
+argument, in which he not only defended the bank charter, but
+vindicated, in a manner never afterwards surpassed, the new doctrine
+of the implied powers of the Constitution. With both sides thus before
+him, Washington considered the question, and signed the bill.
+
+Rives, in his "Life of Madison," intimates that Washington had doubts
+even after signing, but of this there is no evidence of any weight. He
+was not a man who indulged in doubts after he had made up his mind and
+rendered a decision, and it was not in his nature to fret over what
+had been done and was past, whether in war or peace. The story that he
+was worried about his action in this instance arose from his delay in
+signing, and from the disappointment of those who had hoped much
+from his hesitation. This pause, however, was both natural and
+characteristic. Washington had approved Morris's bank policy in the
+Revolution, and remembered the service it rendered. He was familiar
+with Hamilton's views on the subject, and knew that they were the
+result of long study and careful thought. He must also have known that
+any financial policy devised by his Secretary of the Treasury would
+contain as an integral part a national bank. There can be no doubt
+that both the plan for the bank and the report which embodied it were
+submitted to him before they went in to Congress, but the violence of
+the objections raised there on constitutional grounds awakened
+his attention in a new direction. He saw at once the gravity of a
+question, which involved not merely the incorporation of a bank,
+but which opened up a new field of constitutional powers and
+constitutional construction. When such far-reaching results were
+involved he paused and reflected, and, as was always the case with him
+under such circumstances, listened to and examined all the arguments
+on both sides. This done he decided, and with his national feeling
+he could not have decided otherwise than he did. The doctrine of the
+implied powers of the Constitution was the greatest weapon possible
+for those whose leading thought was to develop the union of States
+into a great and imperial nation; and we may well believe that it was
+this feeling, and not merely faith in the bank as a financial engine,
+which led Washington to sign the bill. When he did so he assented to
+the charter of a national bank, but he also assented to the doctrine
+of the implied powers and gave to that far-reaching construction of
+the Constitution the great weight of his name and character. It was,
+perhaps, the most important single act of his presidency.
+
+It is impossible here, even were it necessary, to follow Washington's
+action in regard to all the details which went to make up and to
+sustain Hamilton's policy, to which, as a whole, Washington gave his
+hearty approval and support. The revenue system, the public lands,
+the arrangement of loans, the mint, all alike met with his active
+concurrence. He was too great a man not to value rightly Hamilton's
+work, and the way in which that work brought order, credit, honor, and
+prosperity out of a chaos of debt and bankruptcy appealed peculiarly
+to his own love for method, organization, and sound business
+principles. He met every criticism on Hamilton's policy without
+concession, and defended it when it was attacked. To Hamilton's genius
+that policy must be credited, but it gained its success and strength
+largely from the firm support of Washington.
+
+There are two matters, however, connected with the Treasury
+Department, which cannot be passed over in this general way. One was
+a policy reasoned out and published by Hamilton, but never during his
+lifetime put into the form of law in the broad and systematic manner
+which he desired. The other was a consequence of his financial policy
+as adopted, but which reached far beyond the bounds of financial
+arrangements. The first was the policy set forth in Hamilton's Report
+on Manufactures. The second was the enforcement of the excise and its
+results.
+
+The defense of our commerce against foreign discriminations was a
+proximate cause of the movement which resulted in the Constitution of
+the United States, and closely allied to it was the anxious wish to
+develop our internal resources and our domestic industry. This idea
+was not at all new. Sporadic attempts to start and carry on various
+industries had been made during the colonial period. They had all
+failed, either because the watchful mother-country took pains to
+stifle them, or because lack of capital and experience, in addition to
+foreign competition, killed them almost at their birth. The idea of
+developing American industries was generally diffused for the
+first time when the colonists strove to bring England to terms by
+non-intercourse acts. The Americans then thought that they could carry
+their points by making war upon the British pocket, and excluding
+English merchants from their markets. The next step, of course, was
+to supply their own markets themselves; and the non-intercourse
+agreements, which were economically prohibitory tariff acts, gave a
+fitful impulse to various simple industries. In the clash of arms this
+idea naturally dropped out of the popular mind, but it began to revive
+soon after the return of peace. The government of the confederation
+was too feeble to adopt any policy in this or any other matter, but
+in the first Congress the desire to develop American industries found
+expression. The first tariff was laid primarily to raise the revenue
+so sorely needed at that moment. But the effort to do this gave rise
+to a debate in which the policy of protection, strongly advocated by
+the Pennsylvanian members, was freely discussed. Nobody, however, at
+that time, had any comprehensive plan or general system, so that the
+efforts for protection were incoherent, and resulted only in certain
+special protective features in the tariff bill, and not in a broad
+and well-rounded measure. Still the protective idea was there; it was
+recognized in the preamble of the act, and the constitutionality of
+the policy was affirmed by the framers and contemporaries of the
+Constitution.
+
+Hamilton, of course, watched all these movements intently. His guiding
+thought in all things was the creation of a great nation. For this he
+strove for national unity and national sentiment, and he saw of course
+that one essential condition of national greatness was industrial
+independence, in addition to the political independence already won.
+One of the greatest thinkers of the time on all matters of public
+finance and political economy, he perceived at once that the irregular
+attempts of Congress to encourage home industries could have at best
+but partial results. He saw that a system broad, just, and continental
+in its scope must take the place of the isolated industries which
+now and again obtained an uncertain protection under the haphazard
+measures of Congress. With these views and purposes he wrote and sent
+to Congress his Report on Manufactures. In that great state paper he
+made an argument in behalf of protection, as applied to the United
+States and to the development of home industries, which has never been
+overthrown. The system which he proposed was imperial in its range and
+national in its design, like everything that proceeded from Hamilton's
+mind. He argued, of course, with reference to existing economic
+conditions, and in behalf only of what he then sought,--industrial
+independence and the establishment and diversification of industries.
+The social side of the question, which to-day overshadows all others,
+was not visible a hundred years ago. The Report, however, bore no
+immediate fruit, and Hamilton had been in his grave for years before
+the country turned from this practice of accidental protection, and
+tried to replace it by a broad, coherent system as set forth by the
+great Secretary.
+
+But although it had no result at the moment, the Report on
+Manufactures, which laid the foundation of the American protective
+system, and which has so powerfully influenced American political
+thought, was one of the very greatest events of Washington's
+administration. To trace its effects and history through the
+succeeding century would be wholly out of place here. All that
+concerns us is Washington's relation to this far-reaching policy of
+his Secretary. If we had not a word or a line on the subject from his
+pen, we should still know that the policy of Hamilton was his policy
+too, for Washington was the head of his own administration, and was
+responsible and meant to be responsible for all its acts and policies.
+With his keen foresight he saw the full import of the Report on
+Manufactures, and we may be sure that when it went forth it was with
+his full and cordial approval, and after that minute consideration
+which he gave to all public questions. But we are not left to
+inference. We have Washington's views and feelings on this matter set
+forth again and again, and they show that the principle of the Report
+on Manufactures was as near and dear to him, and as full of meaning,
+as it was to Hamilton.
+
+Washington was brought up and had lived all his life under a system
+which came as near as possible to the ideal of the modern free-trader.
+The people of Virginia were devoted almost entirely to a single
+interest, tobacco-growing, that being the occupation in which they
+could most profitably engage. No legislative artifices had been
+employed to enable them to diversify their industries or to establish
+manufactures. They bought in the cheapest market every luxury and
+most of the necessities of life. British merchants supplied all their
+wants, carried their tobacco, and advanced them money. Cheap labor, a
+single staple with wide fluctuations of value, a credit system, entire
+dependence on foreigners, and absolute free trade according to the
+Manchester theories, should have produced an earthly paradise. As a
+matter of fact, the Virginia planters had little ready money and were
+deeply in debt. Bankruptcy, as has been already said, seems to have
+come to them about once in a generation. The land, rapidly exhausted
+by tobacco, was prodigally wasted, and the general prosperity
+declined. Washington, with his strong sense and perfect business
+methods, personally escaped most of these evils, but he saw the
+mischief of the system all the more clearly. It was bad enough in
+his time, but he did not live to see Virginia with her wasted and
+exhausted lands stand still, while her sister States to the north
+passed her with giant strides in the race for wealth and population.
+He did not live to see her become, as a result of her colonial system,
+a mere breeder of slaves for the plantations of the Gulf States. But
+he saw enough, and the lesson taught him by the results of industrial
+dependence was well learned.
+
+When the war came and he was carrying the terrible burden of the
+Revolution, he learned the same lesson in a new and more bitter way.
+Nothing went so near to wreck the American cause as lack of all the
+supplies by which war was carried on, for the United States produced
+little or nothing of what was then needed. The resources of the
+northern colonies were soon exhausted, and the South had none. Powder,
+cannon, muskets, clothing, medical stores, all were lacking, and the
+fate of the nation hung trembling in the balance on account of the
+dependence in which the colonies had been kept by the skillful policy
+of England. These were teachings that a lesser man than Washington
+would have taken to heart and pondered deeply. In the midst of the
+struggle he wrote to James Warren (March 31, 1779): "Let vigorous
+measures be adopted, ... to punish speculators, forestallers, and
+extortioners, and, above all, to sink the money by heavy taxes,
+to promote public and private economy, and _to encourage
+manufactures_.[1] Measures of this sort, gone heartily into by the
+several States, would strike at once at the root of all our evils,
+and give the _coup de grâce_ to the British hope of subjugating this
+continent either by their arms or their acts."
+
+[Footnote 1: The italics are mine.]
+
+To Lafayette he wrote in 1789: "Though I would not force the
+introduction of manufactures by extravagant encouragements and to the
+prejudice of agriculture, yet I conceive much might be done in
+that way by women, children, and others, without taking one really
+necessary hand from tilling the earth. Certain it is, great savings
+are already made in many articles of apparel, furniture, and
+consumption. Equally certain it is, that no diminution in agriculture
+has taken place at this time, when greater and more substantial
+improvements in manufactures are making than were ever before known in
+America."
+
+In the same year he wrote to Governor Randolph, favoring bounties, the
+strongest form of protection; and this encouragement he wished to have
+given to that industry which a hundred years later has been held up as
+one of the least deserving of all that have received the assistance of
+legislation. He said in this letter: "From the original letter, which
+I forward herewith, your Excellency will comprehend the nature of a
+proposal for introducing and establishing the woolen manufacture
+in the State of Virginia. In the present stage of population and
+agriculture, I do not pretend to determine how far that plan may be
+practicable and advisable; or, in case it should be deemed so, whether
+any or what public encouragement ought to be given to facilitate
+its execution. _I have, however, no doubt as to the good policy
+of increasing the number of sheep in every state_.[1] By a little
+legislative encouragement the farmers of Connecticut have, in two
+years past, added one hundred thousand to their former stock. If a
+greater quantity of wool could be produced, and if the hands which are
+often in a manner idle could be employed in manufacturing it, a spirit
+of industry might be promoted, a great diminution might be made in
+the annual expenses of individual families, and the public would
+eventually be exceedingly benefited." The only hesitation is as to the
+time of applying the policy. There is no doubt as to the wisdom of the
+policy itself, of giving protection and encouragement in every proper
+legislative form to domestic industry.
+
+[Footnote 1: The italics are mine.]
+
+In his first speech to Congress he recommended measures for the
+advancement of manufactures, having already affixed his signature to
+the bill which declared their encouragement to be one of its objects.
+At the same time he wrote, in reply to an address: "The promotion
+of domestic manufactures will, in my conception, be among the first
+consequences which may naturally be expected to flow from an energetic
+government." In 1791 he consulted Hamilton as to the advisability of
+urging Congress to offer bounties for the culture of cotton and hemp,
+his only doubts being as to the power of the general government in
+this respect, and as to the temper of the time in regard to such an
+expenditure of public money. The following year Hamilton's Report
+on Manufactures was given to the country, finally establishing the
+position of the administration as to our economic policy.
+
+The general drift of legislation, although it was not systematized,
+followed the direction pointed out by the administration. But this did
+not satisfy Washington. In his speech to Congress, December 7, 1796,
+he said: "Congress has repeatedly, and not without success, directed
+their attention to the encouragement of manufactures. _The object is
+of too much consequence not to insure a continuance of their efforts
+in every way which shall appear eligible._"[1] He then goes on to
+argue at some length that, although manufacturing on the public
+account is usually inexpedient, it should be established and carried
+on to supply all that was needed for the public force in time of war.
+This was his last address to Congress, and his last word on this
+matter was to approve the course of Congress in following the
+recommendation of his first speech. All his utterances and all his
+opinions on the subject were uniform. Washington had never been a
+student of public finance or political economy like Hamilton, and he
+lived before the days of the Manchester school and its new gospel
+of procuring heaven on earth by special methods of transacting the
+country's business. But Washington was a great man, a state-builder
+who fought wars and founded governments. He knew that nations were
+raised up and made great and efficient, and that civilization was
+advanced, not by _laissez aller_ and _laissez faire_, but by much
+patient human striving. He had fought and conquered, and again he had
+fought and been defeated, and through all he had come to victory, and
+to certain conclusive results both in peace and war. He had not done
+this by sitting still and letting each man go his way, but by strong
+brain and strong will, and by much organization and compulsion. He had
+set his hand to the building of a nation. He had studied his country
+and understood it, and with calm, far-seeing eyes he had looked
+forward into the future of his people. Neither the study nor the
+outlook were vain, and both told him that political independence
+was only part of the work, and that national sentiment, independent
+thinking, and industrial independence also must be reached. The
+first two, time alone could bring. The last, wise laws could help
+to produce; and so he favored protection by legislation to American
+industry and manufactures, threw all his potent influence into the
+scale, and gave his support to the protective policy set forth by his
+Secretary.
+
+[Footnote 1: The italics are mine.]
+
+Two matters connected with the treasury, I have said, deserved
+fuller consideration than a general review could give. The one just
+described, the policy of the Report on Manufactures, came, as has been
+seen, to no clear and immediate result. The other reached a very
+sharp and definite conclusion, not without great effect on the new
+government of the United States, both at the moment and in the future.
+When Hamilton "struck the rock of the national resources," the stream
+of revenue which he sought at the outset was that flowing from duties
+on imports, for this, in his theory, was not only the first source,
+but the best. He would fain have had it the only one; but the
+situation drove him forward. The assumption of the state debts, a
+part of the legacy of the Revolution, and the continuing and at first
+increasing expenses of unavoidable Indian wars, made additional
+revenue absolutely essential. He turned therefore to the excise on
+domestic spirits to furnish what was needed.
+
+Washington approved assumption. It was a measure of honesty, it would
+raise the public credit, and above all, it was thoroughly national in
+its operation and results. The appropriations for Indian wars he of
+course approved, for their energetic prosecution was part of the
+vigorous policy toward our wild neighbors upon which he was so
+determined. It followed, of course, that he did not shrink from
+imposing the taxes thus made necessary; and to raise the money from
+domestic spirits seemed to him, under the existing exigency, to be
+what it was,--thoroughly proper and reasonable both in form and
+subject.
+
+It would seem, however, that neither Washington nor Hamilton realized
+the unpopularity of this mode of getting revenue. The frontier
+settlers along the line of the Alleghanies in Pennsylvania, Virginia,
+and North Carolina, who distilled whiskey, were not very familiar,
+perhaps, with Johnson's dictionary, but they would have cordially
+accepted his definition of an excise. To them it was indeed a "hateful
+tax," and nothing else. In fact, the word was one disliked throughout
+the States, for it brought up evil memories, and excited much jealous
+hostility and prejudice. The first excise law, therefore, when it went
+into force, was the signal for a general outburst of opposition; and
+in the Alleghany region, as might have been expected, the resistance
+was immediate and most bitter. State legislatures passed resolutions,
+public meetings were held and more resolutions were passed, while
+in the wilder parts of the country threats of violence were freely
+uttered. All these murmurings and menaces came on the passage of the
+first bill in 1791. The administration, however, had no desire to
+precipitate an uncalled-for strife, and so the law was softened and
+amended in the following year, the tax being lowered and the most
+obnoxious features removed. The result was general acquiescence
+throughout most of the States, and renewed opposition in the western
+counties of Pennsylvania and North Carolina. In the former a meeting
+was held denouncing the law, pledging the people to "boycott" the
+officers, and hinting at forcible resistance. If the people engaged in
+this business had stopped to consider the men with whom they had
+to deal, they would have been saved a great deal of suffering and
+humiliation. The President and his Secretary of the Treasury were not
+men who could be frightened by opposition or violent speeches. But
+angry frontiersmen, stirred up by demagogues, are not given to much
+reflection, and they meant to have their own way.
+
+Washington was quite clear in his policy from the beginning. He was
+ready to make every proper concession, but when this was done he meant
+on his side to have his own way, which was the way of law and order
+and good government. He wrote to Hamilton in August, 1792: "If, after
+these regulations are in operation, opposition to the due exercise of
+the collection is still experienced, and peaceable procedure is no
+longer effectual, the public interests and my duty will make it
+necessary to enforce the laws respecting this matter; and however
+disagreeable this would be to me, it must nevertheless take place."
+
+Meantime the disorders went on, and the officers were insulted and
+thwarted in the execution of their duty. Washington's next letter
+(September 7) has a touch of anger. He hated disorder and riot
+anywhere, but he was disgusted when they came from the very people for
+whose defense the Indian war was pushed and the excise made necessary.
+He approved of Hamilton's sending out an officer to examine into the
+survey, and said: "If, notwithstanding, opposition is still given to
+the due execution of the law, I have no hesitation in declaring, if
+the evidence of it is clear and unequivocal, that I shall, however
+reluctantly I exercise them, exert all the legal powers with which the
+executive is invested to check so daring and unwarrantable a spirit.
+It is my duty to see the laws executed. To permit them to be trampled
+upon with impunity would be repugnant to it; nor can the government
+longer remain a passive spectator of the contempt with which they are
+treated. Forbearance, under a hope that the inhabitants of that
+survey would recover from the delirium and folly into which they
+were plunged, seems to have had no other effect than to increase the
+disorder."
+
+A few weeks later he issued a proclamation, declaring formally and
+publicly what he had already said in private. He warned the people
+engaged in resistance to the law that the law would be enforced, and
+exhorted them to desist. The proclamation was effective in the south,
+and the opposition died out in North Carolina. Not so in Pennsylvania.
+There the Scotch-Irish borderers who lived in the western counties
+were bent on having their way. A brave, self-willed, hotheaded,
+turbulent people, they were going to have their fight out. They
+had ridden rough-shod over the Quaker and German government in
+Pennsylvania before this, and they no doubt thought they could do the
+same with this new government of the United States. They merely made a
+mistake about the man at the head of the government; nothing more than
+that. Such mistakes have been made before. The Paris mob, for example,
+made a similar blunder on the 13th Vendémiaire, when Bonaparte settled
+matters by the famous whiff of grape-shot. There is some excuse for
+the error of our Scotch-Irish borderers in their past experience, more
+excuse still in the drift of other events that touched all men just
+then with the madness of France, and gave birth to certain democratic
+societies which applauded any resistance to law, even if the cause was
+no nobler than a whiskey still.
+
+Perhaps, too, the Pennsylvanians were encouraged by the moderation
+and deliberate movement of the government. A lull came after the
+proclamation of 1792. Then every effort was made to settle the
+troubles by civil processes and by personal negotiation, but all
+proved vain. The disturbances went on increasing for two years, until
+law was at an end in the insurgent counties. The mails were stopped
+and robbed, there were violence, bloodshed, rioting, attacks on the
+officers of the United States, and meetings threatening still worse
+things.
+
+Meanwhile Washington had waited and watched, and bided his time. He
+felt now that the moment had come when, if ever, public opinion must
+be with him, and that the hour had arrived when he must put his
+fortune to the touch, and "try if it were current gold indeed." On
+August 7 he issued a second proclamation, setting forth the outrages
+committed, and announcing his power to call out the militia, and his
+intention to do so if unconditional submission did not follow at once.
+As he wrote to a friend three days later: "Actual rebellion exists
+against the laws of the United States." On the crucial point, however,
+he felt safe. He was confident that all the public opinion worth
+having was now on his side, and that the people were ready to stand by
+the government. The quick and unconditional submission did not come,
+and on September 25 he issued a third proclamation, reciting the facts
+and calling out the militia of New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Maryland, and
+Virginia.
+
+Washington had judged rightly. The States responded, and the troops
+came to the number of fifteen thousand, for he was in the habit of
+doing things thoroughly, and meant to have an overwhelming force.
+To Governor Lee of Virginia the command of the combined forces was
+intrusted. "I am perfectly in sentiment with you, that the
+business we are drawn out upon should be effectually executed,
+and that the daring and factious spirit which threatens to
+overturn the laws and to subvert the Constitution ought to be
+subdued." Thus he wrote to Morgan, while the commissioners from the
+insurgents were politely received, and told that the march of the
+troops could not be countermanded. Washington would fain have gone
+himself, in command of the army, but he felt that he could not leave
+the seat of government for so long a time with propriety. He went as
+far as Bedford with the troops, and then parted from them. When he
+took leave, he wrote a letter to Lee, to be read to the army, in which
+he said: "No citizen of the United States can ever be engaged in a
+service more important to their country. It is nothing less than to
+consolidate and to preserve the blessings of that revolution which
+at much expense of blood and treasure constituted us a free and
+independent nation." Thus admonished, the army marched, Hamilton going
+with them in characteristic fashion to the end. They did their work
+thoroughly. The insurrection disappeared, and resistance dropped
+suddenly out of sight. The Scotch-Irish of the border, with all their
+love of fighting, found too late that they were dealing with a power
+very different from that of their own State. The ringleaders of the
+insurrection were arrested and tried by civil process, the disorders
+ceased, law reigned once more, and the "hateful tax" was duly paid and
+collected.
+
+The "Whiskey Rebellion" has never received due weight in the history
+of the United States. Its story has been told in the utmost detail,
+but its details are unimportant. As a fact, however, it is full of
+meaning, and this meaning has been too much overlooked. That this
+should be so, is not to be wondered at, for everything has conspired
+to make it seem, after a century has gone by, both mean and trivial.
+Its very name suggests ridicule and contempt, and it collapsed so
+utterly that people laughed at it and despised it. Its leaders, with
+the exception of Gallatin, were cheap and talkative persons of
+little worth, and the cause itself was neither noble, romantic, nor
+inspiriting. Nevertheless, it was a dangerous and formidable business,
+for it was the first direct challenge to the new government. It was
+the first clear utterance of the stern question asked of every people
+striving to live as a nation, Have you a right to live? Have you a
+government able to fight and to endure? Have you men ready to take up
+the challenge? These questions were put by rough frontier settlers,
+and put in the name and for the sake of distilling whiskey unvexed by
+law. But they were there, they had to be answered, and on the reply
+the existence of the government was at stake. If it failed, all was
+over. If the States did not respond to this first demand, that they
+should put down disorder and dissension within the borders of one of
+their number, the experiment had failed. It came, as it almost always
+does come, to one man to make the answer. That man took up the
+challenge. He did not move too soon. He waited with unerring judgment,
+as Lincoln waited with the Proclamation of Emancipation, until he had
+gathered public opinion behind him by his firmness and moderation.
+Then he struck, and struck so hard that the whole fabric of
+insurrection and riot fell helplessly to pieces, and wiseacres looked
+on and laughed, and thought it had been but a slight matter after all.
+The action of the government vindicated the right of the United States
+to live, because they had proved themselves able to keep order. It
+showed to the American people that their government was a reality
+of force and power. If it had gone wrong, the history of the United
+States would not have differed widely from that of the confederation.
+No mistake was made, and people regarded the whole thing as an
+insignificant incident, and historians treat it as an episode. There
+could be no greater tribute to the strong and silent man who did the
+work and bore the stress of waiting for nearly five years. He did his
+duty so well and so completely that it seems nothing now, and yet the
+crushing of that insurrection in the western counties of Pennsylvania
+was one of the turning-points in a nation's life.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+FOREIGN RELATIONS
+
+
+Our present relations with foreign nations fill as a rule but a slight
+place in American politics, and excite generally only a languid
+interest, not nearly so much as their importance deserves. We have
+separated ourselves so completely from the affairs of other people
+that it is difficult to realize how commanding and disproportionate a
+place they occupied when the government was founded. We were then a
+new nation, and our attitude toward the rest of the world was wholly
+undefined. There was, therefore, among the American people much
+anxiety to discover what that attitude would be, for the unknown is
+always full of interest. Moreover, Europe was still our neighbor, for
+England, France, and Spain were all upon our borders, and had large
+territorial interests in the northern half of the New World. Within
+fifteen years we had been colonies, and all our politics, except those
+which were purely local and provincial, had been the politics of
+Europe; for during the eighteenth century we had been drawn into and
+had played a part in every European complication, and every European
+war in which England had the slightest share. Thus the American people
+came to consider themselves a part of the European system, and looked
+to Europe for their politics, which was a habit of thought both
+natural and congenial to colonists. We ceased to be colonists when
+the Treaty of Paris was signed; but treaties, although they settle
+boundaries and divide nations, do not change customs and habits of
+thought by a few strokes of the pen. The free and independent people
+of the United States, as there has already been occasion to point out,
+when they set out to govern themselves under their new Constitution,
+were still dominated by colonial ideas and prejudices. They felt,
+no doubt, that the new system would put them in a more respectable
+attitude toward the other nations of the earth. But this was probably
+the only definite popular notion on the subject. What our actual
+relations with other nations should be, was something wholly vague,
+and very varying ideas were entertained about it by communities and
+by individuals, according to their various prejudices, opinions, and
+interests.
+
+The one idea, however, that the American people did not have on this
+subject was, that they should hold themselves entirely aloof from the
+politics of the Old World, and have with other nations outside the
+Americas no relations except those born of commerce. It had not
+occurred to them that they should march steadily forward on a course
+which would drive out European governments, and sever the connections
+of those governments with the North American continent. After a
+century's familiarity, this policy looks so simple and obvious that
+it is difficult to believe that our forefathers could even have
+considered any other seriously; but in 1789 it was so strange that no
+one dreamed of it, except perhaps a few thinkers speculating on the
+future of the infant nation. It was something so novel that when
+it was propounded it struck the people like a sudden shock of
+electricity. It was so broad, so national, so thoroughly American,
+that men still struggling in the fetters of colonial thought could not
+comprehend it. But there was one man to whom it was neither strange
+nor speculative. To Washington it was not a vague idea, but a
+well-defined system, which he had been long maturing in his mind.
+
+Before he had been chosen President, he wrote to Sir Edward Newenham:
+"I hope the United States of America will be able to keep disengaged
+from the labyrinth of European politics and wars; and that before long
+they will, by the adoption of a good national government, have become
+respectable in the eyes of the world, so that none of the maritime
+powers, especially none of those who hold possessions in the New
+World or the West Indies, shall presume to treat them with insult or
+contempt. It should be the policy of the United States to administer
+to their wants without being engaged in their quarrels. And it is
+not in the power of the proudest and most polite people on earth to
+prevent us from becoming a great, a respectable, and a commercial
+nation if we shall continue united and faithful to ourselves." This
+plain statement shows his fixed belief that in an absolute breaking
+with the political affairs of other peoples lay the most important
+part of the work which was to make us a nation in spirit and in truth.
+He carried this belief with him when he took up the Presidency, and it
+was the chief burden of the last words of counsel which he gave to his
+countrymen when he retired to private life. To have begun and carried
+on to a firm establishment this policy of a separation from Europe
+would have required time, skill, and patience even under the calmest
+and most favorable conditions. But it was the fate of the new
+government to be born just on the eve of the French Revolution. The
+United States were at once caught up and tossed by the waves of that
+terrific storm, and it was in the midst of that awful hurly-burly,
+when the misdeeds of centuries of wrong-doing were brought to an
+account, that Washington opened and developed his foreign policy. It
+was a great task, and the manner of its performance deserves much and
+serious consideration.
+
+His first act in foreign affairs, on entering the Presidency, was to
+make the minister of France understand that the government of the
+United States was to be treated with due formality and respect.
+His second was to examine the whole mass of foreign correspondence
+collected in the State Department of the confederation, and he did
+this, as has been said, pencil in hand, making notes and abstracts as
+he went. It was well worth doing, for he learned much, and from this
+laborious study and thorough knowledge certain facts became apparent,
+for the most part of a hard and unpleasant nature. First, he saw that
+England, taking advantage of our failure to fulfill completely our
+obligations under the treaty, had openly violated hers, and continued
+to hold the fortified posts along the northwestern and western
+borders. Here was a dangerous thorn which pricked sharply, for the
+posts in British hands offered constant temptations to Indian risings,
+and threatened war both with the savages and with Great Britain.
+Further west still, Spain held the Mississippi, closed navigation,
+and intrigued to separate our western settlers from the Union. No
+immediate danger lay here, but still peril and need of close watching,
+for the Mississippi was never to slip out of our power. The mighty
+river and the great region through which it flows were important
+features in that empire which Washington foresaw. His plan was that we
+should get them by binding the settlers beyond the Alleghanies to the
+old States with roads, canals, and trade, and then trust to those
+hardy pioneers to keep the river and its valley for themselves and
+their country. All that was needed for this were time, and vigilant
+firmness with Spain.
+
+Beyond the sea were the West India Islands, the home of a commerce
+long carried on by the colonies and of much profit to them, especially
+to those of New England. This trade was now hampered by England, and
+was soon to be still further blocked, and thereby become the cause of
+much bickering and ill-will.
+
+Across the ocean we maintained with the Barbary States the relations
+usual between brigands and victims, and we tried to make treaties with
+them, and really paid tribute to them, as was the fashion in dealing
+with those pirates at that period. With Holland, Sweden, and Prussia
+we had commercial treaties, and the Dutch sent a minister to the
+United States. With France alone were our relations close. She had
+been our ally, and we had formed with her a treaty of alliance and a
+treaty of commerce, as well as a consular convention, which we were at
+this time engaged in revising. To most of the nations of the world,
+however, we were simply an unknown quantity, an unconsidered trifle.
+The only people who really knew anything about us were the English,
+with whom we had fought, and from whom we had separated; the French,
+who had helped us to win our independence; and the Dutch, from whom
+we had borrowed money. Even these nations, with so many reasons for
+intelligent and profitable interest in the new republic, failed, not
+unnaturally, to see the possibilities shut up in the wild American
+continent.
+
+To the young nation just starting thus unnoticed and unheeded,
+Washington believed that honorable peace was essential, if a firm
+establishment of the new government, and of a respectable and
+respected position in the eyes of the world, was ever to be attained;
+and it was toward England, therefore, as the source of most probable
+trouble, that Washington turned to begin his foreign policy. The
+return of John Adams had left us without a minister at London,
+and England had sent no representative to the United States. The
+President, therefore, authorized Gouverneur Morris, who was going
+abroad on private business, to sound the English government informally
+as to an exchange of ministers, the complete execution of the treaty
+of peace, and the negotiation of a commercial treaty. The mission was
+one of inquiry, and was born of good and generous feelings as well as
+of broad and wise views of public policy. "It is in my opinion very
+important," he wrote to Morris, "that we avoid errors in our system of
+policy respecting Great Britain; and this can only be done by forming
+a right judgment of their disposition and views."
+
+What was the response to these fair and sensible suggestions? On the
+first point the assent was ready enough; but on the other two, which
+looked to the carrying out of the treaty and the making of a treaty of
+commerce, there was no satisfaction. Morris, who was as high-spirited
+as he was able, was irritated by the indifference and hardly concealed
+insolence shown to him and his business. It was the fit beginning of
+the conduct by which England for nearly a century has succeeded in
+alienating the good-will of the people of the United States. Such a
+policy was neither generous nor intelligent, and politically
+it was a gross blunder. Washington, however, was too great
+a man to be disturbed by the bad temper and narrow ideas
+of English ministers. After his fashion he persevered in
+what he knew to be right and for his country's interest, and in due
+time a diplomatic representation was established, while later still,
+in the midst of difficulties of which he little dreamed at the outset,
+he carried through a treaty that removed the existing grievances. In a
+word, he kept the peace, and it lasted long enough to give the United
+States the breathing space they so much needed at the beginning of
+their history.
+
+The greatest perils in our foreign relations came, as it happened,
+from another quarter, where peace seemed most secure, and where no man
+looked for trouble. The government of the United States and the French
+revolution began almost together, and it is one of the strangest facts
+of history that the nation which helped so powerfully to give freedom
+to America brought the results of that freedom into the gravest peril
+by its own struggle for liberty. When the great movement in France
+began, it was hailed in this country with general applause, and with a
+sympathy as hearty as it was genuine, for every one felt that France
+was now to gain all the blessings of free government with which
+America was familiar. Our glorious example, it was clear, was destined
+to change the world, and monarchies and despotisms were to disappear.
+There was to be a new political birth for all the nations, and the
+reign of peace and good-will was to come at once upon the earth at
+the hands of liberated peoples freely governing themselves. It was a
+natural delusion, and a kindly one. History, in the modern sense, was
+still unwritten, and men did not then understand that the force and
+character of a revolution are determined by the duration and intensity
+of the tyranny and misgovernment which have preceded and caused it.
+The vast benefit destined to flow from the French revolution was to
+come many years after all those who saw it begin were in their graves,
+but at the moment it was expected to arrive immediately, and in a form
+widely different from that which, in the slow process of time, it
+ultimately assumed. Moreover, Americans did not realize that the
+well-ordered liberty of the English-speaking race was something
+unknown and inconceivable to the French.
+
+There were a few Americans who were never deceived for a moment, even
+by their hopes. Hamilton, who "divined Europe," as Talleyrand said,
+and Gouverneur Morris, studying the situation on the spot with keen
+and practical observation, soon apprehended the truth, while others
+more or less quickly followed in their wake. But Washington, whom no
+one ever credited with divination, and who never crossed the Atlantic,
+saw the realities of the thing sooner, and looked more deeply into the
+future than anybody else. No man lived more loyal than he, or more
+true to the duties of gratitude; but he looked upon the world of facts
+with vision never dimmed nor dazzled, and watched in silence, while
+others slept and dreamed. Let us follow his letters for a moment. In
+October, 1789, in the first flush of hope and sympathy, he wrote to
+Morris: "The revolution which has been effected in France is of so
+wonderful a nature that the mind can hardly realize the fact. If it
+ends as our last accounts to the first of August predict, that nation
+will be the most powerful and happy in Europe; but I fear though it
+has gone triumphantly through the first paroxysm, it is not the last
+it has to encounter before matters are finally settled. In a word,
+the revolution is of too great magnitude to be effected in so short
+a space, and with the loss of so little blood.... To forbear running
+from one extreme to another is no easy matter; and should this be the
+case, rocks and shelves, not visible at present, may wreck the vessel,
+and give a higher-toned despotism than the one which existed before."
+
+Seven years afterwards, reviewing his opinions in respect to France,
+he wrote to Pickering: "My conduct in public and private life, as it
+relates to the important struggle in which the latter is engaged, has
+been uniform from the commencement of it, and may be summed up in a
+few words: that I have always wished well to the French revolution;
+that I have always given it as my decided opinion that no nation had a
+right to intermeddle in the internal concerns of another; that every
+one had a right to form and adopt whatever government they liked best
+to live under themselves; and that if this country could, consistently
+with its engagements, maintain a strict neutrality and thereby
+preserve peace, it was bound to do so by motives of policy, interest,
+and every other consideration that ought to actuate a people situated
+as we are, already deeply in debt, and in a convalescent state from
+the struggle we have been engaged in ourselves."
+
+Thus prepared, Washington waited and saw his cautious predictions
+verified, and the revolution rush headlong from one extreme to
+another. He also saw the flames spread beyond the borders of France,
+changing and dividing public opinion everywhere; and he knew it was
+only a question of time how soon the new nation, at whose head he
+stood, would be affected. Histories and biographies which treat of
+that period, as a rule convey the idea that the foreign policy of our
+first administration dealt with the complications that arose as they
+came upon us. Nothing could be further from the truth, for the general
+policy was matured at the outset, as has been seen in the letter to
+Newenham, and the occasions for its application were sure to come
+sooner or later, in one form or another. Washington was not surprised
+by the presence of the perils that he feared, and danger only made
+him more set on carrying out the policy upon which he had long since
+determined. In July, 1791, he wrote to Morris: "I trust we shall never
+so far lose sight of our own interest and happiness as to become
+unnecessarily a party to these political disputes. Our local situation
+enables us to maintain that state with respect to them which otherwise
+could not, perhaps, be preserved by human wisdom." He followed this up
+with a strong and concise argument as to the advantage and necessity
+of this policy, showing a complete grasp of the subject, which came
+from long and patient thought.
+
+All his firmness and knowledge were needed, for the position was most
+trying. With every ship that brought news of the extraordinary doings
+in Europe, the applause which greeted the early uprisings of Paris
+grew less general. The wise, the prudent, the conservative, cooled
+gradually at first, and then more quickly in their admiration of the
+French; but in the beginning, this deepening and increasing hostility
+to the revolution kept silence. It was popular to be the friend of
+France, and highly unpopular to be anything else. But when excesses
+multiplied and blood flowed, when religion tottered and the
+foundations of society were shaken, this silence was broken.
+Discussion took the place of harmonious congratulation, and it soon
+became apparent that there was to be a sharp and bitter division of
+public opinion, growing out of the affairs of France. It was necessary
+for the government to maintain a friendly yet cautious attitude toward
+our former ally, and not endanger the stability of the Union and the
+dignity of the country by giving to the French sympathizers any good
+ground for accusing them of ingratitude, or of lukewarmness toward
+the cause of human rights. That a time would soon come when decisive
+action must be taken, Washington saw plainly enough; and when that
+moment arrived, the risk of fierce party divisions on a question of
+foreign politics could not be avoided. Meantime domestic bitterness on
+these matters was to be repressed and delayed, and yet in so doing
+no step was to be taken which would involve the country in any
+inconsistency, or compel a change of position when the crisis was
+actually reached. The policy of separating the United States from all
+foreign politics is usually dated from what is called the neutrality
+proclamation; but the theory, as has been pointed out, was clear and
+well defined in Washington's mind when he entered upon the presidency.
+The outlines were marked out and pursued in practice long before the
+outbreak of war between France and England put his system to the
+touch. In everything he said or wrote, whether in public or private,
+his tone toward France was so friendly that her most zealous supporter
+could not take offense, and at the same time it was so absolutely
+guarded that the country was committed to nothing which could hamper
+it in the future. The course of the administration as a whole, and its
+substantive acts as well, were in harmony with the tone of expression
+used by the President; for Washington, it may be repeated, was the
+head of his own administration, a fact which the biographers of the
+very able men who surrounded him are too prone to overlook. In this
+case he was not only the leader, but the work was peculiarly his own,
+and a few extracts from his letters will show the completeness of his
+policy and the firmness with which he followed it whenever occasion
+came.
+
+To Lafayette he wrote in July, 1791, a letter full of sympathy, but
+with an undertone of warning none the less significant because it was
+veiled. Coming to a point where there was an intimation of trouble
+between the two countries, he said: "The decrees of the National
+Assembly respecting our tobacco and oil do not appear to be very
+pleasing to the people of this country; but I do not presume that any
+hasty measures will be adopted in consequence thereof; for we have
+never entertained a doubt of the friendly disposition of the French
+nation toward us, and are therefore persuaded that, if they have done
+anything which seems to bear hard upon us at a time when the Assembly
+must have been occupied in very important matters, and which, perhaps,
+would not allow time for a due consideration of the subject, they will
+in the moment of calm deliberation alter it and do what is right."
+
+[Illustration: LAFAYETTE]
+
+The unfriendly act was noted, so that Lafayette would understand that
+no tame submission was intended, and yet no resentment was expressed.
+The same tone can be noticed in a widely different direction.
+Washington foresaw that the troubles in France, sooner or later, would
+involve her in war with England. The United States, as the former
+allies of the French, were certain to attract the attention of the
+mother country, and so he watched on that side also with equal
+caution. England, if possible, was to be made to understand that the
+American policy was not dictated by anything but the interests and the
+dignity of the United States, and their resolve to hold aloof from
+European complications. In June, 1792, he wrote to Morris: "One thing,
+however, I must not pass over in silence, lest you should infer from
+it that Mr. D. had authority for reporting that the United States had
+asked the mediation of Great Britain to bring about a peace between
+them and the Indians. You may be fully assured, sir, that such
+mediation never was asked, that the asking of it never was in
+contemplation, and I think I might go further and say that it not only
+never will be asked, but would be rejected if offered. The United
+States will never have occasion, I hope, to ask for the interposition
+of that power, or any other, to establish peace within their own
+territory."
+
+Here is again the same note, always so true and clear, that the United
+States are not colonies but an independent nation. So far as it was in
+the power of the President, this was something which should be heard
+by all men, even at the risk of much reiteration. It was a fact not
+understood at home and not recognized abroad, but Washington proposed
+to insist upon it so far as in him lay, until it was both understood
+and admitted.
+
+Meantime the flames were ever spreading from Paris, consuming and
+threatening to consume the heaped up rubbish of centuries, and also
+burning up many other more valuable things, as is the way with great
+fires when they get beyond control. Many persons were interested in
+the things of worth now threatened with destruction, and many others
+in the rubbish and the tyrannous abuses. It was clear that war of a
+wide and far-reaching kind could not be long put off. In March, 1793,
+Washington wrote: "All our late accounts from Europe hold up the
+expectation of a general war in that quarter. For the sake of
+humanity, I hope such an event will not take place. But if it should,
+I trust that we shall have too just a sense of our own interest to
+originate any cause that may involve us in it."
+
+Even while he wrote, the general war that he anticipated, the war
+between France and England, had come. The news reached him at Mount
+Vernon, and in the letter to Jefferson announcing his immediate
+departure for Philadelphia he said: "War having actually commenced
+between France and Great Britain, it behooves the government of this
+country to use every means in its power to prevent the citizens
+thereof from embroiling us with either of those powers, by endeavoring
+to maintain a strict neutrality. I therefore require that you will
+give the subject mature consideration, that such measures as shall be
+deemed most likely to effect this desirable purpose may be adopted
+without delay." These instructions were written on April 12, and on
+the 18th Washington was in Philadelphia, and had sent out a series
+of questions to be considered by his cabinet and answered on the
+following day. After much discussion, it was unanimously agreed
+to issue a proclamation of neutrality, to receive the new French
+minister, and not to convene Congress in extra session. The remaining
+questions were put over for further consideration.
+
+Hamilton framed the questions, say the historians; Randolph drafted
+the proclamation, says his biographer, in a very instructive and fresh
+discussion of the relations between the Secretary of State and the
+Attorney-General. It is interesting to know what share the President's
+advisers took when he consulted them on this momentous question, but
+the leading idea was his own. When the moment came, the policy long
+meditated and matured was put in force. The world was told that a new
+power had come into being, which meant to hold aloof from Europe,
+and which took no interest in the balance of power or the fate of
+dynasties, but looked only to the welfare of its own people and to the
+conquest and mastery of a continent as its allotted tasks. The policy
+declared by the proclamation was purely American in its conception,
+and severed the colonial tradition at a stroke. In the din then
+prevailing among civilized men, it was but little heeded, and even at
+home it was almost totally misunderstood; yet nevertheless it did
+its work. For twenty-five years afterward the American people slowly
+advanced toward the ground then taken, until the ideas of the
+neutrality proclamation received their final acceptance and extension
+at the hands of the younger Adams, in the promulgation of the Monroe
+doctrine. The shaping of this policy which was then launched was
+a great work of far-sighted and native statesmanship, and it was
+preëminently the work of the President himself.
+
+Moreover, it did not stop here. A circular to the officers of the
+customs provided for securing notice of infractions of the law, and
+the task of enforcing the principles laid down in the proclamation
+began. As it happened, the theory of neutrality was destined at once
+to receive rude tests of its soundness in practice. The new French
+minister was landing on our shores, and beginning his brief career in
+this country, while the proclamation was going from town to town and
+telling the people, in sharp and unaccustomed tones, that they were
+Americans and not colonists, and must govern themselves accordingly.
+
+Everything, in fact, seemed to conspire to make the path of the new
+policy rough and thorny. In the excitement of the time a large portion
+of the population regarded it as a party measure aimed against our
+beloved allies, while, to make the situation worse, France on one
+side and England on the other proceeded, as if deliberately, to do
+everything in their power to render neutrality impossible, and to
+drive us into war with some one.
+
+The new minister, Genet, could not have been better chosen, if the
+special errand for which he had been employed had been to make
+trouble. Light-headed and vain, with but little ability and a vast
+store of unintelligent zeal, the whirl of the French revolution flung
+him on our shores, where he had a glorious chance for mischief. This
+opportunity he at once seized. As soon as he landed he proceeded to
+arm privateers at Charleston. Thence he took his way north, and the
+enthusiastic popular acclaim which everywhere greeted his arrival
+almost crazed him, and drew forth a series of high-flown and most
+injudicious speeches. By the time he reached Philadelphia, and before
+he had presented his credentials, he had induced enough violations of
+neutrality, and sown the seeds of enough trouble, to embarrass our
+government for months to come.
+
+Washington had written to Governor Lee on May 6: "I foresaw in the
+moment information of that event (the war) came to me, the necessity
+for announcing the disposition of this country towards the belligerent
+powers, and the propriety of restraining, as far as a proclamation
+would do it, our citizens from taking part in that contest.... The
+affairs of France would seem to me to be in the highest paroxysm of
+disorder; not so much from the presence of foreign enemies, for in
+the cause of liberty this ought to be fuel to the fire of a patriot
+soldier and to increase his ardor, but because those in whose hands
+the government is intrusted are ready to tear each other to pieces,
+and will more than probably prove the worst foes the country has."
+
+He easily foresaw the moment of trial, when he would be forced to
+the declaration of his policy, which was so momentous for the United
+States, and he also understood the condition of affairs at Paris, and
+the probable tendencies and proximate results of the Revolution. It
+was evident that the great social convulsion had brought forth men of
+genius and force, and had maddened them with the lust of blood and
+power. But it was less easy to foresee, what was equally natural, that
+the revolution would also throw to the surface men who had neither
+genius nor force, but who were as wild and dangerous as their betters.
+No one, surely, could have been prepared to meet in the person of the
+minister of a great nation such a feather-headed mischief-maker as
+Genet.
+
+In everything relating to France Washington had observed the utmost
+caution, and his friendliness had been all the more marked because he
+had felt obliged to be guarded. He had exercised this care even in
+personal matters, and had refrained, so far as possible, from seeing
+the _émigrés_ who had begun to come to this country. Such men as the
+Vicomte de Noailles had been referred to the State Department, and in
+many cases the maintenance of this attitude had tried his feelings
+severely, for the exiles were not infrequently men who had fought or
+sympathized with us in our day of conflict. Now came the new minister
+of the republic, a being apparently devoid of training or manners.
+Before he had been received, or had appeared at the seat of
+government, before he had even taken possession of his predecessor's
+papers, he had behaved in a way which would not have been
+inappropriate to a Roman governor of a conquered province. He had
+ordered the French consuls to act as admiralty courts, he had armed
+cruisers, enlisted and commissioned American citizens, and had seen
+the vessels of a power with which the United States were at peace
+captured in American waters, and condemned in the States by French
+consular courts. Three weeks before Genet's audience Jefferson had a
+memorial from the British minister, justly complaining of the injuries
+done his country under cover of our flag; and while the government was
+considering this pleasant incident, Genet was faring gayly northward,
+fêted and caressed, cheered and applauded, the subject of ovations
+and receptions everywhere. At Philadelphia he was received by a
+great concourse of citizens, called together by the guns of the very
+privateer that had violated our neutrality, and led by provincial
+persons, who thought it fine to name themselves "citizen" Smith and
+"citizen" Brown, because that particular folly was the fashion in
+France. A day was passed in receiving addresses, and then Genet was
+presented to the President.
+
+A stranger contrast could not easily have been found even in that
+strange time, and two men more utterly unlike probably never faced
+each other as representatives of two great nations. In the difference
+between them the philosopher may find, perhaps, some explanation of
+the difference in the character and results of the revolutions which
+came so near together in the two countries. Nothing, moreover, could
+well be conceived more distasteful to Washington than the Frenchman's
+conduct except the Frenchman himself. There was about the man and his
+performances everything most calculated to bring one of those gusts of
+passionate contempt which now and again had made things unpleasant
+for some one who had failed in sense, decency, and duty. This was
+impossible to a President, but nevertheless his self-restraint from
+the beginning to the end of his intercourse with Genet was very
+remarkable in a man of his temperament. At their first interview his
+demeanor may have been a little colder than usual, and the dignified
+reserve somewhat more marked, but there was no trace of any feeling.
+His manner, nevertheless, chilled Genet and came upon him like a
+cold bath after the warm atmosphere of popular plaudits and turgid
+addresses. He went away grumbling, and complained that he had seen
+medallions of the Capets on the walls of the President's room.
+
+But although Washington was calm and polite, he was also watchful and
+prepared, as he had good reason to be, for Genet immediately began,
+in addition to his wild public utterances, to pour in notes upon the
+State Department. He demanded money; he announced in florid style the
+opening of the French ports; he wrote that he was ready to make a
+new treaty; and finally he filed an answer to the complaints of the
+British minister. His arguments were wretched, but they seemed to
+weigh with Jefferson, although not with the President; and meantime
+the dragon's teeth which he had plentifully sown began to come up and
+bear an abundant harvest. More prizes were made by his cruisers, and
+after many remonstrances one was ordered away, and two Americans whom
+Genet had enlisted were indicted. Genet declared that this was an act
+which his pen almost refused to state; but still it was done, and the
+administration pushed on and ordered the seizure of privateers fitting
+in American ports. Governor Clinton made a good beginning with one at
+New York, and in hot haste Genet wrote another note more furious and
+impertinent than any he had yet sent. He was answered civilly, and the
+work of stopping the sale of prizes went on.
+
+Meantime the opposition were not idle. The French sympathizers
+bestirred themselves, and attacks began to be made even on the
+President himself. The popular noise and clamor were all against the
+administration, but the support of it was really growing stronger,
+although the President and his secretaries could not see it.
+Jefferson, on whom the conduct of foreign affairs rested, was uneasy
+and wavering. He wrote able letters, as he was directed, but held, it
+is to be feared, quite different language in his conversations with
+Genet. Randolph argued and hesitated, while Hamilton, backed by Knox,
+was filled with wrath and wished more decisive measures. Still, as we
+look at it now across a century, we can observe that the policy went
+calmly forward, consistent and unchecked. The French minister was held
+back, privateers were stopped, the English minister's complaints were
+answered, every effort was made for exact justice, and neutrality was
+preserved. It was hard and trying work, especially to a man of strong
+temper and fighting propensities. Still it was done, and toward the
+end of June Washington went for a little rest to Mount Vernon.
+
+Then came a sudden explosion. One July morning the rumor ran through
+Philadelphia that the Little Sarah, a prize of the French man-of-war,
+was fitting out as a privateer. The reaction in favor of the
+administration was beginning, and men, indignant at the proceeding,
+carried the news to Governor Mifflin, and also to the Secretary
+of State. Great disturbance of mind thereupon ensued to these two
+gentlemen, who were both much interested in France and the rights of
+man. The brig would not sail before the arrival of the President, said
+the Secretary of State. Still the arming went on apace, and then came
+movements on the part of the governor. Dallas, Secretary of State for
+Pennsylvania, went at midnight to expostulate with Genet, who burst
+into a passion, and declared that the vessel should sail. This
+defiance roused the governor, and a company of militia marched to
+the vessel and took possession. Greatly excited, Jefferson went next
+morning to Genet, who very honestly declined to promise to detain the
+vessel, but said that she would not be ready to sail until Wednesday.
+This announcement, which was distinctly not a promise, the Secretary
+of State chose to accept as such, and as he was very far from being
+a fool, he did so either from timidity, or from a very unworthy
+political preference for another nation's interests to the dignity of
+his own country. At all events, he had the troops withdrawn, and the
+Little Sarah, now rejoicing in the name of the Petit Democrat,
+dropped down to Chester. Hamilton and Knox, being neither afraid nor
+un-American, were for putting a battery on Mud Island and sinking
+the privateer if she attempted to go by. Great saving of trouble and
+bloodshed would have been accomplished by the setting up of this
+battery and the sinking of this vessel, for it would have informed the
+world that though the United States were weak and young, they were
+ready nevertheless to fight as a nation, a fact which we subsequently
+were obliged to prove by a three years' war.
+
+Jefferson, however, opposed decisive measures, and while the cabinet
+wrangled, Washington, hurrying back from Mount Vernon, reached
+Philadelphia. He was full of just anger at what had been done and left
+undone. Jefferson, feeling uneasy, had gone to the country, where he
+was fond of making a retreat at unpleasant moments, and Washington at
+once wrote him a letter, which could not have been very agreeable
+to the discoverer of diplomatic promises in a refusal to give any.
+"What," said the President, "is to be done in the case of the Little
+Sarah, now at Chester? Is the minister of the French Republic to set
+the acts of this government at defiance _with impunity_? and then
+threaten the executive with an appeal to the people? What must the
+world think of such conduct, and of the government of the United
+States in submitting to it?" Then came a demand for an immediate
+opinion.
+
+To the tender feelings of the Secretary of State, who had not been
+considering the affair from an American standpoint, this must have
+seemed a violent and almost a coarse way of treating the "great
+republic," and he replied that the French minister had assured him
+that the vessel would not sail until the President reached a decision.
+Having got the vessel to Chester, however, by telling the truth, Genet
+now changed his tack. He lied about detaining her, and she went to
+sea. This performance filled the cup of Washington's disgust almost to
+overflowing, for he had what Jefferson seems to have totally lost at
+this juncture--a keen national feeling, and it was touched to the
+quick. The truth was, that in all this business Jefferson was thinking
+too much of France and of the cause of human liberty in Paris, while
+Washington thought of the United States alone. The result was
+the escape of the vessel, owing to Washington's absence, and the
+consequent humiliation to the government. To refrain from ordering
+Genet out of the country at once required a strong effort of
+self-control; but he wished to keep the peace as long as possible, and
+he proposed to get rid of him speedily but decorously. He resolved
+also that no more such outrages should be committed through his
+absence, and the consequent differences among his advisers. He
+continued, of course, to consult his cabinet, but he took the
+immediate control, more definitely even than before, into his own
+hands. On July 25 he wrote to Jefferson, whose vigor at this critical
+time he evidently doubted: "As the letter of the minister of the
+Republic of France, dated the 22d of June, lies yet unanswered, and
+as the official conduct of that gentleman, relative to the affairs of
+this government, will have to undergo a very serious consideration,
+... in order to decide upon measures proper to be taken thereupon, it
+is my desire that all the letters to and from that minister may
+be ready to be laid before me, the heads of departments, and the
+attorney-general, whom I shall advise with on the occasion." He also
+saw to it that better precautions should be taken by the officers of
+the customs to prevent similar attempts to break neutrality, and set
+the administration and the laws of the country at defiance.
+
+The cabinet consultations soon bore good fruit, and Genet's recall
+was determined on during the first days of August. There was some
+discussion over the manner of requesting the recall, but the terms
+were made gentle by Jefferson, to the disgust of the Secretary of the
+Treasury and the Secretary of War, who desired direct methods and
+stronger language. As finally toned up and agreed upon by the
+President and cabinet, the document was sufficiently vigorous to annoy
+Genet, and led to bitter reproaches addressed to his friend in the
+State Department. Then there was question about publishing the
+correspondence, and again Jefferson intervened in behalf of mildness.
+The substantive fact, however, was settled, and the letter asking
+Genet's recall, as desired by Washington, went in due time, and in the
+following February came a successor. Genet, however, did not go back
+to his native land, for he preferred to remain here and save his head,
+valueless as that article would seem to have been. He spent the rest
+of his days in America, married, harmless, and quite obscure. His
+noise and fireworks were soon over, and one wonders now how he could
+ever have made as much flare and explosion as he did.
+
+But even while his recall was being decided, before he knew of it
+himself, and long before his successor came, Genet's folly produced
+more trouble than ever, and his insolence rose to a higher pitch. The
+arming of privateers had been checked, but the consuls continued to
+arrogate powers which no self-respecting nation could permit, and for
+some gross offense Washington revoked the _exequatur_ of Duplaine,
+consul at Boston. An insolent note from Genet thereupon declared that
+the President had overstepped his authority, and that he should appeal
+to the sovereign State of Massachusetts. Next there was riot and the
+attempted murder of a man from St. Domingo who was accused by the
+refugees. Then it began to get abroad that Genet had threatened to
+appeal from the President to the people, and frantic denials ensued
+from all the opposition press; whereupon a card appeared from John Jay
+and Rufus King, which stated that they were authority for the story
+and believed it. Apologies now took the place of denial, and were
+backed by ferocious attacks on the signers of the card. Unluckily,
+intelligent people seemed to put faith in Jay and King rather than in
+the opposition newspapers, and the tide, which had turned some time
+before, now ran faster every moment against the French. To make it
+flow with overwhelming force and rapidity was reserved for Genet
+himself, who was furious at the Jay card, and wrote to the President,
+demanding a denial of the statement which it contained. A cool note
+informed him that the President did not consider it proper or material
+to make denials, and pointed out to him that he must address his
+communications to the State Department. This correspondence was
+published, and the mass of the people were at last aroused, and turned
+from Genet in disgust. The leaders tried vainly to separate the
+minister from his country, and Genet himself frothed and foamed,
+demanded that Randolph should sue Jay and King for libel, and declared
+that America was no longer free. This sad statement had little effect.
+Washington had triumphed completely, and without haste but with
+perfect firmness had brought the people round to his side as that of
+the national dignity and honor.
+
+The victory had been won at no little cost to Washington himself in
+the way of self-control. He had been irritated and angered at every
+step, so much so that he even referred in a letter to Richard Henry
+Lee to the trial of temper to which he had been put, a bit of personal
+allusion in which he rarely indulged. "The specimens you have seen,"
+he wrote, "of Mr. Genet's sentiments and conduct in the gazettes form
+a small part only of the aggregate. But you can judge from them to
+what test the temper of the executive has been put in its various
+transactions with this gentleman. It is probable that the whole will
+be exhibited to public view in the course of the next session of
+Congress. Delicacy towards his nation has restrained the doing of
+it hitherto. The best that can be said of this agent is, that he is
+entirely unfit for the mission on which he is employed; unless (which
+I hope is not the case), contrary to the express and unequivocal
+declaration of his country made through himself, it is meant to
+involve ours in all the horrors of a European war."
+
+But there was another side to the neutrality question even more full
+of difficulties and unpopularity, which began to open just as the
+worst of the contests with Genet was being brought to a successful
+close. Genet had not confined his efforts to the seaboard, nor been
+content with civic banquets, privateers, rioting, and insolent notes
+to the government. He had fitted out ships, and he intended also to
+levy armies. With this end in view he had sent his agents through the
+south and west to raise men in order to invade the Floridas on the
+one hand and seize New Orleans on the other. To conceive of such a
+performance by a foreign minister on the soil of the United States,
+requires an effort of the imagination to-day almost equal to that
+which would be necessary for an acceptance of the reality of the
+Arabian nights. It brings home with startling clearness not merely the
+crazy insolence of Genet, but a painful sense of the manner in which
+we were regarded by the nations of Europe. Still worse is the fact
+that they had good reason for their view. The imbecility of the
+confederation had bred contempt, and it was now seen that we were
+still so wholly provincial that a large part of the people was not
+only ready to condone but even to defend the conduct of the minister
+who engaged in such work. Worst of all, the people among whom the
+French agents went received their propositions with much pleasure. In
+South Carolina, where it was said five thousand men had been enlisted,
+there was sufficient self-respect to stop the precious scheme. The
+assembly arrested certain persons and ordered an inquiry, which
+came to nothing; but the effect of their action was sufficient. In
+Kentucky, on the other hand, the authorities would not interfere. The
+people there were always quite ready for a march against New Orleans,
+and that it did not proceed was due to Genet's inability to get money;
+for the governor declined to meddle, and the democratic society of
+Lexington demanded war. Matters looked so serious that the cavalry was
+sent to Kentucky, and the rest of the army wintered in Ohio. It was
+actually necessary to teach the American people by the presence of the
+troops of the United States that they must not enroll themselves in
+the army of a foreign minister.
+
+Nothing can show more strikingly than this the almost inconceivable
+difficulties with which the President was contending. To develop a
+policy of wise and dignified neutrality, and to impress it upon the
+world, was a great enough task in itself. But Washington was obliged
+to impress it also upon his own people, and to teach them that they
+must have a policy of their own toward other nations. He had to carry
+this through in the teeth of an opposition so utterly colonial that
+it could not grasp the idea of having any policy but that which, from
+sympathy or hate, they took from foreigners. Beyond the mountains, he
+had to bring this home to men to whom American nationality was such a
+dead letter that they were willing to defy their own government,
+throw off their allegiance, and enlist for an offensive war under the
+banners of a crazy French Girondist. It is neither easy nor pleasant
+to carry out a new foreign policy in time of general war, with one's
+own people united in its support; but when the foreign divisions are
+repeated at home, the task is enhanced in difficulty a thousand-fold.
+Nevertheless, there was the work to do, and the President faced it. He
+dealt with Genet, he prevailed in public opinion on the seaboard, and
+in some fashion he maintained order west of the mountains.
+
+Washington also saw, as we can see now very plainly, that, wrong and
+unpatriotic as the Kentucky attitude was, there was still an excuse
+for it. Those bold pioneers, to whom the country owes so much, had
+very substantial grievances. They knew nothing of the laws of nations,
+and did not yet realize that they had a country and a nationality; but
+they had the instincts of all great conquering races. They looked upon
+the Mississippi and felt that it was of right theirs, and that it must
+belong to the vast empire which they were winning from the wilderness.
+They saw the mighty river held and controlled by Spaniards, and they
+were harassed and interfered with by Spanish officials, whom they both
+hated and despised. To men of their mould and training there was but
+one solution conceivable. They must fight the Spaniard, and drive him
+from the land forever. Their purposes were quite right, but their
+methods were faulty. Washington, born to a life of adventure and
+backwoods conquest, had a good deal of real sympathy with these men,
+for he knew them to be in the main right, and his ultimate purposes
+were the same as theirs. But he had a nation in his charge to whom
+peace was precious. To have the backwoodsmen of Kentucky go down the
+river and harry the Spaniards out of the country, as their descendants
+afterwards harried the Mexicans out of Texas, would have been a
+refreshing sight, but it would have interfered sadly with the nation
+which was rising on the Atlantic seaboard, and of which Kentucky was a
+part. War was to be avoided, and above all a war into which we should
+have been dragged as the vassal of France; so Washington intended to
+wait, and he managed to make the Kentuckians wait too, a process by no
+means agreeable to that enterprising people.
+
+His own policy about the Mississippi, which has already been
+described, never wavered. He meant to have the great river, for his
+ideas of the empire of the future were quite as extended as those of
+the pioneers, and much more definite, but his way of getting it was
+to build up the Atlantic States and bind them, with their established
+resources, to the settlers over the mountains. This done, time would
+do the rest; and the sequel showed that he was right. A little more
+than a year after he came to the presidency he wrote to Lafayette:
+"Gradually recovering from the distresses in which the war left us,
+patiently advancing in our task of civil government, unentangled in
+the crooked politics of Europe, _wanting scarcely anything but the
+free navigation of the Mississippi, which we must have, and as
+certainly shall have, if we remain a nation_,"[1] etc.
+
+[Footnote 1: The italics are mine.]
+
+Time and peace, sufficient for the up-building of the nation, that is
+the theme everywhere. Yet he knew that a sacrifice of everything for
+peace was the surest road both to war and ruin. Peace must be kept;
+yet war was still the last resort, and he was ready to go to war with
+the Spaniards, as with the Indians, if all else failed. But he did
+not mean to have all else fail, nor did he mean to submit to Spanish
+insolence and exactions. The grievances of the pioneers of the West
+were to be removed, if possible, by treaty, and if that way was
+impossible, then by fighting.
+
+Carmichael, who had been minister at Madrid under the confederation,
+had been continued there by the new government. But while the
+intrigues of Spain to detach Kentucky, and the interference and
+exactions of Spanish officials, went on, our negotiation for the
+settlement of our rights to the navigation of the Mississippi halted.
+Tired of this inaction, Washington, late in 1791, united William
+Short, our minister to Holland, in a commission with Carmichael, to
+open a fresh and special negotiation as to the Mississippi, and at
+the same time a confidential agent was sent to Florida to seek some
+arrangements with the governor as to fugitive slaves, a matter of
+burning interest to the planters on the border. The joint commission
+bore no fruit, and the troubles in the West increased. Fostered by
+Genet, they came near bringing on war and detaching the western
+settlements from the Union, so that it was clearly necessary to take
+more vigorous measures.
+
+Accordingly, in 1794, after Genet had been dismissed, Washington sent
+Thomas Pinckney, who for some years had been minister in London, on
+a special treaty-making mission to Madrid. The first results were
+vexatious and unpromising enough, and Pinckney wrote at the outset
+that he had had two interviews with the Duke de Alcudia, but to no
+purpose. It was the old game of delay, he said, with inquiries as to
+why we had not replied to propositions, which in fact never had been
+made. Even what Pinckney wrote, unsatisfactory as it was, could not be
+wholly made out, for some passages were in a cipher to which the State
+Department had no key. Washington wrote to Pickering, then acting as
+Secretary of State: "A kind of fatality seems to have pursued this
+negotiation, and, in short, all our concerns with Spain, from the
+appointment of Mr. Carmichael, under the new government, as minister
+to that country, to the present day.... Enough, however, appears
+already to show the temper and policy of the Spanish court, and its
+undignified conduct as it respects themselves, and insulting as it
+relates to us; and I fear it will prove that the late treaty of peace
+with France portends nothing favorable to these United States."
+Washington's patience had been sorely tried by the delays and shifty
+evasions of Spain, but he was now on the brink of success, just as he
+concluded that negotiation was hopeless.
+
+He had made a good choice in Thomas Pinckney, better even than he
+knew. Triumphing over all obstacles, with persistence, boldness, and
+good management, Pinckney made a treaty and brought it home with him.
+Still more remarkable was the fact that it was an extremely good
+treaty, and conceded all we asked. By it the Florida boundary was
+settled, and the free navigation of the Mississippi was obtained. We
+also gained the right to a place of deposit at New Orleans, a pledge
+to leave the Indians alone, a commercial agreement modeled on that
+with France, and a board of arbitration to settle American claims.
+All this Pinckney obtained, not as the representative of a great and
+powerful state, but as the envoy of a new nation, distant, unknown,
+disliked, and embroiled in various complications with other powers.
+Our history can show very few diplomatic achievements to be compared
+with this, for it was brilliant in execution, and complete and
+valuable in result. Yet it has passed into history almost unnoticed,
+and both the treaty and its maker have been singularly and most
+unjustly neglected. Even the accurate and painstaking Hildreth omits
+the date and circumstances of Pinckney's appointment, while the last
+elaborate history of the United States scarcely alludes to the matter,
+and finds no place in its index for the name of its author. It was
+in fact one of the best pieces of work done during Washington's
+administration, and perfected its policy on a most difficult and
+essential point. It is high time that justice were done to the gallant
+soldier and accomplished diplomatist who conducted the negotiation and
+rendered such a solid service to his country. Thomas Pinckney, who
+really did something, who did work worth doing and without many words,
+has been forgotten, while many of his contemporaries, who simply made
+a noise, are freshly remembered in the pages of history.
+
+There was, however, another nation out on our western and northern
+border more difficult to deal with than Spain; and in this quarter
+there was less evasion and delay, but more arrogance and bad temper.
+It was to England that Washington turned first when he took up the
+presidency, and it was in her control of the western posts and her
+influence among the Indian tribes that he saw the greatest dangers
+to the continental movement of our people. Morris, as we have seen,
+sounded the British government with but little success. Still they
+promised to send a minister, and in due time Mr. George Hammond
+arrived in that capacity, and opened a long and somewhat fruitless
+correspondence with the Secretary of State on the various matters of
+difference existing between the two countries. This interchange of
+letters went on peaceably and somewhat monotonously for many months,
+and then suddenly became very vivid and animated. This was the effect
+of the arrival of Genet; and at this point begins the long series of
+mistakes made by Great Britain in her dealings with the United States.
+
+The principle of the declaration of neutrality could be easily upheld
+on broad political grounds, but technically its defense was by no
+means so simple. By the treaty of commerce with France we were bound
+to admit her privateers and prizes to our ports; and here, as any one
+could see, and as the sequel amply proved, was a fertile source of
+dangerous complications. Then by the treaty of alliance we guaranteed
+to France her West Indian possessions, binding ourselves to aid her
+in their defense; and a proclamation of neutrality when France was
+actually at war with a great naval power was an immediate and obvious
+limitation upon this guarantee. Hamilton argued that while France had
+an undoubted right to change her government, the treaty applied to a
+totally different state of affairs, and was therefore in suspense. He
+also argued that we were not bound in case of offensive war, and that
+this war was offensive. Jefferson and Randolph held that the treaties
+were as binding and as much in force now as they had ever been; but
+they both assented to the proclamation of neutrality. There can be
+little question that on the general legal principle Jefferson and
+Randolph were right. Hamilton's argument was ingenious and very
+fine-spun. But when he made the point about the character of the war
+as relieving us from the guarantee, he was unanswerable; and this of
+itself was a sufficient ground. He went beyond it in order to make his
+reasoning fit existing conditions consistently and throughout, and
+then it was that his position became untenable. In reality the French
+revolution was showing itself so wholly abnormal and was so rapid in
+its changes, that as a matter of practical statesmanship it was
+worse than idle even to suppose that previous treaties, made with an
+established government, were in force with this ever-shifting thing
+which the revolution had brought forth. Still the general doctrine as
+to the binding force of treaties remained unaltered, and this conflict
+between fact and principle was what constituted the great difficulty
+in the way of Washington and Hamilton. The latter met it with one
+clever and adroit argument which it was difficult to sustain, and
+avoided it with a second, which was narrower, but at the same time
+sound and all-sufficient, as to the character of the war. Jefferson
+and Randolph stood by the general principle, but abandoned it in
+practice under pressure of imperious facts, as men generally do, while
+France herself soon removed all technical difficulties by abrogating
+by her measures the treaty of commerce, an act which relieved us of
+any further obligations and justified Hamilton's position. But in
+the beginning this was not known, and yet action was none the less
+necessary.
+
+The result was right, and Washington had his way, which it must be
+confessed he had fully determined on before his cabinet supplied him
+with technical arguments.
+
+All these points must have been plain enough to Hammond and the
+English ministry. They could not see the full scope of the neutrality
+policy in its national meaning, and they very naturally failed to
+perceive that it marked the rise of a new power wholly disconnected
+from Europe, to which their own views were confined. But they were
+quite able to understand the immediate aspect of the case. They saw
+Washington adopt and carry out a policy of dignified impartiality;
+they were well able to value rightly the technical objections which
+stood in his path, and they could see also that this policy was at the
+outset very unpopular in America. The remembrance of old injuries and
+of the war for independence was still fresh, and the hatred of England
+was well nigh universal in the United States. On the other hand, a
+lively sense of gratitude to France, and a sympathy with the objects
+of the revolution, made affection for that country uniform and
+general. The easy and popular course was for our government to range
+itself more or less directly with the French, and the refusal to do so
+was bold and in the highest degree creditable to the administration.
+It was, moreover, an important advantage to England that the United
+States should not ally themselves with her enemy, for next to herself,
+the Americans were the great seafaring people of the world, and were
+in a position to ravage her commerce, and, aided by France, to break
+up her West Indian possessions. If the United States had followed the
+natural prejudices of the time and had espoused the cause of France,
+it would have been wise and right for England to attack them and break
+them down if possible. But when, from a sense of national dignity and
+of fair dealing, the United States stood apart from the conflict
+and placed their former foe on the same footing as their friend and
+ancient ally, a very small allowance of good sense would have led
+the British ministry to encourage them in so doing. By favorable
+treatment, and by a friendly and conciliatory policy, they should have
+helped Washington in his struggle against popular prejudices, and
+endeavored by so doing to keep the United States neutral, and
+lead them, if possible, to their side; but with a fatuity almost
+incomprehensible they pursued an almost exactly opposite course. By
+similar conduct England had brought on the war for independence, which
+ended in the division of her empire. In precisely the same way she now
+proceeded to make it as arduous as possible for Washington to maintain
+neutrality, and thereby played directly into the hands of the party
+that supported France. The true policy demanded no sacrifices on the
+part of Great Britain. Civility and consideration in her dealings,
+and a careful abstention from wanton aggression and insult, were
+all-sufficient. But England disliked us, as was quite natural; she did
+not wish us to thrive and prosper, and she knew that we were weak and
+not in a position to enter upon an offensive war.
+
+As soon as it became known that Genet's privateers, manned by seamen
+enlisted in our ports, were preying on British commerce, and that the
+French man-of-war L'Ambuscade had taken an English vessel, The Grange,
+within the capes of the Delaware, Hammond filed a memorial in regard
+to these incidents. In so doing he was of course quite right, and the
+government responded immediately, and proceeded in good faith to make
+every effort to repair these breaches of neutrality, and to redress
+the wrongs suffered by Great Britain. Hammond, however, instead of
+doing all in his power, not merely to gain his own ends, but to
+make it easy for our government to satisfy him, assumed at once a
+disagreeable tone with a strong flavor of bullying, which was not
+calculated to conciliate the statesmen with whom he was dealing. It
+was a small matter enough, but unfortunately it was an indication of
+what was to come.
+
+On November 6, 1793, a British order in council was passed, but not
+immediately published, directing the seizure of all vessels carrying
+the produce of the French islands, or loaded with provisions for the
+use of the French colonies. The object of the order was to destroy all
+neutral trade, and it was aimed particularly at the commerce of the
+United States. The moment selected for its adoption was when the
+troubles with Genet had culminated, when we were on the point of
+getting rid of that very objectionable person, and when we had proved
+that we meant to maintain an honest and a real neutrality. It was as
+well calculated as any move could have been to drive us back into the
+arms of France, yet the manner of executing the order was far worse
+than the order itself. Our merchantmen and traders had been quick to
+take advantage of the opening of the French ports, and they had gone
+in swarms to the French islands. Now, without a word of warning, their
+vessels were seized by the cruisers of a nation with which we were
+supposed to be at peace. Every petty governor of an English island sat
+as a judge in admiralty. Many of them were corrupt, all were unfit for
+the duty, and our vessels were condemned and pillaged. The crews were
+made prisoners, and in many cases thrown into loathsome and unhealthy
+places of confinement, while the ships were left to rot in the
+harbors. The tale of the outrages and miseries thus inflicted on
+citizens of the United States without any warning, and by a nation
+considered to be at peace with us, fills an American with shame and
+anger even to-day. If our people remonstrated, they were told that
+England meant to have no neutrals, and that six of their frigates
+could blockade our coast. A course of kind treatment would have made
+us the friends of Great Britain, but the experiment was not even
+tried. The truth was that we were weak, and this was not only a
+misfortune but apparently an unpardonable sin. England could not
+conquer us, but she could harry our coasts, and let loose her Indians
+on our borders; and we had no navy with which to retaliate. She meant
+that there should be no neutrals, and so adopted a policy which would
+make us the active ally of France. It was no answer to say, what was
+perfectly true, that French privateers preyed upon our commerce with
+that fine indifference to rights and treaties which characterized
+the governments of the Revolution. If both sides maltreated us, the
+natural course was to unite with the power to which we at least owed a
+debt of gratitude.
+
+About the same time a speech was reported from Quebec, in which Lord
+Dorchester told the Indians that they should soon take the war-path
+for England against the United States. Lord Grenville denied in
+Parliament, and subsequently to Jay, that the ministry had ever taken
+any step to incite the Indians against the United States, and the
+authenticity of Lord Dorchester's utterances has been questioned in
+later days; but it was not disavowed at the time, even by Hammond in
+a sharp correspondence which he held on that and other topics with
+Randolph. The speech, as is now known and proved, was probably made,
+whether it was authorized or not, and it was universally accepted at
+the moment as both true and authoritative.
+
+This menace of desolating savage war in the West, in addition to the
+unquestioned outrages to our seamen, the loss of our ships, and the
+destruction of our commerce, with consequent ruin to all our seaboard
+towns, led to a general outburst of indignation from men of all
+parties, and Congress began to prepare for war. Many of the methods
+suggested were feeble and inadequate, but there could be no doubt of
+either the spirit or intentions which dictated them. News that an
+order of January 8, 1794, modified that of November 6, and confined
+the seizure to vessels carrying French property, and reports that
+some of our vessels were being restored, moderated the movements of
+Congress, but it was nevertheless evident that a resolution cutting
+off commercial intercourse with Great Britain would soon pass. In the
+existing state of things such a step in all probability meant war, and
+Washington was thus brought face to face with the most serious problem
+of his administration. It did not take him unawares, nor find him
+unprepared, for he had anticipated the situation, and his mind was
+made up. He had no intention of letting the country drift into war
+without a great effort to prevent it, and the time for that effort had
+now come. As in the case of Spain, he was resolved to send a special
+envoy to make a treaty. His first choice for this important mission
+was Hamilton, which, like most of his selections, would have been
+the best choice that could have been made. Hamilton, however, was so
+conspicuous as the great leader of the party which supported both the
+foreign and domestic policy of the administration, and he was so hated
+by the opposition, that a loud outcry was at once raised against his
+appointment. At that particular juncture it was very important that
+the envoy should depart with as much general good-will and public
+confidence as possible, so Hamilton sacrificed himself to this
+necessity, and withdrew his name voluntarily. His withdrawal was a
+mistake, but it was a wholly natural one under the circumstances.
+Washington then made the next best choice, and appointed John Jay,
+who was a man of most spotless character, honorable, high-minded, and
+skilled in public affairs. He was chief justice of the United States,
+and that fact gave additional weight to the mission. The only point in
+which he fell behind Hamilton was in aggressiveness of character, and
+this negotiation demanded, not merely firmness and tact, which Jay
+had in abundance, but a boldness verging on audacity. The immediate
+purpose, however, was answered, and Jay set forth on his journey with
+much good feeling toward himself, and with a very solemn sense among
+the people of the gravity of his undertaking. Washington himself saw
+Jay depart with many misgivings, and the act of sending such a mission
+at all was very trying to him, for the conduct of England galled him
+to the quick. He had long suspected Great Britain, as well as Spain,
+of inciting the Indians secretly to assail our settlements, and
+knowing as he did the character of savage warfare, and feeling deeply
+the bloodshed and expense of our Indian wars, he cherished a profound
+dislike for those who could be capable of promoting such misery to the
+injury of a friendly and-civilized nation. As England became more and
+more hostile, he made up his mind that she was bent on attacking us,
+and in March, 1794, he wrote to Governor Clinton that he had no doubts
+as to the authenticity of Lord Dorchester's speech, and that he
+believed England intended war. He therefore urged the governor to
+inquire carefully into the state of feeling in Canada, and as to the
+military strength of the country, especially on the border. He put no
+trust in the disclaimers of the ministry when he saw the long familiar
+signs of hostile intrigue among the Indians, and he was quite
+determined that, if war should come, all the suffering should not be
+on one side.
+
+This belief in the coming of war, however, only strengthened him in
+his well-matured plans to leave nothing undone to prevent it. It was
+in this spirit that he despatched the special mission, although his
+first letter to Jay shows that he had no very strong hopes of peace,
+and that his uppermost thoughts were of the wrongs which had been
+perpetrated, and of the perils which hung over the border. He did not
+wish the commissioner to mince matters at all. "There does not remain
+a doubt," he wrote, "in the mind of any well-informed person in this
+country, not shut against conviction, that all the difficulties we
+encounter with the Indians, their hostilities, the murder of helpless
+women and innocent children along our frontiers, result from the
+conduct of the agents of Great Britain in this country.... Can it
+be expected, I ask, so long as these things are known in the United
+States, or at least firmly believed, and suffered with impunity by
+Great Britain, that there ever will or can be any cordiality between
+the two countries? I answer, No. And I will undertake, without the
+gift of prophecy, to predict that it will be impossible to keep this
+country in a state of amity with Great Britain long, if the posts are
+not surrendered. A knowledge of these being my sentiments would have
+little weight, I am persuaded, with the British administration, and
+perhaps not with the nation, in effecting the measure; but both may
+rest satisfied that, if they want to be in peace with this country,
+and to enjoy the benefits of its trade, to give up the posts is the
+only road to it. Withholding them, and the consequences we feel at
+present continuing, war will be inevitable."
+
+Jay meantime had been well received in England. Lord Grenville
+expressed the most friendly feelings, and every desire that the
+negotiation might succeed. Jay was also received at court, where he
+was said to have kissed the queen's hand, a crime, so the opposition
+declared, for which his lips ought to have been blistered to the bone,
+a difficult and by no means common form of punishment. Receptions,
+dinner parties, and a ready welcome everywhere, did not, however,
+make a treaty. When it came to business, the English did not differ
+materially from their neighbors whom Canning satirized.
+
+ "The fault of the Dutch
+ Is giving too little and asking too much."
+
+So the Americans now found it with Lord Grenville. There were many
+subjects of dispute, some dangerous, and all requiring settlement for
+the benefit of both countries. Boundaries, negro claims, and British
+debts were easily disposed of by reference to boards of arbitration.
+Two others, awkward and threatening, but not immediately pressing,
+were the impressment of British seamen, real or pretended, from
+American ships, and the exclusion of American vessels from the trade
+of the British West Indies. The latter circumstance was no doubt
+disagreeable to us, and deprived us of profit; but it is difficult to
+see what right we had to complain of it, for the ports of the British
+West Indies belonged to Great Britain, and if she chose to close
+them to us, or anybody else, she was quite within her rights. At all
+events, Lord Grenville declined to let us in, except in a very limited
+way and under most onerous conditions. The right of search and the
+right of impressment were simply the rights of the powerful over the
+weak. England wanted to get seamen where she could for her navy; and
+so long as she could violate our flag and carry off as recruits any
+able-bodied seaman who spoke English, she meant to do it. It was worse
+than idle to negotiate about it. When we should be ready and willing
+to fight we could settle that question, but not before. In due time we
+were ready to fight. England defeated us in various battles, ravaged
+our coasts, and burned our capital; while we whipped her frigates
+and lake flotillas, and repulsed her Peninsula veterans with heavy
+slaughter at New Orleans. Impressment was not mentioned in the treaty
+which concluded that war, but it ended at that time. The English are a
+brave and combative people, but rather than get into wars with nations
+that will fight, and fight hard, they will desist from wanton and
+illegal aggressions, in which they do not differ greatly from the rest
+of mankind; and so the practical abandonment of impressment came with
+the war of 1812. The fact was officially stated by Webster, not many
+years later, when he announced that the flag covered and protected all
+those who lived or traded under it.
+
+But in 1794 impressment was a negotiable question, because we were not
+ready to go to war about it then and there. So Jay, wisely enough,
+allowed this especial from of bullying to drift aside, along with the
+exclusion from the West India trade, and addressed himself to the
+two points which it was essential to have settled at that particular
+moment. These questions were: the retention of the western posts, and
+neutral rights at sea. In return for the agreement on our part to pay
+the British debts, as determined by arbitration, England agreed
+to surrender the posts on June 1, 1796. There was to be mutual
+reciprocity in inland trade on the North American continent; but
+coastwise, while we opened all our harbors and rivers to the British,
+they shut us out from theirs in the colonies and the territory of the
+Hudson's Bay Company. In the eighteen articles, limited in duration
+to two years after the conclusion of the existing war, a treaty of
+commerce was practically formed and neutral rights dealt with. We were
+to be admitted to British ports in Europe and the East Indies on terms
+of equality with British vessels, but we were refused admission to the
+East Indian coasting trade, and to that between East India and Europe.
+We gained the right to trade to the West Indies, but only on condition
+that we should give up the transportation from America to Europe of
+any of the principal products of the colonies. These were enumerated,
+and besides sugar, molasses, coffee, and cocoa, included cotton, which
+had just become an export from the southern States, and which already
+promised to assume the importance that it afterwards reached. The
+vexed questions of privateers, prizes, and contraband of war were also
+settled and determined.
+
+The treaty as a whole was not a very brilliant one for the United
+States, but its treatment was far worse than its deserts, and it was
+received with such a universal outburst of indignation that even to
+this day it has never freed itself from the bad name it then acquired.
+Nobody, not even its supporters, liked it, and yet it may be doubted
+whether anything materially better was possible at the time. The
+admirers of Hamilton, from that day to this, have believed that if
+he had been sent, his boldness, ability, and force would have wrung
+better terms from England. This is not at all improbable; but that
+they would have been materially improved, even by Hamilton, does not
+seem very likely. The treaty, in reality, was by no means bad; on the
+contrary, it had many good points. It disposed satisfactorily and
+fairly of all the minor questions which were vexatious and threatening
+to the peaceful relation of the two countries. It settled the British
+debts, gave us the western posts, which was a matter of the utmost
+importance, and arranged the disputed and thorny question of neutral
+rights, for the time being at least. It left impressment totally
+unsettled, simply because we were still too weak to be ready to fight
+England profitably on that theme. It opened to us the West Indian
+ports, which was the matter most nearly affecting our interests and
+our pockets, but it did so under limitations and concessions which
+were excessive and even humiliating. We were obliged to pay a price
+far too high for this coveted privilege, and it was on this point that
+the controversy finally hinged.
+
+The treaty reached Philadelphia on March 7. Nothing was said of its
+arrival, which does not seem to have been known to any one but the
+President and Randolph, who had meantime succeeded Jefferson as
+Secretary of State. Three months later, on June 8, the Senate was
+called together in special session, and the treaty was laid before
+them. Washington did not like it and never changed his feeling in that
+respect, but he had made up his mind upon full reflection to accept
+it; and the Senate, after most careful consideration, voted by exactly
+the necessary two thirds to ratify it, provided that the objectionable
+West Indian article could be modified. On no terms could we consent to
+forego the exportation of cotton, and it is difficult to see how
+the Senate could have taken any other ground upon this point. Their
+action, however, opened some delicate questions. Washington wrote to
+Randolph: "First, is or is not that resolution intended to be the
+final act of the Senate; or do they expect that the new article which
+is proposed shall be submitted to them before the treaty takes effect?
+Secondly, does or does not the Constitution permit the President to
+ratify the treaty, without submitting the new article, after it shall
+be agreed to by the British King, to the Senate for their further
+advice and consent?"
+
+These questions were carefully considered, and Washington had made
+up his mind to ratify conditionally on the modification of the West
+Indian article, when news arrived which caused him to suspend action.
+England, having made the treaty, and before any news could have been
+received of our attitude in regard to it, took steps to render its
+ratification both difficult and offensive, if not impossible. The mode
+adopted was to renew the "provision order," as it was called, which
+directed the seizure of all vessels carrying food products to France,
+and thus give to the Jay treaty the interpretation it was designed to
+avoid, that provisions could be declared contraband at the pleasure of
+one of the belligerents. It was a stupid thing to do, for if England
+desired to have peace with us, as her making the treaty indicated,
+she should not have renewed the most irritating of all her past
+performances before we had had opportunity even to sign and ratify.
+Washington, on hearing of this move, withheld his signature, bade
+Randolph prepare a strong memorial against the provision order, and
+then betook himself to Mount Vernon on some urgent private business.
+
+Before he started, however, the storm of popular rage had begun to
+break. Bache had the substance of the treaty in the "Aurora" on June
+29, and Mr. Stevens Thomson Mason, senator from Virginia, was so
+pained by some slight inaccuracies in this version that he wrote Mr.
+Bache a note, and sent him a copy of the treaty despite the injunction
+of secrecy by which he as a senator was bound. Mr. Mason gained great
+present glory by this frank breach of promise, and curiously enough
+this single discreditable act is the only thing that keeps his name
+and memory alive in history. All that he achieved at the moment was to
+hurry the inevitable disclosure of the contents of a treaty which no
+one desired to conceal, except in deference to official form. Mason's
+note and copy of the treaty, made up into a pamphlet, were issued
+from Bache's press on July 2, and hundreds of copies were soon being
+carried by eager riders north and south throughout the Union.
+
+Everywhere, as the treaty traveled, the popular wrath was kindled. The
+first explosion came in Boston, Federalist Boston, devoted beyond any
+other town in the country to Washington and his administration. There
+was a town meeting in Faneuil Hall, violent speeches were made, and a
+committee was appointed to draw up a memorial to the President against
+ratification. This remonstrance was despatched at once by special
+messenger, who seemed to carry the torch of Malise instead of a set of
+dry resolutions. Everywhere the anger and indignation flamed forth.
+The ground had been carefully prepared, for, ever since Jay sailed,
+the partisans of the French had been denouncing him and his mission,
+predicting failure, and, in one case at least, burning him in effigy
+before it was known whether he had done anything at all. As soon as
+the news spread that the treaty had actually arrived, the attacks
+were multiplied in number and grew ever more bitter as the Senate
+consulted. The popular mind was so worked up that in Boston a British
+vessel had been burned on suspicion that she was a privateer, while in
+New York there had been street fights and rioting because of an insult
+to a French flag. In such a state of feeling, artificially stimulated
+and ingeniously misled, the most brilliant diplomatic triumph would
+have had but slight chance of approval. Jay's moderate achievement
+was better than his enemies expected, but it was sufficient for their
+purpose, and the popular fury blazed up and ran through the country,
+like a whirlwind of fire over the parched prairie. Everywhere the
+example of Boston was followed, meetings were held, committees
+appointed, and memorials against the treaty sent to the President. In
+New York Hamilton was stoned when he attempted to speak in favor of
+ratification; and less illustrious persons, who ventured to differ
+from the crowd, were ducked and otherwise maltreated. Jay was hanged
+and burned in effigy in every way that imagination could devise,
+and copies of his treaty suffered the same fate at the hands of the
+hangman. Feeling ran highest in the larger towns where there was a
+mob, but even some of the smaller places and those most Federal in
+their politics were carried away. The excitement seems also to have
+been confined for the most part to the seaboard, but after all that
+was where the bulk of the population lived. The crowd, moreover,
+was not led by obscure agitators or by violent and irresponsible
+partisans. The Livingstons in New York, Rodney in Delaware, Gadsden
+and the Rutledges in South Carolina, were some of the men who guided
+the meetings and denounced the treaty. On the other hand, the friends
+and supporters of the administration appeared stunned, and for weeks
+no opposition to the popular movement except that attempted by
+Hamilton was apparent. Even the administration was divided, for
+Randolph was as hostile to the treaty as it was possible for a man of
+his temperament to be.
+
+The crisis was indeed a serious one. There have been worse in our
+history, but this was one of the gravest; and never did a President
+stand, so far as any one could see, so utterly alone. With his own
+party silenced and even divided, with the opposition rampant, and with
+popular excitement at fever heat, Washington was left to take his
+course alone and unsupported. It was the severest trial of his
+political life, but he met it, as he met the reverses of 1776,
+calmly and without flinching. He was always glad to have advice and
+suggestions. No man ever sought them or benefited from them more
+than he; yet no man ever lived so little dependent on others and so
+perfectly capable of standing alone as Washington. After the Senate
+had acted, he made up his mind to conditional ratification. He
+withheld his signature on hearing of the provision order, and was
+ready to sign as soon as that order was withdrawn. Whether he would
+make its withdrawal another condition of his signature he had not
+determined when he left Philadelphia for Mount Vernon, and on his
+arrival he wrote to Randolph: "The conditional ratification (if the
+late order, which we have heard of, respecting provision vessels
+is not in operation) may, on all fit occasions, be spoken of as my
+determination. Unless, from anything you have heard or met with since
+I left you, it should be thought more advisable to communicate further
+with me on the subject, my opinion respecting the treaty is the same
+now that it was, namely, not favorable to it; but that it is better
+to ratify it in the manner the Senate have advised, and with the
+reservation already mentioned, than to suffer matters to remain as
+they are, unsettled." He had already received the Boston resolutions,
+and had sent them to his cabinet for their consideration. He did not
+for a moment underrate their importance, and he saw that they were
+the harbingers of others of like character, although he could not yet
+estimate the full violence of the storm of popular disapprobation. On
+July 28 he sent his answer to the selectmen of Boston, and it is such
+an important paper that it must be given in full. It was as follows:--
+
+ UNITED STATES, _28th of July_, 1795.
+
+ GENTLEMEN: In every act of my administration I have sought the
+ happiness of my fellow-citizens. My system for the attainment of
+ this object has uniformly been to overlook all personal, local,
+ and partial considerations; to contemplate the United States
+ as one great whole; to confide that sudden impressions, and
+ erroneous, would yield to candid reflections; and to consult only
+ the substantial and permanent interests of our country.
+
+ Nor have I departed from this line of conduct on the occasion
+ which has produced the resolutions contained in your letter of the
+ 13th inst.
+
+ Without a predilection for my own judgment, I have weighed with
+ attention every argument which has at any time been brought into
+ view. But the Constitution is the guide which I never can abandon.
+ It has assigned to the President the power of making treaties with
+ the advice and consent of the Senate. It was doubtless supposed
+ that these two branches of government would combine, without
+ passion and with the best means of information, those facts and
+ principles upon which the success of our foreign relations will
+ always depend; that they ought not to substitute for their own
+ convictions the opinions of others, or to seek truth through any
+ channel but that of a temperate and well-informed investigation.
+
+ Under this persuasion, I have resolved on the manner of executing
+ the duty before me. To the high responsibility attached to it, I
+ fully submit; and you, gentlemen, are at liberty to make these
+ sentiments known as the grounds of my procedure. While I feel the
+ most lively gratitude for the many instances of approbation from
+ my country, I can no otherwise deserve it than by obeying the
+ dictates of my conscience. With due respect, I am, etc.
+
+It will be noticed that this letter is dated "The United States, 28th
+of July," which is, I think, the only instance of the sort to be found
+in his letters. In all his vast correspondence there possibly may be
+other cases in which he used this method of dating, but one cannot
+help feeling that on this occasion at least it had a particular
+significance. It was not George Washington writing from Mount Vernon,
+but the President, who represented the whole country, pointing out
+to the people of Boston that the day of small things and of local
+considerations had gone by. This letter served also as a model for
+many others. The Boston address had a multitude of successors, and
+they were all answered in the same strain. Washington was not a man to
+underrate popular feeling, for he knew that the strongest bulwark of
+the government was in sound public opinion. On the other hand, he
+was one of the rare men who could distinguish between a temporary
+excitement, no matter how universal, and an abiding sentiment. In this
+case he quietly resisted the noisy popular demand, believing that the
+sober second thought of the people would surely be with him; but at
+the same time the outcry against the treaty, while it could not make
+him waver in his determination to do what he believed to be right,
+caused him deep anxiety. The day after he sent his answer to Boston he
+wrote to Randolph:--
+
+ "I view the opposition which the treaty is receiving from the
+ meetings in different parts of the Union in a very serious light;
+ not because there is more weight in any of the objections which
+ are made to it than was foreseen at first, for there is none in
+ some of them, and gross misrepresentations in others; nor as it
+ respects myself personally, for this shall have no influence on
+ my conduct, plainly perceiving, and I am accordingly preparing my
+ mind for it, the obloquy which disappointment and malice are
+ collecting to heap upon me. But I am alarmed at the effect it may
+ have on and the advantage the French government may be disposed to
+ make of, the spirit which is at work to cherish a belief in them
+ that the treaty is calculated to favor Great Britain at their
+ expense.... To sum the whole up in a few words I have never,
+ since I have been in the administration of the government,
+ a crisis, which, in my judgment, has been so pregnant with
+ interesting events, nor one from which more is to be apprehended,
+ whether viewed on one side or the other."
+
+He already felt that it might be necessary for him to return to
+Philadelphia at any moment; and, writing to Randolph to this effect
+two days later, he said:--
+
+ "To be wise and temperate, as well as firm, the present crisis
+ most eminently calls for. There is too much reason to believe,
+ from the pains which have been taken before, at, and since the
+ advice of the Senate respecting the treaty, that the prejudices
+ against it are more extensive than is generally imagined. This I
+ have lately understood to be the case in this quarter from men who
+ are of no party, but well-disposed to the present administration.
+ Nor should it be otherwise, when no stone has been left unturned
+ that could impress on the minds of the people the most arrant
+ misrepresentation of facts; that their rights have not only been
+ _neglected_, but absolutely _sold_; that there are no reciprocal
+ advantages in the treaty; that the benefits are all on the side of
+ Great Britain; and, what seems to have had more weight with them
+ than all the rest, and to have been most pressed, that the treaty
+ is made with the design to oppress the French, in open violation
+ of our treaty with that nation, and contrary, too, to every
+ principle of gratitude and sound policy. In time, when passion
+ shall have yielded to sober reason, the current may possibly turn;
+ but, in the mean while, this government, in relation to France and
+ England, may be compared to a ship between the rocks of Scylla and
+ Charybdis. If the treaty is ratified, partisans of the French, or
+ rather of war and confusion, will excite them to hostile measures,
+ or at least to unfriendly sentiments; if it is not, there is no
+ foreseeing all the consequences which may follow, as it respects
+ Great Britain.
+
+ "It is not to be inferred from hence that I am disposed to quit
+ the ground I have taken, unless circumstances more imperious than
+ have yet come to my knowledge should compel it; for there is but
+ one straight course, and that is to seek truth, and pursue it
+ steadily. But these things are mentioned to show that a close
+ investigation of the subject is more than ever necessary, and
+ that there are strong evidences of the necessity of the most
+ circumspect conduct in carrying the determination of government
+ into effect, with prudence, as it respects our own people, and
+ with every exertion to produce a change for the better from Great
+ Britain.
+
+ "The memorial seems well designed to answer the end proposed,
+ and by the time it is revised and new-dressed, you will probably
+ (either in the resolutions which are or will be handed to me, or
+ in the newspaper publications, which you promise to be attentive
+ to) have seen all the objections against the treaty which have
+ any real force in them, and which may be fit subjects for
+ representation in a memorial, or in the instructions, or both. But
+ how much longer the presentation of the memorial can be delayed
+ without exciting unpleasant sensations here, or involving serious
+ evils elsewhere, you, who are at the scene of information and
+ action, can decide better than I. In a matter, however, so
+ interesting and pregnant with consequences as this treaty, there
+ ought to be no precipitation; but on the contrary, every step
+ should be explored before it is taken, and every word weighed
+ before it is uttered or delivered in writing.
+
+ "The form of the ratification requires more diplomatic experience
+ and legal knowledge than I possess, or have the means of acquiring
+ at this place, and therefore I shall say nothing about it."
+
+Three days later, on August 3, he wrote again to Randolph to say that
+the mails had been delayed, and that he had not received the Baltimore
+resolutions. He then continued:--
+
+ "The like may be expected from Richmond, a meeting having been
+ had there also, at which Mr. Wythe, it is said, was seated as
+ moderator; by chance more than design, it is added. A queer chance
+ this for the chancellor of the state.
+
+ "All these things do not shake my determination with respect to
+ the proposed ratifications, nor will they, unless something more
+ imperious and unknown to me should, in the judgment of yourself
+ and the gentlemen with you, make it advisable for me to pause."
+
+A few days later Washington was recalled by a letter from Randolph,
+and also by a private note from Pickering, which said, mysteriously,
+that there was a "special reason" for his immediate return. He had
+been expecting to be recalled at any moment, and he now hastened to
+Philadelphia, reaching there on August 11. He little dreamed, however,
+of what had led his two secretaries, one ignorantly and the other
+wittingly, to hasten his return. On the very day when he dated his
+letter to the selectmen of Boston as from the United States, the
+British minister placed in the hands of Mr. Wolcott, the Secretary of
+the Treasury, an intercepted letter from Fauchet, the French minister,
+to his own government. This dispatch, bearing the number 10, had come
+into the possession of Mr. Hammond by a series of accidents; but the
+British government and its representatives were quick to perceive that
+the chances of the sea had thrown into their hands a prize of much
+more value than many French merchantmen. The dispatch thus rescued
+from the water, where its bearer had cast it, was filled with a long
+and somewhat imaginative dissertation on political parties in the
+United States, and with an account of the whiskey rebellion. It also
+gave the substance of some conversations held by the writer with the
+Secretary of State. This is not the place, nor would space serve, to
+examine the details of this famous dispatch, with reference to the
+American statesman whom it incriminated. On its face it showed that
+Randolph had held conversations with the French minister which no
+American Secretary of State ought to have held with any representative
+of a foreign government, and it appeared further that the most obvious
+interpretation of certain sentences, in view of the readiness of man
+to think ill of his neighbor, was that Randolph had suggested corrupt
+practices. Such was the document, implicating in a most serious way
+the character of his chief cabinet officer, which Pickering and
+Wolcott placed in Washington's hands on his arrival in Philadelphia.
+
+Mr. Conway, in his biography of Randolph, devotes many pages to
+explaining what now followed. His explanations show, certainly, a most
+refined ingenuity, and form the most elaborate discussion of this
+incident that has ever appeared. All this effort and ingenuity are
+needless, however, unless the object be to prove that Randolph was
+wholly without fault, which is an impossible task. There was
+nothing complicated about the affair, and nothing strange about the
+President's course, if we confine ourselves to the plain facts and the
+order of their occurrence.
+
+Before the treaty went to the Senate, Washington made up his mind to
+sign it, and when the Senate ratified conditionally, he still adhered
+to his former opinion. Then came the news of the provision order,
+and thereupon he paused and withheld his signature, at the same time
+ordering a memorial against the order to be prepared. But there is no
+evidence whatever that he changed his mind, or that he had determined
+to make his signature conditional upon the revocation of the order.
+To argue that he had is, in fact, misrepresentation. In the letter
+of July 22, on which so much stress was laid afterwards by Randolph,
+Washington said that his intention to ratify conditionally was to be
+announced, if the provision order was not in operation. Put in the
+converse form, his intention was not to be announced if the order
+was in operation; but this is very different from saying that his
+intention had altered, and that he would not sign unless the order was
+revoked. This last idea was Randolph's, but not Washington's. Indeed,
+in the very next lines of the same letter he said expressly that his
+opinion had not changed, that he did not like the treaty, but that
+it was best to ratify. It is a fair inference, no doubt, that he
+was considering whether he should change his intention and make his
+signature conditional; but if this was the case, it is sure beyond a
+peradventure that his original opinion was only confirmed as the days
+went by.
+
+He examined with the utmost care all the remonstrances and addresses
+that were poured in upon him, and found few solid objections, and none
+that he had not already weighed and disposed of. On July 31 he wrote
+to Randolph that it was not to be inferred that he was disposed to
+quit his ground unless more imperious circumstances than had yet come
+to his knowledge should compel him to do so. The provision order was
+of course within his knowledge, and therefore had not led him to
+change his mind. On August 3 he wrote even more strongly that nothing
+had come to his knowledge to shake his determination. In his letter to
+Randolph of October 21, giving him full liberty to have and publish
+everything he desired for his vindication, Washington said: "You
+know that it was my determination to ratify before submission to the
+Senate; that the doubts which arose proceeded from the provision
+order." Doubts are mentioned here, and not changes of intention. If
+he had changed his mind at any time he would have said so, for he was
+neither timid nor dishonest, but as a matter of fact he never had
+changed his mind. He came to Philadelphia with his mind made up to
+ratify, and that being the case, it was clear that further delay would
+be wrong and impolitic. The surest way to check the popular excitement
+and rally the friends of the administration was to act. Suspense
+fostered opposition more than ratification, for most people accept the
+inevitable when the deed is done.
+
+The Fauchet letter, therefore, although its revelations astounded and
+grieved him, had no effect upon his action, which would have been the
+same in any event; for he had said over and over again that he had not
+changed his first opinion. In the letter to Randolph, just quoted,
+he also said: "And finally you know the grounds on which my ultimate
+decision was taken, as the same were expressed to you, the other
+secretaries of departments, and the late attorney-general, after a
+thorough investigation of the subject in all the aspects in which it
+could be placed." As the Fauchet letter was not disclosed to Randolph
+until after the treaty had been signed, it was impossible that it
+should have been one of the grounds of the President's decision, for
+Washington said to him, "You knew the grounds." If we are to suppose
+that the Fauchet letter had anything to do with the ratification so
+far as the President himself was concerned, we must, in the face of
+this letter, set Washington down as a deliberate liar, which is so
+wholly impossible that it disposes at once of the theory that he was
+driven into signing by a clever British intrigue.
+
+Here as elsewhere the simple and obvious explanation is the true one,
+although the whole matter is sufficiently plain on the mere narration
+of facts. The treaty was a great public question, to be decided on its
+merits, and the only new point raised by the Fauchet dispatch was how
+to deal with Randolph himself at this particular juncture. To have
+shown the letter to him at once would have been to break the cabinet,
+with the treaty unsigned. It would have resulted in much delay,
+extending to weeks, unless the President was ready to have an acting
+secretary sign both treaty and memorial; and it would have added
+during the continued suspense a fresh subject of excitement to the
+popular mind. Washington's duty plainly was to carry out his policy
+and bring the matter to an immediate conclusion, and, as was his
+custom, he did his duty. If, as Mr. Conway thinks, the Fauchet letter
+was what compelled the ratification, Washington would have given it
+to the world at once, and then, having by this means discredited the
+opposition and roused a feeling against the French, would have signed
+the treaty. England, of course, had taken advantage of this letter,
+and equally of course her minister and his influence were against
+Randolph, who was thought to be unfriendly. Hammond intrigued with our
+public men just as all the French ministers did. It is humiliating
+that such should have been the case, but it was due to our recent
+escape from a colonial condition, and to the way in which we allowed
+our politics to turn on foreign affairs. Having made up his mind to
+ratify and end the question, Washington very properly kept silence
+as to the Fauchet letter until the work was done. To do this, it was
+necessary of course that he should make no change in his personal
+attitude toward Randolph, nor was he obliged to do so, for he was too
+just a man to assume Randolph's guilt until his defense had been made.
+The ratification was brought before the cabinet at once. There was a
+sharp discussion, in which it appeared that Randolph had advanced a
+good deal in his hostility to the treaty, a fact not tending to make
+the Fauchet business look better; and then ratification was voted, and
+a memorial against the provision order was adopted. On August 18 the
+treaty was signed, and on the 19th, Washington, in the presence of his
+cabinet, placed the Fauchet letter in Randolph's hands. Randolph read
+it, made some comments, and asked time to offer suitable explanations.
+He then withdrew, and in a few hours sent in his resignation.
+
+There would be no need, so far as Washington is concerned, to say more
+on this unfortunate affair of the Secretary of State, were it not for
+the recent statements made by Randolph's biographer. In order to clear
+his hero, Mr. Conway represents that Washington, knowing Randolph to
+be innocent, sacrificed him in great anguish of heart to an imperious
+political necessity, while the fact was, that nobody sacrificed
+Randolph except himself. He was represented in a dispatch written by
+the French minister in a light which, as Washington said, gave rise to
+strong suspicions; a moderate statement in which every candid man
+who knew anything about the matter has agreed from that day to this.
+According to Fauchet, Randolph not only had held conversations wholly
+unbecoming his position, but on the same authority he was represented
+to have asked for money. That the Secretary of State was corrupt, no
+one who knew him, as Jefferson said, for one moment believed. Whether
+he disposed of this charge or not, it was plain to his friends, as
+it is to posterity, that Randolph was a perfectly honorable man. But
+neither his own vindication nor that of his biographer have in the
+least palliated or even touched the real error which he committed.
+
+As Secretary of State, the head of the cabinet, and in charge of our
+foreign relations, he had, according to Fauchet's dispatch and to his
+own admissions, entered into relations with a foreign minister which
+ought to have been as impossible as they were discreditable to an
+American statesman. That Fauchet believed that Randolph deceived him
+did not affect the merits of the case, nor, if true, did it excuse
+Randolph, especially as everybody with whom he was brought into
+close contact seems at some time or other to have had doubts of his
+sincerity. As a matter of fact, Randolph could find no defense except
+to attack Washington and discuss our foreign relations, and his
+biographer has followed the same line. What was it then that
+Washington had actually done which called for assault? He had been put
+in possession of an official document which on its face implicated
+his Secretary of State in the intrigues of a foreign minister, and
+suggested that he was open to corruption. These were the views which
+the public, having no personal knowledge of Randolph, would be sure to
+take, and as a matter of fact actually took, when the affair became
+known. There was a great international question to be settled, and
+settled without delay. This was done in a week, during which time
+Washington kept silent, as his public duty required. The moment the
+treaty was signed he handed Fauchet's dispatch to Randolph and asked
+for an explanation. None knew of the dispatch except the cabinet
+officers, through whom it had necessarily come. Washington did not
+prejudge the case; he did not dismiss Randolph with any mark of his
+pleasure, as he would have been quite justified in doing. He simply
+asked for explanation, and threw open his own correspondence and
+the archives of the department, so that Randolph might have every
+opportunity for defense. It is difficult to see how Washington could
+have done less in dealing with Randolph, or in what way he could have
+shown greater consideration.
+
+Randolph resigned of his own motion, and then cried out against
+Washington because he had been obliged to pay the penalty of his own
+errors. When it is considered that Washington did absolutely nothing
+to Randolph except to hand him Fauchet's dispatch and accept his
+consequent resignation, the talk about Randolph's forgiving him
+becomes simply ludicrous. Randolph saw his own error, was angry with
+himself, and, like the rest of humanity, proceeded to vent his anger
+on somebody else, but unfortunately he had the bad taste to turn at
+the outset to the newspapers. Like Mr. Snodgrass, he took off his coat
+in public and announced in a loud voice that he was going to begin.
+The President's only response was to open the archives and bid him
+publish everything he desired. Randolph then wrote the President a
+private letter, which was angry and impertinent; "full of innuendoes,"
+said the recipient. Washington drafted a sharp reply, and then out
+of pure kindness withheld it, and let the private letter drop into
+silence, whither the bulky "Vindication," which vindicated nobody,
+soon followed it. The fact was, that Washington treated Randolph with
+great kindness and forbearance. He had known him long; he was fond
+of him on his own account as well as his father's; he appreciated
+Randolph's talents; but he knew on reading that dispatch, if he had
+never guessed it before, that Randolph, although honest and clever,
+and certainly not bad, was a dangerously weak man. Others among
+our public men had put themselves into relations with foreign
+representatives which it is now intolerable to contemplate, but
+Randolph, besides being found out at the moment, had, after the
+fashion of weak natures, gone further and shown more feebleness than
+any one else had. Washington's conduct was so perfectly simple, and
+the facts of the case were so plain, that it would seem impossible to
+complicate them. The contemporary verdict was harsh, crushing, and
+unjust in many respects to Randolph. The verdict of posterity, which
+is both gentler and fairer to the secretary, will certainly at the
+same time sustain Washington's course at every point as sensible,
+direct, and proper.
+
+Only one question remains which demands a word before tracing briefly
+the subsequent fate of the Jay treaty, and that is, to know exactly
+why the President signed it. The answer is fortunately not difficult.
+There was a choice of evils. When Washington determined to send a
+special envoy, he said: "My objects are, to prevent a war, if justice
+can be obtained by fair and strong representations (to be made by a
+special envoy) of the injuries which this country has sustained from
+Great Britain in various ways; to put it into a complete state
+of military defense; and to provide eventually such measures for
+execution as seem to be now pending in Congress, if negotiation in
+a reasonable time proves unsuccessful." From these views he never
+varied. The treaty was not a perfect one, but it had good features and
+was probably, as has been said, the best that could then be obtained.
+It settled some vexed questions, and it gave us time. If the United
+States could only have time without making undue sacrifice, they could
+pass beyond the stage when a foreign war with its consequent suffering
+and debt would endanger our national existence. If they could only
+have time to grow into a nation, there would be no difficulty in
+settling all their disputes with other people satisfactorily, either
+by war or negotiation. But if the national bonds were loosened, then
+all was lost. It was in this spirit that Washington signed the Jay
+treaty; and although there was much in it that he did not like,
+and although men were bitterly divided about the ratification, a
+dispassionate posterity has come to believe that he was right at the
+most difficult if not the most perilous crisis in his career.
+
+The signature of the treaty, however, did not put an end to the
+attacks upon it, or upon the action of the Senate and the Executive.
+Nevertheless, it turned the tide, and, as Washington foresaw, brought
+out a strong movement in its favor. Hamilton began the work by the
+publication of the letters of "Camillus." The opposition newspapers
+sneered, but after Jefferson had read a few numbers he begged Madison
+in alarm to answer them. His fears were well grounded, for the letters
+were reprinted in newspapers throughout the country, and their
+powerful and temperate arguments made converts and strengthened the
+friends of the administration everywhere. The approaching surrender of
+the posts gratified the western people when they at last stopped to
+think about it. The obnoxious provision order was revoked, and the
+traders and merchants found that security and commerce even under
+unpleasant restrictions were a great deal better than the uncertainty
+and the vexatious hostilities to which they had before been exposed.
+Those who had been silent, although friendly to the policy of the
+government, now began to meet in their turn and send addresses to
+Congress; for in the House of Representatives the last battle was to
+be fought.
+
+That body came together under the impression of the agitation and
+excitement which had been going on all through the summer. There was a
+little wrangling at the opening over the terms to be employed in the
+answer to the President's message, and then the House relapsed into
+quiet, awaiting the formal announcement of the treaty. At last the
+treaty arrived with the addition of the suspending article, and the
+President proclaimed it to be the law of the land, and sent a copy to
+the House. Livingston, of New York, at once moved a resolution, asking
+the President to send in all the papers relating to the negotiation,
+and boldly placed the motion on the ground that the House was vested
+with a discretionary power as to carrying the treaty into execution.
+On this principle the debate went on for three weeks, and then the
+resolution passed by 62 to 37. A great constitutional question was
+thus raised, for there was no pretense that the papers were really
+needed, inasmuch as committees had seen them all, and they contained
+practically nothing which was not already known.
+
+Washington took the request into consideration, and asked his cabinet
+whether the House had the right, as set forth in the resolutions, to
+call for the papers, and if not, whether it was expedient to furnish
+them. Both questions were unanimously answered in the negative. The
+inquiry was largely formal, and Washington had no real doubts on the
+point involved. He wrote to Hamilton: "I had from the first moment,
+and from the fullest conviction in my own mind, resolved _to resist
+the principle_, which was evidently intended to be established by the
+call of the House of Representatives; and only deliberated on the
+manner in which this could be done with the least bad consequences."
+His only question was as to the method of resistance, and he finally
+decided to refuse absolutely, and did so in a message setting forth
+his reasons. He said that the intention of the constitutional
+convention was known to him, and that they had intended to vest the
+treaty-making power exclusively in the Executive and Senate. On
+that principle he had acted, and in that belief foreign nations had
+negotiated, and the House had hitherto acquiesced. He declared further
+that the assent of the House was not necessary to the validity of
+treaties; that they had all necessary information; and "as it is
+essential to the due administration of the government that the
+boundaries fixed by the Constitution should be preserved, a just
+regard to the Constitution and to the duty of my office, under all the
+circumstances of this case, forbid a compliance with your request."
+The question was a difficult one, but there could be no doubt as to
+Washington's opinion, and the weight of authority has sustained his
+view. From the practical and political side there can be little
+question that his position was extremely sound. In a letter to
+Carrington he gave the reasons for his action, and no better statement
+of the argument in a general way has ever been made. He wrote:--
+
+ "No candid man in the least degree acquainted with the progress
+ of this business will believe for a moment that the _ostensible_
+ dispute was about papers, or whether the British treaty was a good
+ one or a bad one, but whether there should be a treaty at all
+ without the concurrence of the House of Representatives. This
+ was striking at once, and that boldly, too, at the fundamental
+ principles of the Constitution; and, if it were established, would
+ render the treaty-making power not only a nullity, but such an
+ absolute absurdity as to reflect disgrace on the framers of it.
+ For will any one suppose that they who framed, or those who
+ adopted, that instrument ever intended to give the power to the
+ President and Senate to make treaties, and, declaring that when
+ made and ratified they should be the supreme law of the land,
+ would in the same breath place it in the power of the House of
+ Representatives to fix their vote on them, unless apparent marks
+ of fraud or corruption (which in equity would set aside any
+ contract) accompanied the measure, or such striking evidence of
+ national injury attended their adoption as to make a war or any
+ other evil preferable? Every unbiased mind will answer in the
+ negative.
+
+ "What the source and what the object of all this struggle is, I
+ submit to my fellow-citizens. Charity would lead me to hope that
+ the motives to it would be pure. Suspicions, however, speak
+ a different language, and my tongue for the present shall be
+ silent."
+
+No man who has ever held high office in this country had a more real
+deference for the popular will than Washington. But he also had always
+a keen sensitiveness to the dignity and the prerogatives of the office
+which he happened to hold, whether it was that of president or general
+of the armies. This arose from no personal feeling, for he was too
+great a man ever to worry about his own dignity; but he esteemed the
+great offices to which he was called to be trusts, which were to
+suffer no injury while in his hands. He regarded the attempt of the
+House of Representatives to demand the papers as a matter of right
+as an encroachment on the rights of the Executive Department, and he
+therefore resisted it at once, and after his usual fashion left no one
+in any doubt as to his views. So far as the President was concerned,
+the struggle ended here; but it was continued for some time longer in
+the House, where the debate went on for a fortnight, with the hostile
+majority surely and steadily declining. The current out-doors ran more
+and more strongly every day in favor of the administration, until
+at last the contest ended with Ames's great speech, and then the
+resolution to carry out the treaty prevailed. Washington's policy had
+triumphed, and was accepted by the country.
+
+The Jay treaty and its ratification had, however, other results
+than mere domestic conflicts. Spain, acting under French influence,
+threatened to rescind the Pinckney treaty which had just been made
+so advantageously to the United States; but, like most Spanish
+performances at that time, these threats evaporated in words, and the
+Mississippi remained open. With France, however, the case was very
+different. Our demand for the recall of Genet had been met by a
+counter-demand for the recall of Morris, to which, of course, we were
+obliged to accede, and the question as to the latter's successor was
+a difficult and important one. Washington himself had been perfectly
+satisfied with the conduct of Morris, but he was also aware that the
+known dislike of that brilliant diplomatist to the revolutionary
+methods then dominant in Paris had seriously complicated our relations
+with France. He wished by all fair means to keep France in good humor,
+and he therefore determined that Morris's successor should be a man
+whose friendship toward the French republic was well known. His first
+choice was Madison, which would have answered admirably, for Madison
+was preëminently a safe man. Very unluckily, however, Madison either
+could not or would not go, and the President's final choice was by no
+means equally good.
+
+It was, of course, most desirable that the new minister should be
+_persona grata_ to the republic, but it was vastly more important that
+he should be in cordial sympathy with the administration at home,
+for no administration ought ever to select for a foreign mission,
+especially at a critical moment, any one outside the ranks of its own
+supporters. This was the mistake which Washington, from the best of
+motives, now committed by appointing James Monroe to be minister to
+France. It is one of the puzzles of our history to reconcile the
+respectable and common-place gentleman, who for two terms as President
+of the United States had less opposition than ever fell to the lot
+of any other man in that office, with the violent, unscrupulous, and
+extremely light-headed politician who figured as senator from Virginia
+and minister to France at the close of the last century. Monroe at
+the time of his appointment had distinguished himself chiefly by his
+extreme opposition to the administration, and by his intrigues against
+Hamilton, which were so dishonestly conducted that they ultimately
+compelled the publication of the "Reynolds Pamphlet," a sore trial to
+its author, and a lasting blot on the fame of the enemy who made the
+publication necessary. From such a man loyalty to the President who
+appointed him was hardly to be expected. But there was no reason
+to suppose that he would lose his head, and forget that he was an
+American, and not a French citizen.
+
+Monroe reached Paris in the summer of 1794. He was publicly received
+by the Convention, made an undignified and florid speech, received
+the national embrace from the president of the Convention, and then
+effected an exchange of flags with more embracings and addresses.
+But when he came to ask redress for the wrongs committed against our
+merchants, he got no satisfaction. So far as he was concerned, this
+appears to have been a matter of indifference, for he at once occupied
+himself with the French proposition that we should lend France five
+millions of dollars, and France in return was to see to it that we
+obtained control of the Spanish possessions in North America. Monroe
+fell in with this precious scheme to make the United States a
+dependency of France, and received as a reward vast promises as to
+what the great republic would do for us. Meantime he regarded with
+suspicion Jay's movements in England, and endeavored to obtain
+information, if not control, of that negotiation. In this he
+completely failed; but he led the French government to believe, first,
+that the English treaty would not be made, then that it would not be
+ratified, and finally that the House would not make the appropriations
+necessary to carry it into effect; and all the time he was
+compromising his own government by his absurd efforts to involve it in
+an offensive alliance with France. The upshot of it all was that he
+was disowned at home, discredited in France, and brought our relations
+with that nation into a state of dangerous complication, without
+obtaining any redress for our injuries.
+
+Washington at first, little as he liked the theatrical performances
+with which Monroe opened his mission, wrote about him with great
+moderation to Jay, who was naturally much annoyed by the manner in
+which Monroe had tried to interfere with his negotiations. Six months
+later, however, Washington saw only too plainly that he had been
+mistaken in his minister to France. He wrote to Randolph on July 24,
+1795: "The conduct of Mr. Monroe is of a piece with that of the other;
+and one can scarcely forbear thinking that these acts are part of a
+premeditated system to embarrass the executive government." When it
+became clear that Monroe had omitted to explain properly our reasons
+for treating with England, that he had held out hopes to the French
+government which were totally unauthorized, that he had brought on a
+renewal of the hostilities of that government, and that he had placed
+us in all ways in the most unenviable light, Washington recalled him,
+and appointed Charles Cotesworth Pinckney in his place. By this time
+too he was thoroughly disgusted with Monroe's performances, and in his
+letter to Pinckney, on July 8, 1796, offering him the appointment to
+Paris, he said: "It is a fact too notorious to be denied that the
+greatest embarrassments under which the administration of this
+government labors proceed from the counter-action of people among
+ourselves, who are more disposed to promote the views of another
+nation than to establish a national character of their own; and that,
+unless the virtuous and independent men of this country will come
+forward, it is not difficult to predict the consequences. Such is my
+decided opinion." He felt, as he wrote to Hamilton at the close of his
+administration, that "the conduct of France towards this country is,
+according to my ideas of it, outrageous beyond conception; not to
+be warranted by her treaty with us, by the law of nations, by any
+principle of justice, or even by a regard to decent appearances." This
+was after we had begun to reap the humiliations which Monroe's folly
+had prepared for us, and it is easy to understand that Washington
+regarded their author with anything but satisfaction or approval.
+
+The culprit himself took a very different view, came home presently
+in great wrath, and proceeded to pose as a martyr and compile
+a vindication, which he entitled "A View of the Conduct of the
+Executive," and which surpassed in bulk any of the vindications in
+which that period of our history was prolific. It was published after
+Washington had retired to private life, and did not much disturb his
+serenity. In a letter to Nicholas, on March 8, 1798, he said: "If the
+executive is chargeable with 'premeditating the destruction of Mr.
+Monroe in his appointment, because he was the _centre_ around which
+the Republican party rallied in the Senate' (a circumstance quite new
+to me), it is to be hoped he will give it credit for its lenity toward
+that gentleman in having designated several others, not of the Senate,
+as victims to this office _before_ the sacrifice of Mr. Monroe was
+even had in contemplation. As this must be some consolation to him and
+his friends, I hope they will embrace it."
+
+Washington apparently did not think Monroe was worthy of anything more
+serious than a little sarcasm, and he was quite content, as he said,
+to leave the book to the tribunal to which the author himself had
+appealed. He read the book, however, with care, and in his methodical
+way he appended a number of notes, which are worth consideration
+by all persons interested in the character of Washington. They are
+especially to be commended to those who think that he was merely good
+and wise and solemn, for it would be difficult to find a better piece
+of destructive criticism, or a more ready and thorough knowledge of
+complicated foreign relations, than are contained in these brief
+notes. His own opinion of Monroe is concisely stated in one of them.
+Referring to one of that gentleman's statements he said: "For this
+there is no better proof than his own opinion; whilst there is
+abundant evidence of his being a mere tool in the hands of the French
+government, cajoled and led away always by unmeaning assurances of
+friendship." With this brief comment we may leave the Monroe incident.
+His appointment was a mistake, and increased existing complications,
+which were not finally settled until the next administration.
+
+Monroe's recall was the last act, however, in the long contest of the
+Jay treaty, and it was also, as it happened, the last important act in
+Washington's foreign policy. That policy has been traced here in its
+various branches, but it is worth while to look at it as a whole
+before leaving it, in order to see just what the President aimed at
+and just what he effected. The guiding principle, which had been with
+him from the day when he took command of the army at Cambridge, was to
+make the United States independent. The war had achieved this so far
+as our connection with England was concerned, but it still remained to
+prove to the world that we were an independent nation in fact as well
+as in name. For this the neutrality policy was adopted and carried
+out. We were not only to cease from dependence on the nations of
+Europe, but we were to go on our own way with a policy of our own
+wholly apart from them. It was also necessary to lift up our own
+politics, to detach our minds from those of other nations, and to make
+us truly Americans. All this Washington's policy did so far as it was
+possible to do it in the time given to him. A new generation had to
+come upon the stage before our politics were finally taken out of
+colonialism and made national and American, but the idea was that
+of the first President. It was the foresight and the courage of
+Washington which at the outset placed the United States in their
+relations with foreign nations on the ground of a firm, independent,
+and American policy.
+
+His foreign policy had, however, some immediate practical results
+which were of vast importance. In December, 1795, he wrote to Morris:
+"It is well known that peace has been (to borrow a modern phrase)
+the order of the day with me since the disturbances in Europe first
+commenced. My policy has been, and will continue to be while I have
+the honor to remain in the administration, to maintain friendly terms
+with, but to be independent of, all the nations of the earth; to share
+in the broils of none; to fulfill our own engagements; to supply the
+wants and be carriers for them all; being thoroughly convinced that it
+is our policy and interest to do so. Nothing short of self-respect
+and that justice which is essential to a national character ought to
+involve us in war; for sure I am, if this country is preserved in
+tranquillity twenty years longer, it may bid defiance in a just cause
+to any power whatever; such in that time would be its population,
+wealth, and resources."
+
+He wanted time, but he wanted space also for his country; and if we
+look for a moment at the results of his foreign policy we see clearly
+how he got both. The time gained by peace without any humiliating
+concessions is plain enough. If we look a little further and a little
+deeper, we can see how he compassed his other object. The true and the
+first mission of the American people was, in Washington's theory, the
+conquest of the continent which stretched away wild and silent behind
+them, for in that direction lay the sure road to national greatness.
+The first step was to bind by interest, trade, and habit of
+communication the Atlantic States with the settlements beyond the
+mountains, and for this he had planned canals and highways in the days
+of the confederation. The next step was to remove every obstacle which
+fettered the march of American settlement; and for this he rolled
+back the Indian tribes, patiently negotiated with Spain until the
+Mississippi was opened, and at great personal sacrifice and trial
+signed the Jay treaty, and obtained the surrender of the British
+posts. When Washington went out of office, the way was open to the
+western movement; the dangers of disintegration by reason of foreign
+intrigues on the frontier were removed; peace had been maintained; and
+the national sentiment had had opportunity for rapid growth. France
+had discovered that, although she had been our ally, we were not her
+dependants; other nations had been brought to perceive that the United
+States meant to have a foreign policy all its own; and the American
+people were taught that their first duty was to be Americans and
+nothing else. There is no need to comment on or to praise the
+greatness of a policy with such objects and results as these. The mere
+summary is enough, and it speaks for itself and for its author in a
+way which makes words needless.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+WASHINGTON AS A PARTY MAN
+
+
+Washington was not chosen to office by a political party; he
+considered parties to be perilous things, and he entered the
+presidency determined to have nothing to do with them. Yet, as has
+already been pointed out, he took the members of his cabinet entirely
+from one of the two parties which then existed, and which had been
+produced by the divisions over the Constitution and its adoption. To
+this charge he would no doubt have replied that the parties caused
+by the constitutional differences had ceased to exist when that
+instrument went into operation, and that it was to be supposed that
+all men were then united in support of the government. Accepting this
+view of it, it only remains to see how he fared when new and purely
+political parties, as was inevitable, sprang into active life.
+
+Whatever his own opinions may have been as to parties and
+party-strife, Washington was under no delusions in regard either to
+human nature or to himself, and he had no expectation that everything
+he said or did would meet with universal approbation. He well knew
+that there would be dissatisfaction, and no man ever took high office
+with a mind more ready to bear criticism and to profit by it. Three
+months after his inauguration he wrote to his friend David Stuart:
+"I should like to be informed of the public opinion of both men and
+measures, and of none more than myself; not so much of what may be
+thought commendable parts, if any, of my conduct, as of those which
+are conceived to be of a different complexion. The man who means to
+commit no wrong will never be guilty of enormities; consequently he
+can never be unwilling to learn what are ascribed to him as foibles.
+If they are really such, the knowledge of them in a well-disposed mind
+will go half-way towards a reform. If they are not errors, he can
+explain and justify the motives of his actions." This readiness
+to hear criticism and this watching of public opinion were
+characteristic, for his one desire was to know the truth and never
+deceive himself. His journey through New England in the autumn of that
+year, his visit to Rhode Island a year later, and his trip through the
+southern States in the spring of 1791, had a double motive. He wished
+to bring home to the people the existence and the character of the new
+government by his appearance among them as its representative; and he
+desired also to learn from his own observation, and from inquiries
+made on the spot, what the people thought of the administration and
+its policies, and of the doings of Congress. He was a keen observer
+and a good gatherer of information; for he was patient and persistent,
+and had that best of all gifts for getting at public opinion, an
+absolute and cheerful readiness to listen to advice from any one. His
+travels all had the same result. In the South as in New England he
+found that the people were pleased with the new government, and
+contented with the prosperity which began at once to flow from the
+adoption of a stable national system.
+
+More credit, if anything, was given to it than it really deserved;
+for, as he had written to Lafayette before the Constitution went into
+effect, "Many blessings will be attributed to our new government which
+are now taking their rise from that industry and frugality into which
+the people have been forced from necessity." Whether this were true or
+not, the new government was entitled to the benefit of all accidents,
+and Washington's correct conclusion was that the great body of the
+people were heartily with him and his administration. But he was
+also quite aware that all the criticism was not friendly, and as
+the measures of the government one by one passed Congress, he saw
+divisions of sentiment appear, slight at first, but deepening and
+hardening with each successive contest. Indeed, he had not been in
+office a year when he wrote a long letter to Stuart deploring the
+sectionalism which had begun to show itself. The South was complaining
+that everything was done in the interest of the northern and eastern
+States, and against this idea Washington argued with great force. He
+was especially severe on the unreasonable and childish character of
+such grievances, and he attributed the feeling in certain States
+largely to the outcries of persons who had come home disappointed
+in some personal matter from the seat of government. "It is to be
+lamented," he said, "that the editors of the different gazettes in the
+Union do not more generally and more correctly (instead of stuffing
+their papers with scurrility and nonsensical declamation, which few
+would read if they were apprised of the contents) publish the debates
+in Congress on all great national questions. And this, with no
+uncommon pains, every one of them might do." Washington evidently
+believed that there was no serious danger of the people going wrong
+if they were only fully informed. But the able editors of that day no
+doubt felt that they and their correspondents were better fitted to
+enlighten the public than any one else could be, and there is no
+evidence that any of them ever followed the President's suggestion.
+
+The jealousies and the divisions in Congress, which Washington watched
+with hearty dislike on account of their sectional character, began, as
+is well known, with the financial measures of the Treasury. As time
+went on they became steadily more marked and better defined, and at
+last they spread to the cabinet. Jefferson had returned to take his
+place as Secretary of State after an absence of many years, and
+during that time he had necessarily dropped out of the course of
+home politics. He came back with a very moderate liking for the
+Constitution, and an intention undoubtedly to do his best as a member
+of the cabinet. His first and most natural impulse, of course, was
+to fall in with the administration of which he was a part; and so
+completely did he do this that it was at his table that the famous
+bargain was made which assumed the state debts and took the capital to
+the banks of the Potomac.
+
+Exactly what led to the first breach between Jefferson and Hamilton,
+whose financial policy was then in the full tide of success, is not
+now very easy to determine. Jefferson's action was probably due to a
+mixture of motives and a variety of causes, as is generally the case
+with men, even when they are founders of the democratic party. In the
+first place, Jefferson very soon discovered that Hamilton was
+looked upon as the leader in the cabinet and in the policies of the
+administration, and this fact excited a very natural jealousy on his
+part, because he was the official head of the President's advisers.
+In the second place, it was inevitable that Jefferson should dislike
+Hamilton, for there never were two men more unlike in character and in
+their ways of looking at things. Hamilton was bold, direct, imperious,
+and masculine; he went straight to his mark, and if he encountered
+opposition he either rode over it or broke it down. When Jefferson
+met with opposition he went round it or undermined it; he was adroit,
+flexible, and extremely averse to open fighting. There was also good
+ground for a genuine difference of opinion between the two secretaries
+in regard to the policy of the government. Jefferson was a thorough
+representative of the great democratic movement of the time. At bottom
+his democracy was of the sensible, practical American type, but he
+had come home badly bitten by many of the wild notions which at that
+moment pervaded Paris. A man of much less insight than Jefferson would
+have had no difficulty in perceiving that Hamilton and his
+friends were not in sympathy with these ideas. They hoped for the
+establishment of a republic, but they desired for it a highly
+energetic and centralized government not devoid of aristocratic
+tendencies. This fundamental difference of opinion, increased as it
+was by personal jealousies, soon put Jefferson, therefore, into an
+attitude of hostility to the men who were then guiding the policy of
+the government. The new administration had been so successful that
+there was at first practically no party of opposition, and the task
+before Jefferson involved the creation of a party, the formulation of
+principles, and the definition of issues, with appropriate shibboleths
+for popular consumption. Jefferson knew that Hamilton and all who
+fought with him were as sincerely in favor of a republic as he himself
+was; but his unerring genius in political management told him that he
+could never raise a party or make a party-cry out of the statement
+that, while he favored a democratic republic, the men to whom he was
+opposed preferred one of a more aristocratic caste. It was necessary
+to have something much more highly seasoned than this. So he took the
+ground that his opponents were monarchists, bent on establishing a
+monarchy in this country, and were backed by a "corrupt squadron"
+in Congress in the pay of the Treasury. This was of course utter
+nonsense, but it served its purpose admirably. Jefferson, indeed,
+shouted these cries so much that he almost came to believe in them
+himself, and sympathetic writers to this day repeat them as if they
+had reality instead of having been mere noise to frighten the unwary.
+The prime object of it all was to make the great leaders odious by
+connecting them in the popular mind with the royal government that had
+been overthrown.
+
+Jefferson's first move was a covert one. In the spring of 1791 he
+received Thomas Paine's "Rights of Man," and straightway sent the
+pamphlet to the printer with a note of approbation reflecting upon
+John Adams. The pamphlet promptly appeared in a reprint with the
+note prefixed. It made much stir, and the published approval of the
+Secretary of State excited a great deal of criticism, much of which
+was very hostile. Jefferson thereupon expressed extreme surprise that
+his note had been printed, and on the plea of explaining the matter
+wrote to Washington a letter, in which he declared that his friend
+Mr. Adams, for whom he had a most cordial esteem, was an apostate to
+hereditary monarchy and nobility. He further described his old friend
+as a political heretic and as the bellwether Davila, upon whom and
+whose writings Mr. Adams had recently been publishing some discourses.
+It is but fair to say that no more ingenious attack on the
+Vice-President could have been made, but the purpose of it was simply
+to arrest the public attention for the real struggle which was to
+follow.
+
+The true object of all these movements was to rally a party and break
+down Jefferson's great colleague in the cabinet. The "Rights of Man"
+served to start the discussion; and the next step was to bring on from
+New York Philip Freneau, a verse-writer and journalist, and make him
+translating clerk in the State Department, and editor of an opposition
+newspaper known as the "National Gazette." The new journal proceeded
+to do its work after the fashion of the time. It teemed with abuse
+not only of Hamilton and Adams and all the supporters of the treasury
+measures, denouncing them as "monarchists," "aristocrats," and "a
+corrupt squadron," but it even began a series of coarse assaults
+upon the President himself. Jefferson, of course, denied that he had
+anything to do with the writing in the newspaper, and Freneau made
+oath at the time that the Secretary wrote nothing; but in his old age
+he declared that Jefferson wrote or dictated all the most abusive
+articles, and he showed a file of the "Gazette" with these articles
+marked. Strict veracity was not the strongest characteristic of either
+Freneau or Jefferson, and it is really of but little consequence
+whether Freneau was lying in his old age or in the prime of life. The
+undoubted facts of the case are enough to fix the responsibility upon
+Jefferson, where it belongs. The editor of a newspaper devoted
+to abusing the administration was brought to Philadelphia by the
+Secretary of State, was given a place in his department, and was his
+confidential friend. Jefferson himself took advantage of his
+position to gather material for attacks upon his chief, and upon his
+colleagues, to whom he was bound to be loyal by every rule which
+dictates the conduct of honorable men. He did not, moreover, content
+himself with this outside work. It has been too much overlooked that
+Jefferson, in addition to forming a party and organizing attacks upon
+the Secretary of the Treasury and his friends, sought in the first
+instance to break down Hamilton in the cabinet, to deprive him of the
+confidence of Washington, and by driving him from the administration
+to get control himself. At no time did Jefferson ever understand
+Washington, but he knew him well enough to be quite aware that he
+would never give up a friend like Hamilton on account of any newspaper
+attacks. He therefore took a more insidious method.
+
+Knowing that Washington was in the habit of consulting with old
+friends at home of all shades of opinion in regard to public affairs,
+he contrived through their agency to have his own charges against
+Hamilton laid before the President. He also, to make perfectly sure,
+wrote himself to Washington, candidly setting forth outside criticism,
+and his letter took the form of a well-arranged indictment of the
+Treasury measures. This method had the advantage of assailing Hamilton
+without incurring any responsibility, and the charges were skilfully
+formulated and ingeniously constructed to raise in the mind of the
+reader every possible suspicion. At this point Washington comes for
+the first time into the famous controversy from which our two great
+political parties were born. He did exactly what Jefferson would not
+have done, sent the charges all duly formulated to Hamilton, and asked
+him his opinion about them. As the accusations thus made against the
+policies of the government and the Secretary of the Treasury were all
+mere wind of the "monarchist" and "corrupt squadron" order, Hamilton
+disposed of them with very little difficulty. The whole proceeding,
+if Jefferson was aware of it at the time, must have been a great
+disappointment to him. But his mistake was the natural error of an
+ingenious man wasting his efforts on one of great directness and
+perfect simplicity of character. Hamilton's answer was what Washington
+undoubtedly expected. He knew the hollowness of the attack, but none
+the less he was made anxious by it as an indication of the serious
+party divisions rising about him. This, however, was but the
+beginning, and he was soon to have much more direct evidence of the
+grave nature of a political conflict, which he then could not bring
+himself to believe was irrepressible.
+
+Hamilton, on his side, was not the most patient of men, and although
+he bore the attacks of Frenean for some time in silence he finally
+retaliated. He did not get any one to do his fighting for him, but
+under a thin disguise proceeded to answer in Fenno's newspaper the
+abuse of the "National Gazette." He was the best political writer in
+the country, and when he struck, his blows told. Jefferson winced and
+cried out under the punishment, but it would have been more dignified
+in Hamilton to have kept out of the newspapers. Still there was the
+fight. It had gone from the cabinet to the press, and the public knew
+that the two principal secretaries were at swords' points and were
+marshaling behind them strong political forces. The point had been
+reached where the President was compelled to interfere unless he
+wished his administration to be thoroughly discredited by the bitter
+and open conflicts of its members.
+
+He wrote to both secretaries in a grave and almost pathetic tone of
+remonstrance, urging them to abandon their quarrel, and, sinking minor
+differences, to work with him for the success of the Constitution to
+which they were both devoted. Each man replied after his fashion.
+Hamilton's letter was short and straight-forward. He could not profess
+to have changed his opinion as to the conduct or purpose of his
+colleague, but he regretted the strife which had arisen, and promised
+to do all that was in his power to allay it by ceasing from further
+attacks. Jefferson wrote at great length, controverting Hamilton's
+published letters in a way which showed that he was still smarting
+from the well-aimed shafts. He also contrived to make his own defense
+the vehicle for a renewal of all his accusations against the Treasury,
+and he wound up by saying that he looked forward to retirement with
+the longing of "a wave-worn mariner," and that he should reserve any
+further fighting that he had to do until he was out of office. Soon
+after he followed this letter with another, containing a collection
+of extracts from his own correspondence while in Paris, to show his
+devotion to the Constitution. One is irresistibly reminded by all
+this of the Player Queen--"The lady protests too much, methinks."
+Washington had not accused Jefferson of lack of loyalty to the
+Constitution, indeed he had made no accusations against him of any
+kind; but Jefferson knew that his own position was a false one, and
+he could not refrain from taking a defensive tone. Washington, in his
+reply, said that he needed no proofs of Jefferson's fidelity to the
+Constitution, and reiterated his earnest desire for an accommodation
+of all differences. "I will frankly and solemnly declare," he said,
+"that I believe the views of both of you to be pure and well-meant,
+and that experience only will decide with respect to the salutariness
+of the measures which are the subjects of dispute.... I could, and
+indeed was about to, add more on this interesting subject, but will
+forbear, at least for the present, after expressing a wish that the
+cup which has been presented to us may not be snatched from our
+lips by a discordance of action, when I am persuaded there is no
+discordance in your views."
+
+The difficulty was that there was not only discordance in the views of
+the two secretaries, but a fundamental political difference, extending
+throughout the people, which they typified. The accommodation of views
+and the support of the Constitution could only mean a support of
+Washington's administration and its measures. Those measures not
+only had the President's approval, but they were in many respects
+peculiarly his own, and in them he rightly saw the success and
+maintenance of the Constitution. But, unfortunately for the interests
+of harmony, these measures were either devised or ardently sustained
+by the Secretary of the Treasury. They were not the measures of the
+Secretary of State, and received from him either lukewarm support
+or active, if furtive, hostility. The only peace possible was in
+Jefferson's giving in his entire adherence to the policies of
+Washington and Hamilton, which were radically opposed to his own. In
+one word, a real, profound, and inevitable party division had come,
+and it had found the opposing chiefs side by side in the cabinet.
+
+Against this conclusion Washington struggled hard. He had come in as
+the representative and by the votes of the whole people, and he shrank
+from any step which would seem to make him lean on a party for support
+in his administration. He had made up his cabinet with what he very
+justly considered the strongest material. He believed that a breaking
+up of the cabinet or a change in its membership would be an injury to
+the cause of good government, and he was so entirely single-minded
+in his own views and wishes, that, with all his knowledge of human
+nature, he found it difficult to understand how any one could differ
+from him materially. Moreover, having started with the firm intention
+of governing without party, he determined, with his usual persistence,
+to carry it through, if it were possible. When party feeling had
+once developed, and division had sprung up between the two principal
+officers of his cabinet, no greater risk could have been run than
+that which Washington took in refusing to make the changes which were
+necessary to render the administration harmonious. With any lesser
+man, such a perilous experiment would have failed and brought with it
+disastrous consequences. There is no greater proof of the force of his
+will and the weight and strength of his character than the fact that
+he held in his cabinet Jefferson and Hamilton, despite their hatred
+for each other and each other's principles, and that he not only
+prevented any harm, but actually drew great results from the
+talents of each of them. Yet, with all his strength of grasp, this
+ill-assorted combination could not last, although Washington resisted
+the inevitable in a surprising way, and he even begged Jefferson to
+remain when the impossibility of doing so had become quite clear to
+that gentleman.
+
+The remonstrance in regard to the Freneau matter had but a temporary
+effect. Hamilton stopped his attacks, it is true; but Jefferson did
+not discontinue his, and he set on foot a movement which was designed
+to destroy his rival's public and private reputation. Hamilton met
+this attack in Congress, where he refuted it signally; and although
+the ostensible movers were members of the House, the defeat recoiled
+on the Secretary of State. Having failed in Congress and before the
+public to ruin his opponent, and having failed equally to shake
+Washington's confidence in Hamilton or the latter's influence in the
+administration, Jefferson made up his mind that the cabinet was no
+longer the place for him. He became more than ever satisfied that
+he was a "wave-worn mariner," and after some hesitation he finally
+resigned and transferred his political operations to another field. A
+year later Hamilton, from very different reasons of a purely private
+character, followed him.
+
+Meantime many events had occurred which all tended to show the growing
+intensity of party divisions, and which were not without their effect
+upon the mind of the President. In 1792 it became necessary to
+consider the question of the approaching election, and all elements
+united in urging upon Washington the absolute necessity of accepting
+the presidency a second time. Hamilton and the Federalists, of course,
+desired Washington's reëlection, because they regarded him as their
+leader, as the friend and supporter of their measures, and as the
+great bulwark of the government. Jefferson, who was equally urgent,
+felt that in the unformed condition of his own party the withdrawal of
+Washington, in addition to its injury to the general welfare,
+would leave his incoherent forces at the mercy of an avowed and
+thorough-going Federalist administration.
+
+So it came about that Washington received another unanimous election.
+He had no great longing for public office, but at this time he seems
+to have been not without a desire to continue President, in order that
+he might carry his measures to completion. In the unanimity of the
+choice he took a perfectly natural pleasure, for besides the personal
+satisfaction, he could not but feel that it greatly strengthened his
+hands in doing the work which he had at heart. On January 20, 1793,
+he wrote to Henry Lee: "A mind must be insensible, indeed, not to be
+gratefully impressed by so distinguished and honorable a testimony of
+public approbation and confidence; and as I suffered my name to be
+contemplated on this occasion, it is more than probable that I should,
+for a moment, have experienced chagrin if my reëlection had not been
+by a pretty respectable vote. But to say I feel pleasure from the
+prospect of commencing another tour of duty would be a departure from
+the truth." Some time was still to pass before Washington, either by
+word or deed, would acknowledge himself to be the chief or even a
+member of a party; but before he entered the presidency a second time,
+he had no manner of doubt that a party existed which was opposed to
+him and to all his measures.
+
+The establishment of the government and the treasury measures had
+very quickly rallied a strong party, which kept the name that it had
+adopted while fighting the battles of the Constitution. They were
+known in their own day, and have been known ever since to history, as
+the Federalists. The opposition, composed chiefly of those who had
+resisted the adoption of the Constitution, were discredited at the
+very start by the success of the union and the new government. When
+Jefferson took hold of them they were disorganized and even nameless,
+having no better appellation than that of "Anti-Federalists." In
+the process of time their great chief gave them a name, a set of
+principles, a war-cry, an organization, and at last an overwhelming
+victory. They began to take on something like form and coherence in
+resisting Hamilton's financial measures; but the success of his policy
+was so dazzling that they were rather cowed by it, and were left by
+their defeat little better off in the way of discipline than before.
+The French Revolution and its consequences, including a war with
+England, gave them a much better opportunity. It is melancholy to
+think that American parties should have entered upon their first
+struggle purely on questions of foreign politics. The only explanation
+is to repeat that we were still colonists in all but name and
+allegiance, and it was Washington's task not only to establish a
+dignified and independent policy of his own abroad, but to beat down
+colonial politics at home.
+
+In the first burst of rejoicing over the uprising of the French
+people, no divisions were apparent; but the arrival of Genet was the
+signal for their beginning. The extraordinary spectacle was then
+presented of an American party arrayed against the administration
+under the lead of the French minister, and with the strong, although
+covert sympathy of the Secretary of State. The popular feeling in fact
+was so strongly with France that the new party seemed on the
+surface to have almost universal support. The firm attitude of the
+administration and Washington's unyielding adherence to his policy of
+neutrality gave them their first serious check, but also embittered
+their attacks. In the first three years of the government almost every
+one refrained from attacking Washington personally. The unlimited love
+and respect in which he was held were the principal causes of this
+moderation, but even those opponents who were not influenced by
+feelings of respect were restrained by a wholesome prudence from
+bringing upon themselves the odium of being enemies of the President.
+
+The fiction that the king could do no wrong was carried to the last
+extreme by the Long Parliament when they made war on Charles in order
+to remove him from evil counselors. It was, no doubt, the exercise of
+a wise conservatism in that instance; but in the United States, and
+in the ordinary condition of politics, such a position was of course
+untenable. The President was responsible for his cabinet and for the
+measures of his administration, and it was impossible to separate them
+long, even when the chief magistrate was so great and so well-beloved
+as Washington. Freneau, editing his newspaper from the office of the
+Secretary of State, seems to have been the first to break the line. He
+passed speedily from attacks on measures to attacks on men, and among
+the latter he soon included the President. Washington had had too much
+experience of slander and abuse during the revolutionary war to be
+worried by them. But Freneau took pains to send him copies of his
+newspapers, a piece of impertinence which apparently led to a little
+vigorous denunciation, the account of which seems probable, although
+our only authority is in Jefferson's "Ana." As the attacks went on and
+were extended, and when Bache joined in with the "Aurora," Washington
+was not long in coming to the unpleasant conclusion that all this
+opposition proceeded from a well-formed plan, and was the work of
+a party which designed to break down his measures and ruin his
+administration. All statesmen intrusted in a representative system
+with the work of government are naturally prone to think that their
+opponents are also the enemies of the public welfare, and Washington
+was no exception to the rule. Such an opinion is indeed unavoidable,
+for a public man must have faith that his own measures are the best
+for the country, and if he did not, he would be but a faint-hearted
+representative, unfit to govern and unable to lead. History has agreed
+with Washington in his view of the work of his administration, and has
+set it down as essential to the right and successful foundation of the
+government. It is not to be wondered at that at the moment Washington
+should regard a party swayed by the French minister and seeking to
+involve us in war as unpatriotic and dangerous. He even thought that
+one probable solution of Genet's conduct was that he was the tool and
+not the leader of the party which sustained him. In fact, his general
+view of the opposition was marked by that perfect clearness which was
+characteristic of all his opinions when he had fully formed them. In
+July, 1793, he wrote to Henry Lee:--
+
+"That there are in this as well as in all other countries,
+discontented characters, I well know; as also that these characters
+are actuated by very different views: some good, from an opinion that
+the general measures of the government are impure; some bad, and, if I
+might be allowed to use so harsh an expression, diabolical, inasmuch
+as they are not only meant to impede the measures of that government
+generally, but more especially, as a great means toward the
+accomplishment of it, to destroy the confidence which it is necessary
+for the people to place, until they have unequivocal proof of demerit,
+in their public servants. In this light I consider myself whilst I
+am an occupant of office; and if they were to go further and call me
+their slave during this period, I would not dispute the point.
+
+"But in what will this abuse terminate? For the result, as it respects
+myself, I care not; for I have a consolation within that no earthly
+efforts can deprive me of, and that is, that neither ambition
+nor interested motives have influenced my conduct. The arrows of
+malevolence, therefore, however barbed and well pointed, never can
+reach the most vulnerable part of me; though, whilst I am up as a
+_mark_, they will be continually aimed. The publications in Freneau's
+and Bache's papers are outrages on common decency, and they progress
+in that style in proportion as their pieces are treated with contempt,
+and are passed by in silence by those at whom they are aimed. The
+tendency of them, however, is too obvious to be mistaken by men of
+cool and dispassionate minds, and, in my opinion, ought to alarm them,
+because it is difficult to prescribe bounds to the effect."
+
+He was not much given, however, to talking about his assailants. If he
+said anything, it was usually only in the way of contemptuous sarcasm,
+as when he wrote to Morris: "The affairs of this country _cannot go
+amiss_. There are _so many watchful guardians of them_, and such
+_infallible guides_, that one is at no loss for a director at every
+turn. But of these matters I shall say little." If these attacks had
+any effect on him, it was only to make him more determined in carrying
+out his purposes. In the first skirmish, which ended in the recall
+of Genet, he not only prevailed, but the French minister's audacity
+especially in venturing to appeal to the people against their
+President, demoralized the opposition and brought public opinion round
+to the side of the administration with an overwhelming force.
+
+Genet's mischief, however, did not end with him. He had sown the seeds
+of many troubles, and among others the idea of societies on the model
+of the famous Jacobin Club of Paris. That American citizens should
+have so little self-respect as to borrow the political jargon and ape
+the political manners of Paris was sad enough. To put on red caps,
+drink confusion to tyrants, sing _Ça ira_, and call each other
+"citizen," was foolish to the verge of idiocy, but it was at least
+harmless. When, however, they began to form "democratic societies"
+on the model of the Jacobins, for the defense of liberty against a
+government which the people themselves had made, they ceased to be
+fatuous and became mischievous. These societies, senseless imitations
+of French examples, and having no real cause to defend liberty, became
+simply party organizations, with a strong tendency to foster license
+and disorder. Washington regarded them with unmixed disgust, for he
+attributed to them the agitation and discontent of the settlers beyond
+the mountains, which threatened to embroil us with Spain, and he
+believed also that the much more serious matter of the whiskey
+rebellion was their doing. After having exhausted every reasonable
+means of concession and compromise, and having concentrated the best
+public opinion of the country behind him, he resolved to put down this
+"rebellion" with a strong hand, and he wrote to Henry Lee, just as
+he was preparing to take the last step: "It is with equal pride and
+satisfaction I add that, as far as my information extends, this
+insurrection is viewed with universal indignation and abhorrence,
+except by those who have never missed an opportunity, by side-blows
+or otherwise, to attack the general government; and even among these
+there is not a spirit hardy enough yet openly to justify the daring
+infractions of law and order; but by palliatives they are attempting
+to suspend all proceedings against the insurgents, until Congress
+shall have decided on the case, thereby intending to gain time, and,
+if possible, to make the evil more extensive, more formidable, and, of
+course, more difficult to counteract and subdue.
+
+"I consider this insurrection as the first formidable fruit of the
+democratic societies, brought forth, I believe, too prematurely for
+their own views, which may contribute to the annihilation of them."
+
+The insurrection vanished on the advance of the forces of the United
+States. It had been formidable enough to alarm all conservative
+people, and its inglorious end left the opposition, which had given it
+a certain encouragement, much discredited. This matter being settled,
+Washington determined to strike next at what he considered the chief
+sources of the evil, the clubs, which, to use his own words, "were
+instituted for the express purpose of poisoning the minds of the
+people of this country, and making them discontented with the
+government." Accordingly, in his speech to the next Congress he
+denounced the democratic societies. After tracing the course of the
+whiskey rebellion, he said:--
+
+"And when in the calm moments of reflection they [the citizens of
+the United States] shall have traced the origin and progress of the
+insurrection, let them determine whether it has not been fomented by
+combinations of men, who, careless of consequences, and disregarding
+the unerring truth, that those who rouse cannot always appease a civil
+convulsion, have disseminated, from an ignorance or perversion
+of facts, suspicions, jealousies, and accusations of the whole
+government."
+
+The opposition both in Congress and in the newspapers shrieked loudly
+over this plain speaking; but when Washington struck a blow, it was
+usually well timed, and the present instance was no exception. Coming
+immediately after the failure of the insurrection, and the triumph of
+the government, this strong expression of the President's disapproval
+had a fatal effect upon the democratic societies. They withered away
+with the rapidity of weeds when their roots have been skillfully cut.
+
+After this, even if Washington still refused to consider himself the
+head of a party, the opposition no longer had any doubts on that
+point. They not only regarded him as the chief of the Federalists, but
+also, and with perfect justice, as their own most dangerous enemy,
+and the man who had dealt them and their cause the most deadly blows.
+Whatever restraint they may have hitherto placed upon themselves in
+dealing with him personally, they now abandoned, and the opportunity
+for open war soon came to them in the vexed question of the British
+treaty, where they occupied much better ground than in the Genet
+affair, and commanded much more popular sympathy. Their orators did
+not hesitate to say that the conduct of the President in this affair
+had been improper and monarchical, and that he ought to be impeached.
+After the treaty was signed, the "Aurora" declared that the President
+had violated the Constitution, and made a treaty with a nation
+abhorred by our people; that he answered the respectful remonstrances
+of Boston and New York as if he were the omnipotent director of a
+seraglio, and had thundered contempt upon the people with as much
+confidence as if he sat upon the throne of "Industan."
+
+All these remarks and many more of like tenor have been gathered
+together and very picturesquely arranged by Mr. McMaster, in whose
+volumes they may be studied with advantage by any one who has doubts
+as to Washington's political position. It is not probable that the
+writer of the brilliant diatribe just quoted had any very distinct
+idea about either seraglios or "Industan," but he, and others of like
+mind, probably took pleasure in the words, as did the old woman who
+always loved to hear Mesopotamia mentioned. Other persons, however,
+were more definite in their statements. John Beckley, who had once
+been clerk of the House, writing under the very opposite signature of
+"A Calm Observer," declared that Washington had been overdrawing his
+salary in defiance of law, and had actually stolen in this way $4,750.
+Such being the case, the "Calm Observer" very naturally inquired:
+"What will posterity say of the man who has done this thing? Will it
+not say that the mask of political hypocrisy has been worn by Caesar,
+by Cromwell, and by Washington?" Another patriot, also of the
+Democratic party, declared that the President had been false to
+a republican government. He said that Washington maintained the
+seclusion of a monk and the supercilious distance of a tyrant; and
+that the concealing carriage drawn by supernumerary horses expressed
+the will of the President, and defined the loyal duty of the people.
+
+The support of Genet, the democratic societies, and now this concerted
+and bitter opposition to the Jay treaty, convinced Washington, if
+conviction were needed, that he could carry on his administration only
+by the help of those who were thoroughly in sympathy with his policy
+and purposes. When Jefferson left the State Department, the President
+promoted Randolph, and put Bradford, a Federalist, in the place of
+Attorney-General. When Hamilton left the Treasury, Oliver Wolcott,
+Hamilton's right-hand man, and the staunchest of party men, was
+given the position thus left vacant. If Randolph had remained in the
+cabinet, he would have become a Federalist. Like all men disposed to
+turn, when he was compelled to jump he sprang far, as was shown by
+his signing the treaty and memorial, both of which he strongly
+disapproved. He was quite ready to fall in with the rest of the
+cabinet, but on account of the Fauchet dispatch he resigned. Then
+Washington, after offering the portfolio to several persons known to
+be in hearty sympathy with him, took the risk of giving it to Timothy
+Pickering, who was by no means a safe leader, rather than take any
+chance of getting another adviser who was not entirely of his own way
+of thinking. At the same time he gave the secretaryship of war to
+James McHenry, a most devoted personal friend and follower. He still
+held back from calling himself a party chief, but he had discovered,
+as William of Orange discovered, that he could not, even with his iron
+will and lofty intent, overcome the impossible, alter human nature,
+or carry on a successful government under a representative system,
+without the assistance of a party. He stated his conclusion with his
+wonted plainness in a letter to Pickering written in September, 1795,
+in the midst of the struggle over the treaty. "I shall not," he said,
+"whilst I have the honor to administer the government, bring a man
+into any office of consequence knowingly, whose political tenets are
+adverse to the measures which the general government are pursuing; for
+this, in my opinion, would be a sort of political suicide. That it
+would embarrass its movements is most certain." A terser statement of
+the doctrine of party government it would be difficult to find, and
+in the conduct of Monroe and the course of the opposition journals
+Washington had ample proofs of the soundness of his theory.
+
+If he had needed to be strengthened in his determination, his
+opponents furnished the requisite aid. In February, 1796, the House
+refused to adjourn on his birthday for half an hour, in order to go
+and pay him their respects, as had been the pleasant custom up to that
+time. The Democrats of that day were in no confusion of mind as to the
+party to which Washington belonged, and they did not hesitate to put
+this deliberate slight upon him in order to mark their dislike. This
+was not the utterance of a newspaper editor, but the well-considered
+act of the representatives of a party in Congress. Party feeling,
+indeed, could hardly have gone further; and this single incident is
+sufficient to dispel the pleasing delusion that party strife and
+bitterness are the product of modern days, and of more advanced forms
+of political organization.
+
+Yet despite all these attacks there can be no doubt that Washington's
+hold upon the masses of the people was substantially unshaken. They
+would have gladly seen him assume the presidency for the third time,
+and if the test had been made, thousands of men who gave their votes
+to the opposition would have still supported him for the greatest
+office in their gift. But this time Washington would not yield to the
+wishes of his friends or of the country. He felt that he had done his
+work and earned the rest and the privacy for which he longed above all
+earthly things. In September, 1796, he published his farewell address,
+and no man ever left a nobler political testament. Through much
+tribulation he had done his great part in establishing the government
+of the Union, which might easily have come to naught without his
+commanding influence. He had imparted to it the dignity of his own
+great character. He had sustained the splendid financial policy of
+Hamilton. He had struck a fatal blow at the colonial spirit in our
+politics, and had lifted up our foreign policy to a plane worthy of an
+independent nation. He had stricken off the fetters which impeded the
+march of western settlement, and without loss of honor had gained time
+to enable our institutions to harden and become strong. He had made
+peace with our most dangerous enemies, and, except in the case of
+France, where there were perilous complications to be solved by his
+successor, he left the United States in far better and more honorable
+relations with the rest of the world than even the most sanguine would
+have dared to hope when the Constitution was formed. Now from the
+heights of great achievement he turned to say farewell to the people
+whom he so much loved, and whom he had so greatly served. Every word
+was instinct with the purest and wisest patriotism. "Be united," he
+said; "be Americans. The name which belongs to you, in your national
+capacity, must exalt the just pride of patriotism more than any
+appellation derived from local discriminations. Let there be no
+sectionalism, no North, South, East or West; you are all dependent one
+on another, and should be one in union. Beware of attacks, open or
+covert, upon the Constitution. Beware of the baneful effects of
+party spirit and of the ruin to which its extremes must lead. Do not
+encourage party spirit, but use every effort to mitigate and assuage
+it. Keep the departments of government separate, promote education,
+cherish the public credit, avoid debt. Observe justice and good faith
+toward all nations; have neither passionate hatreds nor passionate
+attachments to any; and be independent politically of all. In one
+word, be a nation, be Americans, and be true to yourselves."
+
+His admonitions were received by the people at large with profound
+respect, and sank deep into the public mind. As the generations have
+come and gone, the farewell address has grown dearer to the hearts of
+the people, and the children and the children's children of those to
+whom it was addressed have turned to it in all times and known that
+there was no room for error in following its counsel.
+
+Yet at the moment, notwithstanding the general sadness at Washington's
+retirement and the deep regard for his last words of advice, the
+opposition was so thoroughly hostile that they seized on the address
+itself as a theme for renewed attack upon its author. "His character,"
+said one Democrat, "can only be respectable while it is not known; he
+is arbitrary, avaricious, ostentatious; without skill as a soldier, he
+has crept into fame by the places he has held. His financial measures
+burdened the many to enrich the few. History will tear the pages
+devoted to his praise. France and his country gave him fame, and they
+will take that fame away." "His glory has dissolved in mist," said
+another writer, "and he has sunk from the high level of Solon or
+Lycurgus to the mean rank of a Dutch Stadtholder or a Venetian
+Doge. Posterity will look in vain for any marks of wisdom in his
+administration."
+
+To thoughtful persons these observations are not without a curious
+interest, as showing that even the wisest of men may be in error. The
+distinguished Democrat who uttered these remarks has been forgotten,
+and the page of history on which Washington's name was inscribed is
+still untorn. The passage of the address, however, which gave the most
+offense, as Mr. McMaster points out, was, as might have been expected
+from the colonial condition of our politics, that which declared it
+to be our true policy "to steer clear of permanent alliances with any
+portion of the foreign world." This, it was held, simply meant that,
+having made a treaty with England, we were to be stopped from making
+one with France. Another distinguished editor declared that the
+farewell address came from the meanest of motives; that the President
+knew he could not be reelected because the Republicans would have
+united to supersede him with Adams, who had the simplicity of a
+Republican, while Washington had the ostentation of an Eastern Pasha,
+and it was in order to save himself from this humiliation that he had
+cunningly resigned.
+
+When Washington met his last Congress, William Giles of Virginia took
+the opportunity afforded by the usual answer to the President's speech
+to assail him personally. It would be of course a gross injustice to
+suppose that a coarse political ruffian like Giles really represented
+the Democratic party. But he represented the extreme wing, and after
+he had declared in his place that Washington was neither wise nor
+patriotic, and that his retirement was anything but a calamity, he got
+twelve of his party friends to sustain his sentiments by voting
+with him. The press was even more unbridled, and it was said in the
+"Aurora" at this time that Washington had debauched and deceived
+the nation, and that his administration had shown that the mask of
+patriotism may be worn to conceal the foulest dangers to the liberties
+of the people. Over and over again it was said by these writers that
+he had betrayed France and was the slave of England.
+
+This charge of being a British sympathizer was the only one of all the
+abuse heaped upon him by the opposition that Washington seems really
+to have resented. In August, 1794, when this slander first started
+from the prolific source of all attacks against the government, he
+wrote to Henry Lee: "With respect to the words said to have been
+uttered by Mr. Jefferson, they would be enigmatical to those who are
+acquainted with the characters about me, unless supposed to be spoken
+ironically; and in that case they are too injurious to me, and have
+too little foundation in truth, to be ascribed to him. There could not
+be the trace of doubt in his mind of predilection in mine toward Great
+Britain or her politics, unless, which I do not believe, he has set me
+down as one of the most deceitful and uncandid men living; because,
+not only in private conversations between ourselves on this subject,
+but in my meetings with the confidential servants of the public, he
+has heard me often, when occasions presented themselves, express very
+different sentiments, with an energy that could not be mistaken by any
+one present.
+
+"Having determined, as far as lay within the power of the executive,
+to keep this country in a state of neutrality, I have made my public
+conduct accord with the system; and whilst so acting as a public
+character, consistency and propriety as a private man forbid those
+intemperate expressions in favor of one nation, or to the prejudice of
+another, which may have wedged themselves in, and, I will venture to
+add, to the embarrassment of government, without producing any good to
+the country."
+
+He had shown by his acts as well as by his words his real friendship
+for France, such as a proper sense of gratitude required. As has been
+already pointed out, rather than run the risk of seeming to reflect in
+the slightest degree upon the government of the French republic, he
+had refused even to receive distinguished _émigrés_ like Noailles,
+Liancourt, and Talleyrand.[1] He was so scrupulous in this respect
+that he actually did violence to his own strong desires in not taking
+into his house at once the son of Lafayette; and when it became
+necessary to choose a successor to Morris, his anxiety was so great
+to select some one agreeable to France that he took such an avowed
+opponent of his administration as Monroe.
+
+[Footnote 1: See the Letter to the Due de Liancourt explaining the
+reasons for his not being received by the President. (Sparks, xi.
+161.)]
+
+On the other hand, he had never lost the strong feeling of hostility
+toward England which he, above all men, had felt during the
+Revolution. The conduct of England, when he was seeking an honorable
+peace with her, tried his patience severely. He wrote to Morris in
+1795: "I give you these details (and if you should again converse with
+Lord Grenville on the subject, you are at liberty, unofficially,
+to mention them, or any of them, according to circumstances), as
+evidences of the unpolitic conduct (for so it strikes me) of the
+British government towards these United States; that it may be
+seen how difficult it has been for the executive, under such an
+accumulation of irritating circumstances, to maintain the ground of
+neutrality which had been taken; and at a time when the remembrance
+of the aid we had received from France in the Revolution was fresh in
+every mind, and while the partisans of that country were continually
+contrasting the affections of _that_ people with the unfriendly
+disposition of the _British government_. And that, too, as I have
+observed before, while _their own_ sufferings during the war with the
+latter had not been forgotten." The one man in the country who above
+all others had the highest conception of American nationality, who
+was the first to seek to lift up our politics from the low level of
+colonialism, who was the author of the neutrality policy, had reason
+to resent the bitter irony of an attack which represented him as a
+British sympathizer. The truth is, that the only foreign party at that
+time was that which identified itself with France, and which was
+the party of Jefferson and the opposition. The Federalists and
+the administration under the lead of Washington and Hamilton were
+determined that the government should be American and not French, and
+this in the eyes of their opponents was equivalent to being in the
+control of England. In after years, when the Federalists fell from
+power and declined into the position of a factious minority, they
+became British sympathizers, and as thoroughly colonial in their
+politics as the party of Jefferson had been. If they had had the
+wisdom of their better days they would then have made themselves the
+champions of the American idea, and would have led the country in the
+determined effort to free itself once for all from colonial politics,
+even if they were obliged to fight somebody to accomplish it. They
+proved unequal to the task, and it fell to a younger generation led by
+Henry Clay and his contemporaries to sweep Federalist and Jeffersonian
+republican alike, with their French and British politics, out of
+existence. In so doing the younger generation did but complete the
+work of Washington, for he it was who first trod the path and marked
+the way for a true American policy in the midst of men who could not
+understand his purposes.
+
+Bitter and violent as had been the attacks upon Washington while he
+held office, they were as nothing compared to the shout of fierce
+exultation which went up from the opposition journals when he finally
+retired from the presidency. One extract will serve as an example of
+the general tone of the opposition journals throughout the country. It
+is to be found in the "Aurora" of March 6, 1797:--
+
+ "'Lord, now lettest Thou Thy servant depart in peace,' was the
+ pious ejaculation of a pious man who beheld a flood of happiness
+ rushing in upon mankind. If ever there was a time that would
+ license the reiteration of the ejaculation, that time has now
+ arrived, for the man who is the source of all the misfortunes
+ of our country is this day reduced to a level with his
+ fellow-citizens, and is no longer possessed of power to multiply
+ evils upon the United States. If ever there was a period for
+ rejoicing, this is the moment. Every heart in unison with the
+ freedom and happiness of the people ought to beat high with
+ exultation that the name of Washington ceases from this day to
+ give currency to political insults, and to legalize corruption. A
+ new era is now opening upon us, an era which promises much to the
+ people, for public measures must now stand upon their own merits,
+ and nefarious projects can no longer be supported by a name. When
+ a retrospect has been taken of the Washingtonian administration
+ for eight years, it is a subject of the greatest astonishment
+ that a single individual should have cankered the principles of
+ republicanism in an enlightened people just emerged from the gulf
+ of despotism, and should have carried his designs against the
+ public liberty so far as to have put in jeopardy its very
+ existence. Such, however, are the facts, and with these staring us
+ in the face, the day ought to be a JUBILEE in the United States."
+
+This was not the outburst of a single malevolent spirit. The article
+was copied and imitated in New York and Boston, and wherever the
+party that called Jefferson leader had a representative among the
+newspapers. It is not probable that stuff of this sort gave Washington
+himself a moment's anxiety, for he knew too well what he had done, and
+he was too sure of his own hold upon the hearts of the people, to be
+in the least disturbed by the attacks of hostile editors. But the
+extracts are of interest as showing that the opposition party of that
+time, the party organized and led by Jefferson, regarded Washington as
+their worst enemy, and assailed him and slandered him to the utmost.
+They even went so far as to borrow materials from the enemies of the
+country with whom we had lately been at war, by publishing the forged
+letters attributed to Washington, and circulated by the British in
+1777, in order to discredit the American general. One of Washington's
+last acts, on March 3, 1797, was to file in the State Department a
+solemn declaration that these letters, then republished by an American
+political party, were base forgeries, of English origin in a time of
+war. His own view of this performance is given in a letter to Benjamin
+Walker, in which he said: "Amongst other attempts, ... spurious
+letters, known at the time of their first publication (I believe in
+the year 1777) to be forgeries, are (or extracts from them) brought
+forward with the highest emblazoning of which they are susceptible,
+with a view to attach principles to me which every action of my life
+has given the lie to. But that is no stumbling-block with the editors
+of these papers and their supporters."
+
+Two or three extracts from private letters will show how Washington
+regarded the course of the opposition, and the interpretation he put
+upon their attacks. After sketching in a letter to David Stuart the
+general course of the hostilities toward his administration, he said:
+"This not working so well as was expected, from a supposition that
+there was too much confidence in, and perhaps personal regard for, the
+present chief magistrate and his politics, the batteries have lately
+been leveled against him particularly and personally. Although he is
+soon to become a private citizen, his opinions are knocked down, and
+his character reduced as low as they are capable of sinking it, even
+by resorting to absolute falsehoods." Again he said, just before
+leaving office: "To misrepresent my motives, to reprobate my
+politics, and to weaken the confidence which has been reposed in my
+administration, are objects which cannot be relinquished by those who
+will be satisfied with nothing short of a change in our political
+system." He at least labored under no misapprehension after eight
+years of trial as to the position or purposes of the party which had
+fought him and his administration, and which had savagely denounced
+his measures at every step, and with ever-increasing violence.
+
+Having defined the attitude of the opposition, we can now consider
+that of Washington himself after he had retired from office, and no
+longer felt restrained by the circumstances of his election to the
+presidency from openly declaring his views, or publicly identifying
+himself with a political party. He rightly regarded the administration
+of Mr. Adams as a continuation of his own, and he gave to it a cordial
+support. He was equally clear and determined in his distrust and
+dislike of the opposition. Not long before leaving office he had
+written a letter to Jefferson, which, while it exonerated that
+gentleman from being the author of certain peculiarly malicious
+attacks, showed very plainly that the writer completely understood the
+position occupied by his former secretary. It was a letter which
+must have been most unpleasant reading for the person to whom it
+was addressed. A year later he wrote to John Nicholas in regard
+to Jefferson: "Nothing short of the evidence you have adduced,
+corroborative of intimations which I had received long before through
+another channel, could have shaken my belief in the sincerity of a
+friendship which I had conceived was possessed for me by the person to
+whom you allude." There was no doubt in his mind now as to Jefferson's
+conduct, and he knew at last that he had been his foe even when a
+member of his political household.
+
+When the time came to fill the offices in the provisional army made
+necessary by the menace of war with France, Washington wrote to the
+President that he ought to have generals who were men of activity,
+energy, health, and "sound politics," carrying apparently his
+suspicion of the opposition even to disbelieving in them as soldiers.
+He repeated the same idea in a letter to McHenry, in which he said:
+"I do not conceive that a desirable set could be formed from the old
+generals, some having never displayed any talent for enterprise,
+and others having shown a general opposition to the government, or
+predilection to French measures, be their present conduct what it
+may."
+
+When the question arose in regard to the relative rank of the
+major-generals, Washington said to Knox: "No doubt remained in my mind
+that Colonel Hamilton was designated second in command (and first, if
+I should decline an acceptance) by the Federal characters of Congress;
+whence alone anything like a public sentiment relative thereto could
+be deduced." He was quite clear that there was no use in looking
+beyond the confines of the Federal party for any public sentiment
+worth considering. He had serious doubts also as to the advisability
+of having the opponents of the government in the army, and wrote to
+McHenry on September 30, 1798, that brawlers against the government in
+certain parts of Virginia had suddenly become silent and were seeking
+commissions in the army. "The motives ascribed to them are that in
+such a situation they would endeavor to divide and contaminate the
+army by artful and seditious discourses, and perhaps at a critical
+moment bring on confusion. What weight to give to these conjectures
+you can judge as well as I. But as there will be characters enough
+of an opposite description who are ready to receive appointments,
+circumspection is necessary. Finding the resentment of the people
+at the conduct of France too strong to be resisted, they have in
+appearance adopted their sentiments, and pretend that, notwithstanding
+the misconduct of the government has brought it upon us, yet if an
+invasion should take place, it will be found that _they_ will be among
+the first to defend it. This is their story at all elections and
+election meetings, and told in many instances with effect." He wrote
+again in the same strain to McHenry, on October 21: "Possibly no
+injustice would be done, if I were to proceed a step further, and give
+it as an opinion that most of the candidates [for the army] brought
+forward by the opposition members possess sentiments similar to their
+own, and might poison the army by disseminating them, if they were
+appointed." In this period of danger, when the country was on the
+verge of war, the attitude of the opposition gave Washington much food
+for thought because it appeared to him so false and unpatriotic. In
+a letter to Lafayette, written on Christmas day, 1798, he gave the
+following brief sketch of the opposition: "A party exists in the
+United States, formed by a combination of causes, which opposed the
+government in all its measures, and are determined, as all their
+conduct evinces, by clogging its wheels indirectly to change the
+nature of it, and to subvert the Constitution. The friends of
+government, who are anxious to maintain its neutrality and to preserve
+the country in peace, and adopt measures to secure these objects, are
+charged by them as being monarchists, aristocrats, and infractors of
+the Constitution, which according to their interpretation of it would
+be a mere cipher. They arrogated to themselves ... the sole merit of
+being the friends of France, when in fact they had no more regard for
+that nation than for the Grand Turk, further than their own views
+were promoted by it; denouncing those who differed in opinion (those
+principles are purely American and whose sole view was to observe
+a strict neutrality) as acting under British influence, and being
+directed by her counsels, or as being her pensioners."
+
+Shortly before this sharp definition was written, an incident had
+occurred which had given Washington an opportunity of impressing his
+views directly and personally upon a distinguished leader of the
+opposite party. Dr. Logan of Philadelphia, under the promptings of
+Jefferson, as was commonly supposed, had gone on a volunteer mission
+to Paris for the purpose of bringing about peace between the two
+republics. He had apparently a fixed idea that there was something
+very monstrous in our having any differences with France, and being
+somewhat of a busybody, although a most worthy man, he felt called
+upon to settle the international complications which were then
+puzzling the brains and trying the patience of the ablest men in
+America. It is needless to say that his mission was not a success, and
+he was eventually so unmercifully ridiculed by the Federalist editors
+that he published a long pamphlet in his own defense. Upon his return,
+however, he seems to have been not a little pleased with himself, and
+he took occasion to call upon Washington, who was then in Philadelphia
+on business. It would be difficult to conceive anything more
+distasteful to Washington than such a mission as Logan's, or that he
+could have a more hearty contempt for any one than for a meddler of
+this description, who by his interference might help to bring his
+country into contempt. He was sufficiently impressed, however, by Dr.
+Logan's call to draw up a memorandum, which gave a very realistic and
+amusing account of it. It may be surmised that when Washington wished
+to be cold in his manner, he was capable of being very freezing, and
+he was not very apt at concealing his emotions when he found himself
+in the presence of any one whom he disliked and disapproved. The
+memorandum is as follows:--
+
+"_Tuesday, November_ 13, 1798.--Mr. Lear, my secretary, being from our
+lodgings on business, one of my servants came into the room where
+I was writing and informed me that a gentleman in the parlor below
+desired to see me; no name was sent up. In a few minutes I went down,
+and found the Rev. Dr. Blackwell and Dr. Logan there. I advanced
+towards and gave my hand to the former; the latter did the same
+towards me. I was backward in giving mine. He, possibly supposing from
+hence that I did not recollect him, said his name was Logan. Finally,
+in a very cold manner, and with an air of marked indifference, I gave
+him my hand and asked _Dr. Blackwell to be seated_; the other _took_
+a seat at the same time. I addressed _all_ my conversation to Dr.
+Blackwell; the other all his to me, to which I only gave negative or
+affirmative answers as laconically as I could, except asking him how
+Mrs. Logan did. He seemed disposed to be very polite, and while Dr.
+Blackwell and myself were conversing on the late calamitous fever,
+offered me an asylum at his house, if it should return or I thought
+myself in any danger in the city, and two or three rooms, by way of
+accommodation. I thanked him slightly, observing there would be no
+call for it."
+
+"About this time Dr. Blackwell took his leave. We all rose from our
+seats, and I moved a few paces toward the door of the room, expecting
+the other would follow and take his leave also."
+
+The worthy Quaker, however, was not to be got rid of so easily. He
+literally stood his ground, and went on talking of a number of things,
+chiefly about Lafayette and his family, and an interview with Mr.
+Murray, our minister in Holland. Washington, meanwhile, stood facing
+him, and to use his own words, "showed the utmost inattention," while
+his visitor described his journey to Paris. Finally Logan said that
+his purpose in going to France was to ameliorate the condition of
+our relations with that country. "This," said Washington, "drew my
+attention more pointedly to what he was saying and induced me to
+remark that there was something very singular in this; that _he_,
+who could only be viewed as a private character, unarmed with proper
+powers, and presumptively unknown in France, should suppose he could
+effect what three gentlemen of the first respectability in our
+country, especially charged under the authority of the government,
+were unable to do." One is not surprised to be then told that Dr.
+Logan seemed a little confounded at this observation; but he recovered
+himself, and went on to say that only five persons knew of his going,
+and that his letters from Mr. Jefferson and Mr. McKean obtained for
+him an interview with M. Merlin, president of the Directory, who had
+been most friendly in his expressions. To this Washington replied
+with some very severe strictures on the conduct of France; and the
+conversation, which must by this time have become a little strained,
+soon after came to an end. One cannot help feeling a good deal of
+sympathy for the excellent doctor, although he was certainly a
+busybody and, one would naturally infer, a bore as well. It would have
+been, however, a pity to have lost this memorandum, and there is every
+reason to regret that Washington did not oftener exercise his evident
+powers for realistic reporting. Nothing, moreover, could bring out
+better his thorough contempt for the opposition and their attitude
+toward France than this interview with the volunteer commissioner.
+
+There were, however, much more serious movements made by the
+Democratic party than well-meant and meddling attempts to make
+peace with France. This was the year of the Kentucky and Virginia
+resolutions, the first note of that disunion sentiment which was
+destined one day to involve the country in civil war and be fought out
+on a hundred battlefields. Washington, with his love for the Union and
+for nationality ever uppermost in his heart, was quick to take alarm,
+and it cut him especially to think that a movement which he esteemed
+at once desperate and wicked should emanate from his own State, and as
+we now know, and as he perhaps suspected, from a great Virginian
+whom he had once trusted. He straightway set himself to oppose this
+movement with all his might, and he summoned to his aid that other
+great Virginian who in his early days had been the first to rouse the
+people against oppression, and who now in his old age, in response to
+Washington's appeal, came again into the forefront in behalf of the
+Constitution and the union of the States. The letter which Washington
+wrote to Patrick Henry on this occasion is one of the most important
+that he ever penned, but there is room to quote only a single passage
+here.
+
+"At such a crisis as this," he said, "when everything dear and
+valuable to us is assailed, when this party hangs upon the wheels of
+government as a dead weight, opposing every measure that is calculated
+for defense and self-preservation, abetting the nefarious views of
+another nation upon our rights, preferring, as long as they dare
+contend openly against the spirit and resentment of the people, the
+interest of France to the welfare of their own country, justifying
+the former at the expense of the latter; when every act of their own
+government is tortured, by constructions they will not bear, into
+attempts to infringe and trample upon the Constitution with a view to
+introduce monarchy; when the most unceasing and the purest exertions
+which were making to maintain a neutrality ... are charged with being
+measures calculated to favor Great Britain at the expense of France,
+and all those who had any agency in it are accused of being under
+the influence of the former and her pensioners; when measures are
+systematically and pertinaciously pursued, which must eventually
+dissolve the Union or produce coercion; I say, when these things have
+become so obvious, ought characters who are best able to rescue their
+country from the pending evil to remain at home?...
+
+"Vain will it be to look for peace and happiness, or for the security
+of liberty or property, if civil discord should ensue. And what else
+can result from the policy of those among us, who, by all the measures
+in their power, are driving matters to extremity, if they cannot be
+counteracted effectually? The views of men can only be known, or
+guessed at, by their words or actions. Can those of the _leaders_ of
+opposition be mistaken, then, if judged by this rule? That they are
+followed by numbers, who are unacquainted with their designs and
+suspect as little the tendency of their principles, I am fully
+persuaded. But if their conduct is viewed with indifference, if there
+are activity and misrepresentations on one side and supineness on
+the other, their numbers accumulated by intriguing and discontented
+foreigners under proscription, who were at war with their own
+government, and the greater part of them with _all_ governments, they
+will increase, and nothing short of omniscience can foretell the
+consequences."
+
+It would have been difficult to draw a severer indictment of the
+opposition party than that given in this letter, but there is one
+other letter even more striking in its contents, without which no
+account of the relation of Washington to the two great parties which
+sprang up under his administration would be complete. It was addressed
+to Governor Trumbull of Connecticut, was written on July 21, 1799,
+less than six months before his death, and although printed, has
+been hidden away in the appendix to the "Life of Benjamin Silliman."
+Governor Trumbull, who bore the name and filled the office of
+Washington's old revolutionary friend, had written to the general, as
+many other Federalists were writing at that time, urging him to come
+forward and stand once more for the presidency, that he might heal the
+dissensions in his own party and save the country from the impending
+disaster of Jefferson's election. That Washington refused all these
+requests is of course well known, but his reasons as stated to
+Trumbull are of great interest. "I come now," he said, "my dear sir,
+to pay particular attention to that part of your letter which respects
+myself.
+
+"I remember well the conversation which you allude to. I have not
+forgot the answer I gave you. In my judgment it applies with as much
+force _now_ as _then_; nay, more, because at that time the line
+between the parties was not so clearly drawn, and the views of the
+opposition so clearly developed as they are at present. Of course
+allowing your observation (as it respects myself) to be well founded,
+personal influence would be of no avail.
+
+"Let that party set up a broomstick, and call it a true son of
+liberty,--a democrat,--or give it any other epithet that will suit
+their purpose, and it will command their votes _in toto_![1] Will not
+the Federalists meet, or rather defend, their cause on the opposite
+ground? Surely they must, or they will discover a want of policy,
+indicative of weakness and pregnant of mischief, which cannot be
+admitted. Wherein, then, would lie the difference between the present
+gentleman in office and myself?
+
+[Footnote 1: "As an analysis of this position, look to the pending
+election of governor in Pennsylvania."]
+
+"It would be matter of grave regret to me if I could believe that a
+serious thought was turned toward me as his successor, not only as
+it respects my ardent wishes to pass through the vale of life in
+retirement, undisturbed in the remnant of the days I have to sojourn
+here, unless called upon to defend my country (which every citizen is
+bound to do); but on public grounds also; for although I have abundant
+cause to be thankful for the good health with which I am blessed, yet
+I am not insensible to my declination in other respects. It would
+be criminal, therefore, in me, although it should be the wish of my
+countrymen and I could be elected, to accept an office under this
+conviction which another would discharge with more ability; and this,
+too, at a time when I am thoroughly convinced I should not draw a
+_single_ vote from the anti-Federal side, and of course should stand
+upon no other ground _than any other Federal character_[1] well
+supported; and when I should become a mark for the shafts of envenomed
+malice and the basest calumny to fire at,--when I should be charged
+not only with irresolution but with concealed ambition, which waits
+only an occasion to blaze out, and, in short, with dotage and
+imbecility.
+
+[Footnote 1: These italics are mine.]
+
+"All this, I grant, ought to be like dust in the balance, when put in
+competition with a _great_ public good, when the accomplishment of it
+is apparent. But, as no problem is better defined in my mind than that
+principle, not men, is now, and will be, the object of contention; and
+that I could not obtain a _solitary_ vote from that party; _that any
+other respectable Federal character could receive the same suffrages
+that I should_;[1] that at my time of life (verging towards threescore
+and ten) I should expose myself without rendering any essential
+service to my country, or answering the end contemplated; prudence on
+my part must avert any attempt of the well-meant but mistaken views of
+my friends to introduce me again into the chair of government."
+
+[Footnote 1: These italics are mine.]
+
+It does not fall within the scope of this biography to attempt to
+portray the history or weigh the merits of the two parties which came
+into existence at the close of the last century, and which, under
+varying names, have divided the people of the United States ever
+since. But it is essential here to define the relation of Washington
+toward them because one hears it constantly said and sees it as
+constantly written down, that Washington belonged to no party, which
+is perhaps a natural, but is certainly a complete misconception.
+Washington came to the presidency by a unanimous vote. He had in his
+mind very strongly the idea of the framers of the Constitution that
+the President, by the method of his election and by his independence
+of the other departments of government, was to be above and beyond
+party, and the representative of the whole people. In addition to this
+he was so absorbed by the great conception which he had of the future
+of the country, and was so confident of the purity and rectitude of
+his own purposes, that he was loath to think that party divisions
+could arise while he held the chief magistracy. It was not long
+before he was undeceived on this point, and he soon found that party
+divisions sprang up from the measures of his own administration.
+Nevertheless, he clung to his determination to govern without the
+assistance of a party as such. When this, too, became impossible, he
+still felt that the unanimity of his election required that he should
+not declare himself to be the head of a party; but he had become
+thoroughly convinced that under the representative system of the
+Constitution party government could not be avoided. In his farewell
+address he warned the people against the excesses of that party
+spirit which he deplored; but he did not suggest that it could be
+extinguished. Being a wise and far-seeing man, he saw that if party
+government was an evil, it also was under a free representative
+system, and in the present condition of human nature a necessary evil,
+furnishing the only machinery by which public affairs could be carried
+on.
+
+In a time of deep political excitement and strong party feeling,
+Washington was the last man in the world not to be decidedly on one
+side or the other. He was possessed of too much sense, force, and
+virility to be content to hold himself aloof and croak over the
+wickedness of people, who were trying to do something, even if
+they did not always try in the most perfect way. He was himself
+preëminently a doer of deeds, and not a critic or a phrase-maker, and
+we can read very distinctly in the extracts which have been brought
+together in this chapter what he thought on party and public
+questions. He was opposed to the party which had resisted all the
+great measures of his administration from the foundation of the
+government of the United States. They had assailed and maligned him
+and his ministers, and he regarded them as political enemies. He
+believed in the principles of that party which had supported the
+financial policy of Hamilton and his own policy of neutrality toward
+foreign nations. He was opposed to the party which introduced the
+interests of France as the leading issue of American politics, and
+which embodied the doctrines of nullification and separatism in the
+resolutions of Kentucky and Virginia. In one word, Washington, in
+policies and politics, was an American and a Nationalist; and the
+National and American party, from 1789 to 1801, was the Federalist
+party. It may be added that it was the only party which, at that
+precise time, could claim those qualities. While he remained in the
+presidency he would not declare himself to be of any party; but as
+soon as this fetter was removed, he declared himself freely after his
+fashion, expressing in words what he had formerly only expressed in
+action. His feelings warmed and strengthened as the controversy with
+France deepened, and as the attitude of the opposition became more
+un-American and leaned more and more to separatism. They culminated
+at last in the eloquent letter to Patrick Henry, and in the carefully
+weighed words with which he tells Trumbull that he can hope for no
+more votes than "any other Federal character."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+THE LAST YEARS
+
+
+Washington had entered upon the presidency with the utmost reluctance,
+and at the sacrifice of all he considered pleasantest and best in
+life. He took it and held it for eight years from a sense of duty,
+and with no desire to retain it beyond that which every man feels
+who wishes to finish a great work that he has undertaken. He looked
+forward to the approaching end of his second term with a feeling of
+intense relief, and compared himself to the wearied traveler who sees
+the resting-place where he is at length to have repose. On March 3 he
+gave a farewell dinner to the President and Vice-President elect, the
+foreign ministers and their wives, and other distinguished persons,
+from one of whom we learn that it was a very pleasant and lively
+gathering. When the cloth was removed Washington filled his glass and
+said: "Ladies and gentlemen, this is the last time I shall drink
+your health as a public man. I do it with sincerity, wishing you all
+possible happiness." The company did not take the same cheerful view
+as their host of this leave-taking. There was a pause in the gayety,
+some of the ladies shed tears, and the little incident only served to
+show the warm affection felt for Washington by every one who came in
+close contact with him.
+
+The next day the last official ceremonies were performed. After
+Jefferson had taken the oath as Vice-President and had proceeded with
+the Senate to the House of Representatives, which was densely crowded,
+Washington entered and was received with cheers and shouts, the waving
+of handkerchiefs, and an enthusiasm which seemed to know no bounds.
+Mr. Adams followed him almost immediately and delivered his inaugural
+address, in which he paid a stately compliment to the great virtues of
+his predecessor. It was the setting and not the rising sun, however,
+that drew the attention of the multitude, and as Washington left the
+hall there was a wild rush from the galleries to the corridors and
+then into the streets to see him pass. He took off his hat and bowed
+to the people, but they followed him even to his own door, where
+he turned once more and, unable to speak, waved to them a silent
+farewell.
+
+In the evening of the same day a great banquet was given to him by
+the merchants of Philadelphia, and when he entered the band played
+"Washington's March," and a series of emblematic paintings were
+disclosed, the chief of which represented the ex-President at Mount
+Vernon surrounded by the allegorical figures then so fashionable.
+After the festivities Washington lingered for a few days in
+Philadelphia to settle various private matters and then started for
+home. Whether he was going or coming, whether he was about to take the
+great office of President or retire to the privacy of Mount Vernon,
+the same popular enthusiasm greeted him. When he was really brought in
+contact with the people, the clamors of the opposition press and the
+attacks of the Jeffersonian editors all faded away and were forgotten.
+On March 12 he reached Baltimore, and the local newspaper of the next
+day said:--
+
+"Last evening arrived in this city, on his way to Mount Vernon, the
+illustrious object of veneration and gratitude, GEORGE WASHINGTON. His
+excellency was accompanied by his lady and Miss Custis, and by the son
+of the unfortunate Lafayette and his preceptor. At a distance from
+the city, he was met by a crowd of citizens, on horse and foot, who
+thronged the road to greet him, and by a detachment from Captain
+Hollingsworth's troop, who escorted him in through as great a
+concourse of people as Baltimore ever witnessed. On alighting at the
+Fountain Inn, the general was saluted with reiterated and thundering
+huzzas from the spectators. His excellency, with the companions of his
+journey, leaves town, we understand, this morning."
+
+Thus with the cheers and the acclamations still ringing in his ears
+he came home again to Mount Vernon, where he found at once plenty
+of occupation, which in some form was always a necessity to him. An
+absence of eight years had not improved the property. On April 3 he
+wrote to McHenry: "I find myself in the situation nearly of a new
+beginner; for, although I have not houses to build (except one, which
+I must erect for the accommodation and security of my military, civil,
+and private papers, which are voluminous and may be interesting),
+yet I have scarcely anything else about me that does not require
+considerable repairs. In a word, I am already surrounded by joiners,
+masons, and painters; and such is my anxiety to get out of their
+hands, that I have scarcely a room to put a friend into or to sit
+in myself without the music of hammers or the odoriferous scent of
+paint." He easily dropped back into the round of country duties and
+pleasures, and the care of farms and plantations, which had always
+had for him so much attraction. "To make and sell a little flour
+annually," he wrote to Wolcott, "to repair houses going fast to ruin,
+to build one for the security of my papers of a public nature, will
+constitute employment for the few years I have to remain on this
+terrestrial globe." Again he said to McHenry: "You are at the source
+of information, and can find many things to relate, while I have
+nothing to say that would either inform or amuse a secretary of war at
+Philadelphia. I might tell him that I begin my diurnal course with the
+sun; that if my hirelings are not in their places by that time I send
+them messages of sorrow for their indisposition; that having put these
+wheels in motion I examine the state of things further; that the more
+they are probed the deeper I find the wounds which my buildings have
+sustained by an absence and neglect of eight years; that by the time
+I have accomplished these matters breakfast (a little after seven
+o'clock, about the time I presume that you are taking leave of Mrs.
+McHenry) is ready; that this being over I mount my horse and ride
+round my farms, which employs me until it is time to dress for dinner,
+at which I rarely miss seeing strange faces, come, as they say, out of
+respect for me. Pray, would not the word curiosity answer as well?
+And how different this from having a few social friends at a cheerful
+board. The usual time of sitting at table, a walk, and tea bring me
+within the dawn of candle-light; previous to which, if not prevented
+by company, I resolve that as soon as the glimmering taper supplies
+the place of the great luminary I will retire to my writing-table and
+acknowledge the letters I have received; that when the lights
+are brought I feel tired and disinclined to engage in this work,
+conceiving that the next night will do as well. The next night comes
+and with it the same causes for postponement, and so on. Having given
+you the history of a day, it will serve for a year, and I am persuaded
+you will not require a second edition of it. But it may strike you
+that in this detail no mention is made of any portion of time allotted
+for reading. The remark would be just, for I have not looked into a
+book since I came home; nor shall I be able to do it until I have
+discharged my workmen; probably not before the nights grow longer,
+when possibly I may be looking in Doomsday book."
+
+There is not much that can be added to his own concise description of
+the simple life he led at home. The rest and quiet were very pleasant,
+but still there was a touch of sadness in his words. The long interval
+of absence made the changes which time had wrought stand out more
+vividly than if they had come one by one in the course of daily life
+at home. Washington looked on the ruins of Belvoir, and sighed to
+think of the many happy hours he had passed with the Fairfaxes, now
+gone from the land forever. Other old friends had been taken away
+by death, and the gaps were not filled by the new faces of which he
+speaks to McHenry. Indeed, the crowd of visitors coming to Mount
+Vernon from all parts of his own country and of the world, whether
+they came from respect or curiosity, brought a good deal of weariness
+to a man tired with the cares of state and longing for absolute
+repose. Yet he would not close his doors to any one, for the Virginian
+sense of hospitality, always peculiarly strong in him, forbade such
+action. To relieve himself, therefore, in this respect, he sent
+for his nephew Lawrence Lewis, who took the social burden from
+his shoulders. But although the visitors tired him when he felt
+responsible for their pleasure, he did not shut himself up now any
+more than at any other time in self-contemplation. He was constantly
+thinking of others; and the education of his nephews, the care of
+young Lafayette until he should return to France, as well as the
+happy love-match of Nellie Custis and his nephew, supplied the human
+interest without which he was never happy.
+
+Before we trace his connection with public affairs in these
+closing years, let us take one look at him, through the eyes of a
+disinterested but keen observer. John Bernard, an English actor,
+who had come to this country in the year when Washington left the
+presidency, was playing an engagement with his company at Annapolis,
+in 1798. One day he mounted his horse and rode down below Alexandria,
+to pay a visit to an acquaintance who lived on the banks of the
+Potomac. When he was returning, a chaise in front of him, containing a
+man and a young woman, was overturned, and the occupants were thrown
+out. As Bernard rode to the scene of the accident, another horseman
+galloped up from the opposite direction. The two riders dismounted,
+found that the driver was not hurt, and succeeded in restoring the
+young woman to consciousness; an event which was marked, Bernard tells
+us, by a volley of invectives addressed to her unfortunate husband.
+"The horse," continues Bernard, "was now on his legs, but the vehicle
+still prostrate, heavy in its frame, and laden with at least half a
+ton of luggage. My fellow-helper set me an example of activity in
+relieving it of the internal weight; and when all was clear, we
+grasped the wheel between us, and to the peril of our spinal columns
+righted the conveyance. The horse was then put in, and we lent a
+hand to help up the luggage. All this helping, hauling, and lifting
+occupied at least half an hour, under a meridian sun, in the middle of
+July, which fairly boiled the perspiration out of our foreheads." The
+possessor of the chaise beguiled the labor by a full personal history
+of himself and his wife, and when the work was done invited the two
+Samaritans to go with him to Alexandria, and take a drop of "something
+sociable." This being declined, the couple mounted into the chaise and
+drove on. "Then," says Bernard, "my companion, after an exclamation at
+the heat, offered very courteously to dust my coat, a favor the return
+of which enabled me to take deliberate survey of his person. He was
+a tall, erect, well-made man, evidently advanced in years, but who
+appeared to have retained all the vigor and elasticity resulting from
+a life of temperance and exercise. His dress was a blue coat buttoned
+to his chin, and buckskin breeches. Though the instant he took off his
+hat I could not avoid the recognition of familiar lineaments, which
+indeed I was in the habit of seeing on every sign-post and over every
+fireplace, still I failed to identify him, and to my surprise I found
+that I was an object of equal speculation in his eyes." The actor
+evidently did not have the royal gift of remembering faces, but the
+stranger possessed that quality, for after a moment's pause he said,
+"Mr. Bernard, I believe," and mentioned the occasion on which he had
+seen him play in Philadelphia. He then asked Bernard to go home with
+him for a couple of hours' rest, and pointed out the house in the
+distance. At last Bernard knew to whom he was speaking. "'Mount
+Vernon!' I exclaimed; and then drawing back with a stare of wonder,
+'Have I the honor of addressing General Washington?' With a smile
+whose expression of benevolence I have rarely seen equaled, he offered
+his hand and replied: 'An odd sort of introduction, Mr. Bernard; but
+I am pleased to find you can play so active a part in private, and
+without a prompter.'" So they rode on together to the house and had a
+chat, to which we must recur further on.
+
+There is no contemporary narrative of which I am aware that shows
+Washington to us more clearly than this little adventure with Bernard,
+for it is in the common affairs of daily life that men come nearest
+to each other, and the same rule holds good in history. We know
+Washington much better from these few lines of description left by
+a chance acquaintance on the road than we do from volumes of state
+papers. It is such a pleasant story, too. There is the great man,
+retired from the world, still handsome and imposing in his old age,
+with the strong and ready hand to succor those who had fallen by the
+wayside; there are the genuine hospitality, the perfect manners, and
+the well-turned little sentence with which he complimented the actor,
+put him at his ease, and asked him to his house. Nothing can well be
+added to the picture of Washington as we see him here, not long before
+the end of all things came. We must break off, however, from the quiet
+charm of home life, and turn again briefly to the affairs of state.
+Let us, therefore, leave these two riding along the road together in
+the warm Virginia sunshine to the house which has since become one of
+the Meccas of humanity, in memory of the man who once dwelt in it.
+
+The highly prized retirement to Mount Vernon did not now, more than
+at any previous time, separate Washington from the affairs of the
+country. He continued to take a keen interest in all that went on,
+to correspond with his friends, and to use his influence for what he
+thought wisest and best for the general welfare. These were stirring
+times, too, and the progress of events brought him to take a more
+active part than he had ever expected to play again; for France,
+having failed, thanks to his policy, to draw us either by fair words
+or trickery from our independent and neutral position, determined,
+apparently, to try the effect of force and ill usage. Pinckney, sent
+out as minister, had been rebuffed; and then Adams, with the cordial
+support of the country, had made another effort for peace by sending
+Pinckney, Marshall, and Gerry as a special commission. The history of
+that commission is one of the best known episodes in our history. Our
+envoys were insulted, asked for bribes, and browbeaten, until the two
+who retained a proper sense of their own and their country's dignity
+took their passports and departed. The publication of the famous X, Y,
+Z letters, which displayed the conduct of France, roused a storm of
+righteous indignation from one end of the United States to the other.
+The party of France and of the opposition bent before the storm, and
+the Federalists were at last all-powerful. A cry for war went up from
+every corner, and Congress provided rapidly for the formation of an
+army and the beginning of a navy.
+
+Then the whole country turned, as a matter of course, to one man to
+stand at the head of the national forces of the United States,
+and Adams wrote to Washington, urging him to take command of the
+provisional army. To any other appeal to come forward Washington would
+have been deaf, but he could never refuse a call to arms. He wrote to
+Adams on July 4, 1798: "In case of _actual invasion_ by a formidable
+force, I certainly should not intrench myself under the cover of age
+or retirement, if my services should be required by my country to
+assist in repelling it." He agreed, therefore, to take command of the
+army, provided that he should not be called into active service
+except in the case of actual hostilities, and that he should have the
+appointment of the general's staff. To these terms Adams of course
+acceded. But out of the apparently simple condition relating to the
+appointment of officers there grew a very serious trouble. There were
+to be three major-generals, the first of them to have also the rank of
+inspector-general, and to be the virtual commander-in-chief until the
+army was actually called into the field. For these places, Washington
+after much reflection selected Hamilton, Pinckney, and Knox, in the
+order named, and in doing so he very wisely went on the general
+principle that the army was to be organized _de novo_, without
+reference to prior service. Apart from personal and political
+jealousies, nothing could have been more proper and more sound than
+this arrangement; but at this point the President's dislike of
+Hamilton got beyond control, and he made up his mind to reverse the
+order, and send in Knox's name first. The Federalist leaders were of
+course utterly disgusted by this attempt to set Hamilton aside, which
+was certainly ill-judged, and which proved to be the beginning of the
+dissensions that ended in the ruin of the Federalist party. After
+every effort, therefore, to move Adams had failed, Pickering and
+others, including Hamilton himself, appealed to Washington. At a
+distance from the scene of action, and unfamiliar with the growth of
+differences within the party, Washington was not only surprised, but
+annoyed by the President's conduct. In addition to the evils which he
+believed would result in a military way from this change, he felt that
+the conditions which he had made had been violated, and that he had
+not been treated fairly. He therefore wrote to the President with
+his wonted plainness, on September 25, and pointed out that his
+stipulations had not been complied with, that the change of order
+among the major-generals was thoroughly wrong, and that the
+President's meddling with the inferior appointments had been hurtful
+and injudicious. His views were expressed in the most courteous
+way, although with an undertone of severe disapproval. There was no
+mistaking the meaning of the letter, however, and Adams, bold man and
+President as he was, gave way at once. Mr. Adams thought at the time
+that there had been about this matter of the major-generals too much
+intrigue, by which Washington had been deceived and he himself made a
+victim; but there seems no good reason to take this view of it, for
+there is no indication whatever that Washington did not know and
+understand the facts; and it was on the facts that he made his
+decision, and not on the methods by which they were conveyed to him.
+The propriety of the decision will hardly now be questioned, although
+it did not tend to make the relations between the ex-President and
+his successor very cordial. They had always a great respect for
+each other, but not much sympathy, for they differed too widely in
+temperament. Even if Washington would have permitted it, it would have
+been impossible for the President to have quarreled with him, but at
+the same time he felt not a little awkwardness in dealing with his
+successor, and was inclined to think that that gentleman did not show
+him all the respect that was due. He wrote to McHenry on October 1:
+"As no mode is yet adopted by the President by which the battalion
+officers are to be appointed, and as I think I stand on very
+precarious ground in my relation to him, I am not over-zealous
+in taking _unauthorized_ steps when those that I thought _were
+authorized_ are not likely to meet with much respect."
+
+[Illustration: HENRY KNOX]
+
+There was, however, another consequence of this affair which gave
+Washington much more pain than any differences with the President. His
+old friend and companion in arms, General Knox, was profoundly hurt at
+the decision which placed Hamilton at the head of the army. One cannot
+be surprised at Knox's feelings, for he had been a distinguished
+officer, and had outranked both Hamilton and Pinckney. He felt that he
+ought to command the army, and that he was quite capable of doing so;
+and he did not relish being told in this official manner that he had
+grown old, and that the time had come for younger and abler men to
+pass beyond him. The archbishop in "Gil Blas" is one of the most
+universal types of human nature that we have. Nobody feels kindly to
+the monitor who points out the failings which time has brought, and we
+are all inclined to dismiss him with every wish that he may fare well
+and have a little more taste. Poor Knox could not dismiss his Gil
+Blas, and he felt the unpleasant admonition all the more bitterly from
+the fact that the blow was dealt by the two men whom he most loved and
+admired. Hamilton wrote him the best and most graceful of letters, but
+failed to soothe him; and Washington was no more fortunate. He tried
+with the utmost kindliness, and in his most courteous manner, to
+soften the disappointment, and to show Knox how convincing were the
+reasons for his action. But the case was not one where argument could
+be of avail, and when Knox persisted in his refusal to take the place
+assigned him, Washington, with all his sympathy, was perfectly frank
+in expressing his views.
+
+In a second letter, complaining of the injustice with which he had
+been treated, Knox intimated that he would be willing to serve on the
+personal staff of the commander-in-chief. This was all very well; but
+much as Washington grieved for his old friend's disappointment, there
+was to be no misunderstanding in the matter. He wrote Knox on October
+21: "After having expressed these sentiments with the frankness of
+undisguised friendship, it is hardly necessary to add that, if you
+should finally decline the appointment of major-general, there is none
+to whom I would give a more decided preference as an aide-de-camp, the
+offer of which is highly flattering, honorable, and grateful to my
+feelings, and for which I entertain a high sense. But, my dear General
+Knox, and here again I speak to you in a language of candor and
+friendship, examine well your mind upon this subject. Do not unite
+yourself to the suite of a man whom you may consider as the primary
+cause of what you call a degradation, with unpleasant sensations.
+This, while it was gnawing upon you, would, if I should come to the
+knowledge of it, make me unhappy; as my first wish would be that my
+military family and the whole army should consider themselves a band
+of brothers, willing and ready to die for each other."
+
+Knox would not serve; and his ill temper, irritated still further
+by the apparent preference of the President and by the talk of his
+immediate circle, prevailed. On the other hand, Pinckney, one of the
+most generous and patriotic of men, accepted service at once without a
+syllable of complaint on the score that he had ranked Hamilton in the
+former war. It was with these two, therefore, that Washington
+carried on the work of organizing the provisional army. Despite his
+determination to remain in retirement until called to the field, his
+desire for perfection in any work that he undertook brought him out,
+and he gave much time and attention not only to the general questions
+which were raised, but to the details of the business, and on November
+10 he addressed a series of inquiries, both general and particular,
+to Hamilton and Pinckney. These inquiries covered the whole scope of
+possible events, probable military operations, and the formation of
+the army. They were written in Philadelphia, whither he had gone, and
+where he passed a month with the two major-generals in the discussion
+of plans and measures. The result of their conferences was an
+elaborate and masterly report on army organization drawn up by
+Hamilton, upon whom, throughout this period of impending war, the
+brunt of the work fell.
+
+Careful and painstaking, however, as Washington was in the matter of
+appointments and organization, dealing with them as if he was about to
+take the field at the head of the army, there was never a moment when
+he felt that there was danger of actual war. He had studied foreign
+affairs and the conditions of Europe too well to be much deceived
+about them, and least of all in regard to France. He felt from the
+beginning that the moment we displayed a proper spirit, began to arm,
+and fought one or two French ships successfully, that France would
+leave off bullying and abusing us, and make a satisfactory peace. The
+declared adherent of the maxim that to prepare for war was the most
+effectual means of preserving peace, he felt that never was it more
+important to carry out this doctrine than now; and it was for this
+reason that he labored so hard and gave so much thought to army
+organization at a time when he felt more than ever the need of repose,
+and shrank from the least semblance of a return to public life. In
+all his long career there was never a better instance of his devoted
+patriotism than his coming forward in this way at the sacrifice of
+every personal wish after his retirement from the presidency.
+
+Yet, although he closely watched the course of politics, and gave, as
+has been said, a cordial support to the administration, his sympathies
+were rather with the opponents of the President within the ranks
+of their common party. The conduct of Gerry, who had been Adams's
+personal selection for a commissioner, was very distasteful to
+Washington, and was very far from exciting in his mind the approval
+which it drew from Mr. Adams. He wrote to Pickering on October 18:
+"With respect to Mr. Gerry, his own character and public satisfaction
+require better evidence than his letter to the minister of foreign
+relations to prove the propriety of his conduct during his envoyship."
+He did not believe that we were to have war with France, but he was
+very confident that a bold and somewhat uncompromising attitude was
+the best one for the country, and that above all we should not palter
+with France after the affronts to which we had been subjected. When
+President Adams, therefore, made his sudden change of policy by
+nominating Murray as a special envoy, Washington, despite his desire
+for peace, was by no means enthusiastic in his approval of the methods
+by which it was sought. The President wrote him announcing the
+appointment of Murray, and Washington acknowledged the letter and
+the information without any comment. He saw, of course, that as the
+President had seen fit to take the step he must be sustained, and he
+wrote to Murray to impress upon him the gravity of the mission with
+which he was intrusted; but he had serious doubts as to the success of
+such a mission under such conditions, and when delays occurred he was
+not without hopes of a final abandonment. The day after his letter to
+Murray he wrote to Hamilton: "I was surprised at the _measure_,
+how much more so at the manner of it! This business seems to have
+commenced in an evil hour, and under unfavorable auspices. I wish
+mischief may not tread in all its steps, and be the final result of
+the measure. A wide door was open, through which a retreat might have
+been made from the first _faux pas_, the shutting of which, to those
+who are not behind the curtain and are as little acquainted with
+the secrets of the cabinet as I am, is, from the present aspect of
+European affairs, quite incomprehensible." He hoped but little good
+from the mission, although it had his fervent wishes for its success,
+expressed repeatedly in letters to members of the cabinet; and while
+he was full of apprehension, he had a firm faith that all would end
+well.
+
+For this anxiety, indeed, there was abundant reason. A violent change
+of policy toward France, the disorders occasioned by political
+dissensions at home, and the sudden appearance of the deadly doctrine
+of nullification, all combined to excite alarm in the mind of a man
+who looked as far into the future and as deep beneath the surface of
+things as did Washington. It was then that he urged Patrick Henry to
+reenter public life, and exerted his own influence wherever he could
+to check the separatist movement set on foot by Jefferson. He was
+deeply disturbed, too, by the tendencies of the times in other
+directions. The delirium of the French Revolution was not confined
+to France. Her soldiers bore with them the new doctrines, while far
+beyond the utmost reach of her armies flew the ideas engendered in
+the fevered air of Paris. Wherever they alighted they touched men and
+stung them to madness, and the madness that they bred was not confined
+to those who believed the new gospel, but was shared equally by those
+who resisted and loathed it. Burke, in his way, was as much crazed as
+Camille Desmoulins, and it seemed impossible for people living in the
+midst of that terrific convulsion of society to retain their judgment.
+Nowhere ought men to have been better able to withstand the contagion
+of the revolution than in America, and yet even here it produced the
+same results as in countries nearly affected by it. The party
+of opposition to the government became first ludicrous and then
+dangerous, in their wild admiration and senseless imitation of ideas
+and practices as utterly alien to the people of the United States as
+cannibalism or fire-worship. Then the Federalists, on their side, fell
+beneath the spell. The overthrow of religion, society, property, and
+morals, which they beheld in Paris, seemed to them to be threatening
+their own country, and they became as extreme as their opponents in
+the exactly opposite direction. Federalist divines came to look
+upon Jefferson, the most timid and prudent of men, as a Marat or
+Robespierre, ready to reproduce the excesses of his prototypes; while
+Pickering, Wolcott, and all their friends in public life regarded
+themselves as engaged in a struggle for the preservation of order and
+society and of all that they held most dear. They were in the habit of
+comparing French principles to a pestilence, and the French republic
+to a raging tiger. Even Hamilton was so moved as to believe that the
+United States were on the verge of anarchy, and he laid down his life
+at last in a senseless duel because he thought that his refusal to
+fight would disable him for leading the forces of order when the final
+crash came.
+
+Washington, with his strong, calm judgment and his penetrating vision,
+was less affected than any of those who had followed and sustained
+him; but he was by no means untouched, and if we try to put ourselves
+in his place, his views seem far from unreasonable. He had at the
+outset wished well to the great movement in France, although even then
+he doubted its final success. Very soon, however, doubts changed
+to suspicions, and suspicions to conviction. As he saw the French
+revolution move on in its inevitable path, he came to hate and dread
+its deeds, its policies, and its doctrines. To a man of his temper it
+could not have been otherwise, for license and disorder were above all
+things detestable to him. They were the immediate fruits of the French
+revolution, and when he saw a party devoted to France preaching the
+same ideas in the United States, he could not but feel that there was
+a real and practical danger confronting the country. This was why he
+felt that we needed an energetic policy, and it was on this account
+that he distrusted the President's renewed effort for peace. The
+course of the opposition, as he saw it, threatened not merely the
+existence of the Union, but wittingly or unwittingly struck at the
+very foundations of society. His anxiety did not make him violent, as
+was the case with lesser men, but it convinced him of the necessity of
+strong measures, and he was not a man to shrink from vigorous action.
+He was quite prepared to do all that could be done to maintain the
+authority of the government, which he considered equivalent to the
+protection of society, and for this reason he approved of the Alien
+and Sedition acts.
+
+In the process of time these two famous laws have come to be
+universally condemned, and those who have not questioned their
+constitutionality have declared them wrong, inexpedient and impolitic,
+and the immediate cause of the overthrow of the party responsible for
+them. Everybody has made haste to disown them, and there has been a
+general effort on the part of Federalist sympathizers to throw the
+blame for them on persons unknown. Biographers, especially, have tried
+zealously to clear the skirts of their heroes from any connection with
+these obnoxious acts; but the truth is, that, whether right or wrong,
+wise or unwise, these laws had the entire support of the ruling party
+from the President down. Hamilton, who objected to the first draft
+because it was needlessly violent, approved the purpose and principle
+of the legislation; and Washington was no exception to the general
+rule. He was calm about it, but his approbation was none the less
+distinct, and he took pains to circulate a sound argument, when he
+met with one, in justification of the Alien and Sedition acts.[1] In
+November, 1798, Alexander Spotswood wrote to him, asking his judgment
+on those laws. As the writer announced himself to be thoroughly
+convinced of their unconstitutionally, Washington, with a little
+sarcasm, declined to enter into argument with him. "But," he
+continued, "I will take the liberty of advising such as are not
+'thoroughly convinced,' and whose minds are yet open to conviction,
+to read the pieces and hear the arguments which have been adduced
+in favor of, as well as those against, the constitutionality and
+expediency of those laws, before they decide and consider to what
+lengths a certain description of men in our country have already
+driven, and seem resolved further to drive matters, and then ask
+themselves if it is not time and expedient to resort to protecting
+laws against aliens (for citizens, you certainly know, are not
+affected by that law), who acknowledge no allegiance to this country,
+and in many instances are sent among us, as there is the best
+circumstantial evidence to prove, for the express purpose of poisoning
+the minds of our people and sowing dissensions among them, in order to
+alienate their affections from the government of their choice, thereby
+endeavoring to dissolve the Union, and of course the fair and happy
+prospects which are unfolding to our view from the Revolution."
+
+[Footnote 1: See letter to Bushrod Washington, Sparks, vi. p. 387.]
+
+With these strong and decided feelings as to the proper policy to
+be adopted, and with such grave apprehensions as to the outcome
+of existing difficulties, Washington was deeply distressed by the
+divisions which he saw springing up among the Federalists. From his
+point of view it was bad enough to have the people of the country
+divided into two great parties; but that one of those parties, that
+which was devoted to the maintenance of order and the preservation
+of the Union, should be torn by internal dissensions, seemed to him
+almost inconceivable. He regarded the conduct of the party and of its
+leaders with quite as much indignation as sorrow, for it seemed to him
+that they were unpatriotic and false to their trust in permitting for
+a moment these personal factions which could have but one result. He
+wrote to Trumbull on August 30, 1799:--
+
+"It is too interesting not to be again repeated, that if principles
+instead of men are not the steady pursuit of the Federalists, their
+cause will soon be at an end; if these are pursued they will not
+_divide_ at the next election of President; if they do divide on
+so _important_ a point, it would be dangerous to trust them on any
+other,--and none except those who might be solicitous to fill the
+chair of government would do it."[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: _Life of Silliman_, vol. ii. p. 385.]
+
+He was a true prophet, but he did not live to see the verification
+of his predictions, which would have been to him a source of so much
+grief. In the midst of his anxieties about public affairs, and of
+the quiet, homely interests which made the days at Mount Vernon so
+pleasant, the end suddenly came. There was no more forewarning than if
+he had been struck down by accident or violence. He had always been a
+man of great physical vigor, and although he had had one or two acute
+and dangerous illnesses arising from mental strain and much overwork,
+there is no indication that he had any organic disease, and since his
+retirement from the presidency he had been better than for many years.
+There was not only no sign of breaking up, but he appeared full of
+health and activity, and led his usual wholesome outdoor life with
+keen enjoyment.
+
+The morning of December 12 was overcast. He wrote to Hamilton warmly
+approving the scheme for a military academy; and having finished this,
+which was probably the last letter he ever wrote, he mounted his horse
+and rode off for his usual round of duties. He noted in his diary,
+where he always described the weather with methodical exactness, that
+it began to snow about one o'clock, soon after to hail, and then
+turned to a settled cold rain. He stayed out notwithstanding for about
+two hours, and then came back to the house and franked his letters.
+Mr. Lear noticed that his hair was damp with snow, and expressed a
+fear that he had got wet; but the General said no, that his coat had
+kept him dry, and sat down to dinner without changing his clothes. The
+next morning snow was still falling so that he did not ride, and he
+complained of a slight sore throat, but nevertheless went out in the
+afternoon to mark some trees that were to be cut down. His hoarseness
+increased toward night, yet still he made light of it, and read the
+newspapers and chatted with Mrs. Washington during the evening.
+
+When he went to bed Mr. Lear urged him to take something for his cold.
+"No," he replied, "you know I never take anything for a cold. Let
+it go as it came." In the night he had a severe chill, followed by
+difficulty in breathing; and between two and three in the morning he
+awoke Mrs. Washington, but would not allow her to get up and call a
+servant lest she should take cold. At daybreak Mr. Lear was summoned,
+and found Washington breathing with difficulty and hardly able to
+speak. Dr. Craik, the friend and companion of many years, was sent
+for at once, and meantime the General was bled slightly by one of the
+overseers. A futile effort was also made to gargle his throat, and
+external applications were tried without affording relief. Dr. Craik
+arrived between eight and nine o'clock with two other physicians, when
+other remedies were tried and the patient was bled again, all without
+avail. About half-past four he called Mrs. Washington to his bedside
+and asked her to get two wills from his desk. She did so, and after
+looking them over he ordered one to be destroyed and gave her the
+other to keep. He then said to Lear, speaking with the utmost
+difficulty, but saying what he had to say with characteristic
+determination and clearness: "I find I am going; my breath cannot last
+long. I believed from the first that the disorder would prove fatal.
+Do you arrange and record all my late military letters and papers.
+Arrange my accounts and settle my books, as you know more about them
+than any one else; and let Mr. Rawlins finish recording my other
+letters, which he has begun." He then asked if Lear recollected
+anything which it was essential for him to do, as he had but a very
+short time to continue with them. Lear replied that he could recollect
+nothing, but that he hoped the end was not so near. Washington smiled,
+and said that he certainly was dying, and that as it was the
+debt which we must all pay, he looked to the event with perfect
+resignation.
+
+The disease which was killing him was acute oedematous laryngitis,[1]
+which is as simple as it is rare and fatal,[2] and he was being
+slowly strangled to death by the closing of the throat. He bore
+the suffering, which must have been intense, with his usual calm
+self-control, but as the afternoon wore on the keen distress and the
+difficulty of breathing made him restless. From time to time Mr. Lear
+tried to raise him and make his position easier. The General said,
+"I fear I fatigue you too much;" and again, on being assured to the
+contrary, "Well, it is a debt we must pay to each other, and I hope
+when you want aid of this kind you will find it." He was courteous and
+thoughtful of others to the last, and told his servant, who had been
+standing all day in attendance upon him, to sit down. To Dr. Craik he
+said: "I die hard, but I am not afraid to go. I believed from my first
+attack that I should not survive it. My breath cannot last long." When
+a little later the other physicians came in and assisted him to sit
+up, he said: "I feel I am going. I thank you for your attentions, but
+I pray you will take no more trouble about me. Let me go off quietly.
+I cannot last long." He lay there for some hours longer, restless and
+suffering, but utterly uncomplaining, taking such remedies as the
+physicians ordered in silence. About ten o'clock he spoke again to
+Lear, although it required a most desperate effort to do so. "I am
+just going," he said. "Have me decently buried, and do not let my body
+be put into the vault in less than three days after I am dead." Lear
+bowed, and Washington said, "Do you understand me?" Lear answered,
+"Yes." "'Tis well," he said, and with these last words again fell
+silent. A little later he felt his own pulse, and, as he was counting
+the strokes, Lear saw his countenance change. His hand dropped back
+from the wrist he had been holding, and all was over. The end had
+come. Washington was dead. He died as he had lived, simply and
+bravely, without parade and without affectation. The last duties
+were done, the last words said, the last trials borne with the quiet
+fitness, the gracious dignity, that even the gathering mists of the
+supreme hour could neither dim nor tarnish. He had faced life with a
+calm, high, victorious spirit. So did he face death and the unknown
+when Fate knocked at the door.
+
+[Footnote 1: It was called at the time a quinsy.]
+
+[Footnote 2: See Memoir on _The Last Sickness of Washington_, by James
+Jackson, M.D. In response to an inquiry as to the modern treatment of
+this disease, the late Dr. F.H. Hooper of Boston, well known as
+an authority on diseases of the throat, wrote me: "Washington's
+physicians are not to be criticised for their treatment, for they
+acted according to their best light and knowledge. To treat such
+a case in such a manner in the year 1889 would be little short
+of criminal. At the present time the physicians would use the
+laryngoscope and _look_ and _see_ what the trouble was. (The
+laryngoscope has only been used since 1857.) In this disease the
+function most interfered with is breathing. The one thing which saves
+a patient in this disease is a _timely tracheotomy_. (I doubt if
+tracheotomy had ever been performed in Virginia in Washington's time.)
+Washington ought to have been tracheotomized, or rather that is the
+way cases are saved to-day. No one would think of antimony, calomel,
+or bleeding now. The point is to let in the air, and not to let out
+the blood. After tracheotomy has been performed, the oedema and
+swelling of the larynx subside in three to six days. The tracheotomy
+tube is then removed, and respiration goes on again through the
+natural channels."]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+GEORGE WASHINGTON
+
+
+This last chapter cannot begin more fitly than by quoting again the
+words of Mr. McMaster: "George Washington is an unknown man." Mr.
+McMaster might have added that to no man in our history has greater
+injustice of a certain kind been done, or more misunderstanding been
+meted out, than to Washington, and although this sounds like the
+merest paradox, it is nevertheless true. From the hour when the door
+of the tomb at Mount Vernon closed behind his coffin to the present
+instant, the chorus of praise and eulogy has never ceased, but has
+swelled deeper and louder with each succeeding year. He has been set
+apart high above all other men, and reverenced with the unquestioning
+veneration accorded only to the leaders of mankind and the founders
+of nations; and in this very devotion lies one secret at least of the
+fact that, while all men have praised Washington, comparatively
+few have understood him. He has been lifted high up into a lonely
+greatness, and unconsciously put outside the range of human sympathy.
+He has been accepted as a being as nearly perfect as it is given to
+man to be, but our warm personal interest has been reserved for other
+and lesser men who seemed to be nearer to us in their virtues and
+their errors alike. Such isolation, lofty though it be, is perilous
+and leads to grievous misunderstandings. From it has come the
+widespread idea that Washington was cold, and as devoid of human
+sympathies as he was free from the common failings of humanity.
+
+Of this there will be something to say presently, but meantime there
+is another more prolific source of error in regard to Washington to
+be considered. Men who are loudly proclaimed to be faultless always
+excite a certain kind of resentment. It is a dangerous eminence
+for any one to occupy. The temples of Greece are in ruins, and her
+marvelous literature is little more than a collection of fragments,
+but the feelings of the citizens who exiled Aristides because they
+were weary of hearing him called "just," exist still, unchanged and
+unchangeable. Washington has not only been called "just," but he
+has had every other good quality attributed to him by countless
+biographers and eulogists with an almost painful iteration, and the
+natural result has followed. Many persons have felt the sense of
+fatigue which the Athenians expressed practically by their oyster
+shells, and have been led to cast doubts on Washington's perfection
+as the only consolation for their own sense of injury. Then, again,
+Washington's fame has been so overshadowing, and his greatness so
+immutable, that he has been very inconvenient to the admirers and the
+biographers of other distinguished men. From these two sources, from
+the general jealousy of the classic Greek variety, and the particular
+jealousy born of the necessities of some other hero, much adverse and
+misleading criticism has come. It has never been a safe or popular
+amusement to assail Washington directly, and this course usually has
+been shunned; but although the attacks have been veiled they have none
+the less existed, and they have been all the more dangerous because
+they were insidious.
+
+In his lifetime Washington had his enemies and detractors in
+abundance. During the Revolution he was abused and intrigued against,
+thwarted and belittled, to a point which posterity in general scarcely
+realizes. Final and conclusive victory brought an end to this, and
+he passed to the presidency amid a general acclaim. Then the attacks
+began again. Their character has been shown in a previous chapter, but
+they were of no real moment except as illustrations of the existence
+and meaning of party divisions. The ravings of Bache and Freneau,
+and the coarse insults of Giles, were all totally unimportant in
+themselves. They merely define the purposes and character of the party
+which opposed Washington, and but for him would be forgotten. Among
+his eminent contemporaries, Jefferson and Pickering, bitterly opposed
+in all things else, have left memoranda and letters reflecting upon
+the abilities of their former chief. Jefferson disliked him because he
+blocked his path, but with habitual caution he never proceeded beyond
+a covert sneer implying that Washington's mental powers, at no time
+very great, were impaired by age during his presidency, and that he
+was easily deceived by practised intriguers. Pickering, with more
+boldness, set Washington down as commonplace, not original in his
+thought, and vastly inferior to Hamilton, apparently because he was
+not violent, and did not make up his mind before he knew the facts.
+
+Adverse contemporary criticism, however, is slight in amount and vague
+in character; it can be readily dismissed, and it has in no case
+weight enough to demand much consideration. Modern criticism of the
+same kind has been even less direct, but is much more serious and
+cannot be lightly passed over. It invariably proceeds by negations
+setting out with an apparently complete acceptance of Washington's
+greatness, and then assailing him by telling us what he was not. Few
+persons who have not given this matter a careful study realize how far
+criticism of this sort has gone, and there is indeed no better way
+of learning what Washington really was than by examining the various
+negations which tell us what he was not.
+
+Let us take the gravest first. It has been confidently asserted that
+Washington was not an American in anything but the technical sense.
+This idea is more diffused than, perhaps, would be generally supposed,
+and it has also been formally set down in print, in which we are more
+fortunate than in many other instances where the accusation has not
+got beyond the elusive condition of loose talk.
+
+In that most noble poem, the "Commemoration Ode," Mr. Lowell speaks of
+Lincoln as "the first American." The poet's winged words fly far, and
+find a resting-place in many minds. This idea has become widespread,
+and has recently found fuller expression in Mr. Clarence King's
+prefatory note to the great life of Lincoln by Hay and Nicolay.[1] Mr.
+King says: "Abraham Lincoln was the first American to reach the lonely
+height of immortal fame. Before him, within the narrow compass of our
+history, were but two preëminent names,--Columbus the discoverer, and
+Washington the founder; the one an Italian seer, the other an English
+country gentleman. In a narrow sense, of course, Washington was an
+American.... For all that he was English in his nature, habits, moral
+standards, and social theories; in short, in all points which,
+aside from mere geographical position, make up a man, he was as
+thorough-going a British colonial gentleman as one could find anywhere
+beneath the Union Jack. The genuine American of Lincoln's type came
+later.... George Washington, an English commoner, vanquished George,
+an English king."
+
+[Footnote 1: Mr. Matthew Arnold, and more recently Professor Goldwin
+Smith, have both spoken of Washington as an Englishman. I do not
+mention this to discredit the statements of Mr. Lowell or Mr. King,
+but merely to indicate how far this mistaken idea has traveled.]
+
+In order to point his sentence and prove his first postulate, Mr.
+King is obliged not only to dispose of Washington, but to introduce
+Columbus, who never was imagined in the wildest fantasy to be an
+American, and to omit Franklin. The omission of itself is fatal to Mr.
+King's case. Franklin has certainly a "preëminent name." He has, too,
+"immortal fame," although of course of a widely different character
+from that of either Washington or Lincoln, but he was a great man
+in the broad sense of a world-wide reputation. Yet no one has ever
+ventured to call Benjamin Franklin an Englishman. He was a colonial
+American, of course, but he was as intensely an American as any man
+who has lived on this continent before or since. A man of the people,
+he was American by the character of his genius, by his versatility,
+the vivacity of his intellect, and his mental dexterity. In his
+abilities, his virtues, and his defects he was an American, and so
+plainly one as to be beyond the reach of doubt or question. There were
+others of that period, too, who were as genuine Americans as Franklin
+or Lincoln. Such were Jonathan Edwards, the peculiar product of New
+England Calvinism; Patrick Henry, who first broke down colonial lines
+to declare himself an American; Samuel Adams, the great forerunner
+of the race of American politicians; Thomas Jefferson, the idol of
+American democracy. These and many others Mr. King might exclude on
+the ground that they did not reach the lonely height of immortal fame.
+But Franklin is enough. Unless one is prepared to set Franklin down
+as an Englishman, which would be as reasonable as to say that Daniel
+Webster was a fine example of the Slavic race, it must be admitted
+that it was possible for the thirteen colonies to produce in the
+eighteenth century a genuine American who won immortal fame. If they
+could produce one of one type, they could produce a second of another
+type, and there was, therefore, nothing inherently impossible in
+existing conditions to prevent Washington from being an American.
+
+Lincoln was undoubtedly the first great American of his type, but that
+is not the only type of American. It is one which, as bodied forth in
+Abraham Lincoln, commands the love and veneration of the people of the
+United States, and the admiration of the world wherever his name is
+known. To the noble and towering greatness of his mind and character
+it does not add one hair's breadth to say that he was the first
+American, or that he was of a common or uncommon type. Greatness like
+Lincoln's is far beyond such qualifications, and least of all is it
+necessary to his fame to push Washington from his birthright. To say
+that George Washington, an English commoner, vanquished George, an
+English king, is clever and picturesque, but like many other pleasing
+antitheses it is painfully inaccurate. Allegiance does not make race
+or nationality. The Hindoos are subjects of Victoria, but they are not
+Englishmen.
+
+Franklin shows that it was possible to produce a most genuine American
+of unquestioned greatness in the eighteenth century, and with all
+possible deference to Mr. Lowell and Mr. King, I venture the assertion
+that George Washington was as genuine an American as Lincoln or
+Franklin. He was an American of the eighteenth and not of the
+nineteenth century, but he was none the less an American. I will go
+further. Washington was not only an American of a pure and noble type,
+but he was the first thorough American in the broad, national sense,
+as distinct from the colonial American of his time.
+
+After all, what is it to be an American? Surely it does not consist in
+the number of generations merely which separate the individual from
+his forefathers who first settled here. Washington was fourth in
+descent from the first American of his name, while Lincoln was in
+the sixth generation. This difference certainly constitutes no real
+distinction. There are people to-day, not many luckily, whose families
+have been here for two hundred and fifty years, and who are as utterly
+un-American as it is possible to be, while there are others, whose
+fathers were immigrants, who are as intensely American as any one can
+desire or imagine. In a new country, peopled in two hundred and fifty
+years by immigrants from the Old World and their descendants, the
+process of Americanization is not limited by any hard and fast rules
+as to time and generations, but is altogether a matter of individual
+and race temperament. The production of the well-defined American
+types and of the fixed national characteristics which now exist has
+been going on during all that period, but in any special instance the
+type to which a given man belongs must be settled by special study and
+examination.
+
+Washington belonged to the English-speaking race. So did Lincoln. Both
+sprang from the splendid stock which was formed during centuries from
+a mixture of the Celtic, Teutonic, Scandinavian, and Norman peoples,
+and which is known to the world as English. Both, so far as we can
+tell, had nothing but English blood, as it would be commonly called,
+in their veins, and both were of that part of the English race which
+emigrated to America, where it has been the principal factor in the
+development of the new people called Americans. They were men of
+English race, modified and changed in the fourth and sixth generations
+by the new country, the new conditions, and the new life, and by the
+contact and admixture of other races. Lincoln, a very great man, one
+who has reached "immortal fame," was clearly an American of a type
+that the Old World cannot show, or at least has not produced. The idea
+of many persons in regard to Washington seems to be, that he was a
+great man of a type which the Old World, or, to be more exact, which
+England, had produced. One hears it often said that Washington was
+simply an American Hampden. Such a comparison is an easy method of
+description, nothing more. Hampden is memorable among men, not for
+his abilities, which there is no reason to suppose were very
+extraordinary, but for his devoted and unselfish patriotism, his
+courage, his honor, and his pure and lofty spirit. He embodied what
+his countrymen believe to be the moral qualities of their race in
+their finest flower, and no nation, be it said, could have a nobler
+ideal. Washington was conspicuous for the same qualities, exhibited
+in like fashion. Is there a single one of the essential attributes of
+Hampden that Lincoln also did not possess? Was he not an unselfish
+and devoted patriot, pure in heart, gentle of spirit, high of honor,
+brave, merciful, and temperate? Did he not lay down his life for
+his country in the box at Ford's Theatre as ungrudgingly as Hampden
+offered his in the smoke of battle upon Chalgrove field? Surely we
+must answer Yes. In other words, these three men all had the great
+moral attributes which are the characteristics of the English race in
+its highest and purest development on either side of the Atlantic.
+Yet no one has ever called Lincoln an American Hampden simply because
+Hampden and Washington were men of ancient family, members of an
+aristocracy by birth, and Lincoln was not. This is the distinction
+between them; and how vain it is, in the light of their lives and
+deeds, which make all pedigrees and social ranks look so poor and
+worthless! The differences among them are trivial, the resemblances
+deep and lasting.
+
+I have followed out this comparison because it illustrates perfectly
+the entirely superficial character of the reasons which have led men
+to speak of Washington as an English country gentleman. It has been
+said that he was English in his habits, moral standards, and social
+theories, which has an important sound, but which for the most part
+comes down to a question of dress and manners. He wore black velvet
+and powdered hair, knee-breeches and diamond buckles, which are
+certainly not American fashions to-day. But they were American
+fashions in the last century, and every man wore them who could afford
+to, no matter what his origin. Let it be remembered, however, that
+Washington also wore the hunting-shirt and fringed leggins of the
+backwoodsman, and that it was he who introduced this purely American
+dress into the army as a uniform.
+
+His manners likewise were those of the century in which he lived,
+formal and stately, and of course colored by his own temperament. His
+moral standards were those of a high-minded, honorable man. Are we
+ready to say that they were not American? Did they differ in any vital
+point from those of Lincoln? His social theories were simple in the
+extreme. He neither overvalued nor underrated social conventions, for
+he knew that they were a part of the fabric of civilized society, not
+vitally important and yet not wholly trivial. He was a member of an
+aristocracy, it is true, both by birth and situation. There was a
+recognized social aristocracy in every colony before the Revolution,
+for the drum-beat of the great democratic march had not then sounded.
+In the northern colonies it was never strong, and in New England
+it was especially weak, for the governments and people there were
+essentially democratic, although they hardly recognized it themselves.
+In Virginia and the southern colonies, on the other hand, there was a
+vigorous aristocracy resting on the permanent foundation of slavery.
+Where slaves are there must be masters, and where there are masters
+there are aristocrats; but it was an American and not an English
+aristocracy. Lineage and family had weight in the south as in the
+north, but that which put a man undeniably in the ruling class was the
+ownership of black slaves and the possession of a white skin. This
+aristocracy lasted with its faults and its virtues until it perished
+in the shock of civil war, when its foundation of human slavery was
+torn from under it. From the slave-holding aristocracy of Virginia
+came, with the exception of Patrick Henry, all the great men of that
+State who did so much for American freedom, and who rendered such
+imperishable service to the republic in law, in politics, and in war.
+From this aristocracy came Marshall, and Mason, and Madison, the Lees,
+the Randolphs, the Harrisons, and the rest. From it came also Thomas
+Jefferson, the hero of American democracy; and to it was added Patrick
+Henry, not by lineage or slave-holding, but by virtue of his brilliant
+abilities, and because he, too, was an aristocrat by the immutable
+division of race. It was this aristocracy into which Washington was
+born, and amid which he was brought up. To say that it colored his
+feelings and habits is simply to say that he was human; but to urge
+that it made him un-American is to exclude at once from the ranks
+of Americans all the great men given to the country by the South.
+Washington, in fact, was less affected by his surroundings, and rose
+above them more quickly, than any other man of his day, because he was
+the greatest man of his time, with a splendid breadth of vision.
+
+When he first went among the New England troops at the siege of
+Boston, the rough, democratic ways of the people jarred upon him, and
+offended especially his military instincts, for he was not only a
+Virginian but he was a great soldier, and military discipline is
+essentially aristocratic. These volunteer soldiers, called together
+from the plough and the fishing-smack, were free and independent men,
+unaccustomed to any rule but their own, and they had still to learn
+the first rudiments of military service. To Washington, soldiers who
+elected and deposed their officers, and who went home when they felt
+that they had a right to do so, seemed well-nigh useless and quite
+incomprehensible. They angered him and tried his patience almost
+beyond endurance, and he spoke of them at the outset in harsh terms by
+no means wholly unwarranted. But they were part of his problem, and he
+studied them. He was a soldier, but not an aristocrat wrapped up in
+immutable prejudices, and he learned to know these men, and they came
+to love, obey, and follow him with an intelligent devotion far better
+than anything born of mere discipline. Before the year was out, he
+wrote to Lund Washington praising the New England troops in the
+highest terms, and at the close of the war he said that practically
+the whole army then was composed of New England soldiers. They stayed
+by him to the end, and as they were steadfast in war so they remained
+in peace. He trusted and confided in New England, and her sturdy
+democracy gave him a loyal and unflinching support to the day of his
+death.
+
+This openness of mind and superiority to prejudice were American in
+the truest and best sense; but Washington showed the same qualities in
+private life and toward individuals which he displayed in regard to
+communities. He was free, of course, from the cheap claptrap which
+abuses the name of democracy by saying that birth, breeding, and
+education are undemocratic, and therefore to be reckoned against a
+man. He valued these qualities rightly, but he looked to see what a
+man was and not who he was, which is true democracy. The two men who
+were perhaps nearest to his affections were Knox and Hamilton. One
+was a Boston bookseller, who rose to distinction by bravery and good
+service, and the other was a young adventurer from the West Indies,
+without either family or money at his back. It was the same with much
+humbler persons. He never failed, on his way to Philadelphia, to stop
+at Wilmington and have a chat with one Captain O'Flinn, who kept a
+tavern and had been a Revolutionary soldier; and this was but a single
+instance among many of like character. Any soldier of the Revolution
+was always sure of a welcome at the hands of his old commander.
+Eminent statesmen, especially of the opposition, often found his
+manner cold, but no old soldier ever complained of it, no servant ever
+left him, and the country people about Mount Vernon loved him as a
+neighbor and friend, and not as the distant great man of the army and
+the presidency.
+
+He believed thoroughly in popular government. One does not find in his
+letters the bitter references to democracy and to the populace which
+can be discovered in the writings of so many of his party friends,
+legacies of pre-revolutionary ideas inflamed by hatred of Parisian
+mobs. He always spoke of the people at large with a simple respect,
+because he knew that the future of the United States was in their
+hands and not in that of any class, and because he believed that they
+would fulfill their mission. The French Revolution never carried him
+away, and when it bred anarchy and bloodshed he became hostile to
+French influence, because license and disorder were above all
+things hateful to him. Yet he did not lose his balance in the other
+direction, as was the case with so many of his friends. He resisted
+and opposed French ideas and French democracy, so admired and so
+loudly preached by Jefferson and his followers, because he esteemed
+them perilous to the country. But there is not a word to indicate that
+he did not think that such dangers would be finally overcome, even
+if at the cost of much suffering, by the sane sense and ingrained
+conservatism of the American people. Other men talked more noisily
+about the people, but no one trusted them in the best sense more than
+Washington, and his only fear was that evils might come from their
+being misled by false lights.
+
+Once more, what is it to be an American? Putting aside all the outer
+shows of dress and manners, social customs and physical peculiarities,
+is it not to believe in America and in the American people? Is it not
+to have an abiding and moving faith in the future and in the destiny
+of America?--something above and beyond the patriotism and love which
+every man whose soul is not dead within him feels for the land of his
+birth? Is it not to be national and not sectional, independent and not
+colonial? Is it not to have a high conception of what this great new
+country should be, and to follow out that ideal with loyalty and
+truth?
+
+Has any man in our history fulfilled these conditions more perfectly
+and completely than George Washington? Has any man ever lived who
+served the American people more faithfully, or with a higher and truer
+conception of the destiny and possibilities of the country? Born of an
+old and distinguished family, he found himself, when a boy just out of
+school, dependent on his mother, and with an inheritance that promised
+him more acres than shillings. He did not seek to live along upon what
+he could get from the estate, and still less did he feel that it was
+only possible for him to enter one of the learned professions. Had
+he been an Englishman in fact or in feeling, he would have felt very
+naturally the force of the limitations imposed by his social position.
+But being an American, his one idea was to earn his living honestly,
+because it was the creed of his country that earning an honest living
+is the most creditable thing a man can do. Boy as he was, he went out
+manfully into the world to win with his own hands the money which
+would make him self-supporting and independent. His business as a
+surveyor took him into the wilderness, and there he learned that the
+first great work before the American people was to be the conquest of
+the continent. He dropped the surveyor's rod and chain to negotiate
+with the savages, and then took up the sword to fight them and the
+French, so that the New World might be secured to the English-speaking
+race. A more purely American training cannot be imagined. It was not
+the education of universities or of courts, but that of hard-earned
+personal independence, won in the backwoods and by frontier fighting.
+Thus trained, he gave the prime of his manhood to leading the
+Revolution which made his country free, and his riper years to
+building up that independent nationality without which freedom would
+have been utterly vain.
+
+He was the first to rise above all colonial or state lines, and grasp
+firmly the conception of a nation to be formed from the thirteen
+jarring colonies. The necessity of national action in the army was of
+course at once apparent to him, although not to others; but he carried
+the same broad views into widely different fields, where at the time
+they wholly escaped notice. It was Washington, oppressed by a thousand
+cares, who in the early days of the Revolution saw the need of Federal
+courts for admiralty cases and for other purposes. It was he who
+suggested this scheme, years before any one even dreamed of the
+Constitution; and from the special committees of Congress, formed for
+this object in accordance with this advice, came, in the process of
+time, the Federal judiciary of the United States.[1] Even in that
+early dawn of the Revolution, Washington had clear in his own mind the
+need of a continental system for war, diplomacy, finance, and law, and
+he worked steadily to bring this policy to fulfilment.
+
+[Footnote 1: See the very interesting memoir on this subject by the
+Hon. J.C. Bancroft Davis.]
+
+When the war was over, the thought that engaged his mind most was
+of the best means to give room for expansion, and to open up the
+unconquered continent to the forerunners of a mighty army of settlers.
+For this purpose all his projects for roads, canals, and surveys were
+formed and forced into public notice. He looked beyond the limits of
+the Atlantic colonies. His vision went far over the barriers of the
+Alleghanies; and where others saw thirteen infant States backed by the
+wilderness, he beheld the germs of a great empire. While striving thus
+to lay the West open to the march of the settler, he threw himself
+into the great struggle, where Hamilton and Madison, and all who
+"thought continentally," were laboring for that union without which
+all else was worse than futile.
+
+From the presidency of the convention that formed the Constitution, he
+went to the presidency of the government which that convention brought
+into being; and in all that followed, the one guiding thought was to
+clear the way for the advance of the people, and to make that people
+and their government independent in thought, in policy, and in
+character, as the Revolution had made them independent politically.
+The same spirit which led him to write during the war that our battles
+must be fought and our victories won by Americans, if victory and
+independence were to be won at all, or to have any real and solid
+worth, pervaded his whole administration. We see it in his Indian
+policy, which was directed not only to pacifying the tribes, but
+to putting it out of their power to arrest or even delay western
+settlement. We see it in his attitude toward foreign ministers, and in
+his watchful persistence in regard to the Mississippi, which ended in
+our securing the navigation of the great river. We see it again in his
+anxious desire to keep peace until we had passed the point where war
+might bring a dissolution; and how real that danger was, and how clear
+and just his perception of it, is shown by the Kentucky and Virginia
+Resolutions and by the separatist movement in New England during the
+later war of 1812. Even in 1812 the national existence was menaced,
+but the danger would have proved fatal if it had come twenty years
+earlier, with parties divided by their sympathies with contending
+foreign nations. It was for the sake of the Union that Washington was
+so patient with France, and faced so quietly the storm of indignation
+aroused by the Jay treaty.
+
+In his whole foreign policy, which was so peculiarly his own, the
+American spirit was his pole star; and of all the attacks made upon
+him, the only one which really tried his soul was the accusation that
+he was influenced by foreign predilections. The blind injustice, which
+would not comprehend that his one purpose was to be American and to
+make the people and the government American, touched him more deeply
+than anything else. As party strife grew keener over the issues raised
+by the war between France and England, and as French politics and
+French ideas became more popular, his feelings found more frequent
+utterance, and it is interesting to see how this man, who, we are now
+told, was an English country gentleman, wrote and felt on this matter
+in very trying times. Let us remember, as we listen to him now in his
+own defense, that he was an extremely honest man, silent for the most
+part in doing his work, but when he spoke meaning every word he said,
+and saying exactly what he meant. This was the way in which he
+wrote to Patrick Henry in October, 1795, when he offered him the
+secretaryship of State:--
+
+"My ardent desire is, and my aim has been as far as depended upon the
+executive department, to comply strictly with all our engagements,
+foreign and domestic; but to keep the United States free from
+political connection with every other country, to see them independent
+of all and under the influence of none. In a word, I want an
+_American_ character, that the powers of Europe may be convinced that
+we act for _ourselves_, and not for others. This, in my judgment, is
+the only way to be respected abroad and happy at home; and not, by
+becoming partisans of Great Britain or France, create dissensions,
+disturb the public tranquillity, and destroy, perhaps forever, the
+cement which binds the Union."
+
+Not quite a year later, when the Jay treaty was still agitating the
+public mind in regard to our relations with France, he wrote to
+Pickering:--
+
+"The Executive has a plain road to pursue, namely, to fulfill all the
+engagements which duty requires; be influenced beyond this by none of
+the contending parties; maintain a strict neutrality unless obliged
+by imperious circumstances to depart from it; do justice to all, and
+never forget that we are Americans, the remembrance of which will
+convince us that we ought not to be French or English."
+
+After leaving the presidency, when our difficulties with France seemed
+to be thickening, and the sky looked very dark, he wrote to a friend
+saying that he firmly believed that all would come out well, and then
+added: "To me this is so demonstrable, that not a particle of doubt
+could dwell on my mind relative thereto, if our citizens would
+advocate their own cause, instead of that of any other nation under
+the sun; that is, if, instead of being Frenchmen or Englishmen in
+politics they would be Americans, indignant at every attempt of either
+or any other powers to establish an influence in our councils or
+presume to sow the seeds of discord or disunion among us."
+
+A few days later he wrote to Thomas Pinckney:
+
+"It remains to be seen whether our country will stand upon independent
+ground, or be directed in its political concerns by any other nation.
+A little time will show who are its true friends, or, what is
+synonymous, who are true Americans."
+
+But this eager desire for a true Americanism did not stop at our
+foreign policy, or our domestic politics. He wished it to enter into
+every part of the life and thought of the people, and when it was
+proposed to bring over the entire staff of a Genevan university to
+take charge of a national university here, he threw his influence
+against it, expressing grave doubts as to the advantage of importing
+an entire "seminary of foreigners," for the purpose of American
+education. The letter on this subject, which was addressed to John
+Adams, then continued:--
+
+"My opinion with respect to emigration is that except of useful
+mechanics, and some particular descriptions of men or professions,
+there is no need of encouragement; while the policy or advantage of
+its taking place in a body (I mean the settling of them in a body) may
+be much questioned; for by so doing they retain the language, habits,
+and principles, good or bad, which they bring with them. Whereas by
+an intermixture with our people, they or their descendants get
+assimilated to our customs, measures, and laws; in a word, soon become
+one people."
+
+He had this thought so constantly in his mind that it found expression
+in his will, in the clause bequeathing certain property for the
+foundation of a university in the District of Columbia. "I proceed,"
+he said, "after this recital for the more correct understanding of the
+case, to declare that it has always been a source of serious regret
+with me to see the youth of these United States sent to foreign
+countries for the purposes of education, often before their minds were
+formed, or they had imbibed any adequate ideas of the happiness of
+their own; contracting too frequently not only habits of dissipation
+and extravagance, but _principles unfriendly to republican government
+and to the true and genuine liberties of mankind_, which thereafter
+are rarely overcome; for these reasons it has been my ardent wish to
+see a plan devised on a liberal scale, which would have a tendency
+to spread systematic ideas through all parts of this rising empire,
+thereby to do away with local attachments and state prejudices, as
+far as the nature of things would or indeed ought to admit, from our
+national councils."
+
+Were these the words of an English country gentleman, who chanced to
+be born in one of England's colonies? Persons of the English country
+gentleman pattern at that time were for the most part loyalists;
+excellent people, very likely, but not of the Washington type. Their
+hopes and ideals, their policies and their beliefs were in the mother
+country, not here. The faith, the hope, the thought, of Washington
+were all in the United States. His one purpose was to make America
+independent in thought and action, and he strove day and night to
+build up a nation. He labored unceasingly to lay the foundations of
+the great empire which, with almost prophetic vision, he saw beyond
+the mountains, by opening the way for the western movement. His
+foreign policy was a declaration to the world of a new national
+existence, and he strained every nerve to lift our politics from the
+colonial condition of foreign issues. He wished all immigration to
+be absorbed and moulded here, so that we might be one people, one in
+speech and in political faith. His last words, given to the world
+after the grave had closed over him, were a solemn plea for a home
+training for the youth of the Republic, so that all men might think
+as Americans, untainted by foreign ideas, and rise above all local
+prejudices. He did not believe that mere material development was the
+only or the highest goal; for he knew that the true greatness of a
+nation was moral and intellectual, and his last thoughts were for the
+up-building of character and intelligence. He was never a braggart,
+and mere boasting about his country as about himself was utterly
+repugnant to him. He never hesitated to censure what he believed to be
+wrong, but he addressed his criticisms to his countrymen in order to
+lead them to better things, and did not indulge in them in order
+to express his own discontent, or to amuse or curry favor with
+foreigners. In a word, he loved his country, and had an abiding faith
+in its future and in its people, upon whom his most earnest thoughts
+and loftiest aspirations were centred. No higher, purer, or more
+thorough Americanism than his could be imagined. It was a conception
+far in advance of the time, possible only to a powerful mind, capable
+of lifting itself out of existing conditions and alien influences, so
+that it might look with undazzled gaze upon the distant future. The
+first American in the broad national sense, there has never been a man
+more thoroughly and truly American than Washington. It will be a sorry
+day when we consent to take that noble figure from "the forefront of
+the nation's life," and rank George Washington as anything but an
+American of Americans, instinct with the ideas, as he was devoted to
+the fortunes of the New World which gave him birth.
+
+There is another class of critics who have attacked Washington from
+another side. These are the gentlemen who find him in the way of their
+own heroes. Washington was a man of decided opinions about men as well
+as measures, and he was extremely positive. He had his enemies as
+well as his friends, his likes and his dislikes, strong and clear,
+according to his nature. The respect which he commanded in his life
+has lasted unimpaired since his death, and it is an awkward thing for
+the biographers of some of his contemporaries to know that Washington
+opposed, distrusted, or disliked their heroes. Therefore, in one way
+or another they have gone round a stumbling-block which they could
+not remove. The commonest method is to eliminate Washington by
+representing him vaguely as the great man with whom every one agreed,
+who belonged to no party, and favored all; then he is pushed quietly
+aside. Evils and wrong-doing existed under his administration from the
+opposition point of view, but they were the work of his ministers and
+of wicked advisers. The king could do no wrong, and this pleasant
+theory, which is untrue in fact, amounts to saying that Washington had
+no opinions, but was simply a grand and imposing figure-head. The only
+ground for it which is even suggested is that he sought advice, that
+he used other men's ideas, and that he made up his mind slowly. All
+this is true, and these very qualities help to show his greatness,
+for only small minds mistake their relations with the universe, and
+confuse their finite powers with omniscience. The great man, who
+sees facts and reads the future, uses other men, knows the bounds of
+possibility in action, can decide instantly if need be, but leaves
+rash conclusions to those who are incapable of reaching any others.
+In reality there never was a man who had more definite and vigorous
+opinions than Washington, and the responsibility which he bore he
+never shifted to other shoulders. The work of the Revolution and the
+presidency, whether good or bad, was his own, and he was ready to
+stand or fall by it.
+
+There is a still further extension of the idea that Washington
+represented all parties and all views, and had neither party nor
+opinions of his own. This theory is to the effect that he was great by
+character alone, but that in other respects he did not rise above the
+level of dignified common-place. Such, for instance, is apparently the
+view of Mr. Parton, who in a clever essay discusses in philosophical
+fashion the possible advantages arising from the success attained by
+mere character, as in the case of Washington. Mr. Parton points his
+theory by that last incident of counting the pulse as death drew nigh.
+How characteristic, he exclaims, of the methodical, common-place
+man, is such an act. It was not common, be it said, even were it
+common-place. It was certainly a very simple action, but rare enough
+so far as we know on the every-day deathbed, or in the supreme hour of
+dying greatness, and it was wholly free from that affectation which
+Dr. Johnson thought almost inseparable from the last solemn moment.
+Irregularity is not proof of genius any more than method, and of the
+two, the latter is the surer companion of greatness. The last hour of
+Washington showed that calm, collected courage which had never failed
+in war or peace; and so far it was proof of character. But was it not
+something more? The common-place action of counting the pulse was in
+reality profoundly characteristic, for it was the last exhibition of
+the determined purpose to know the truth, and grasp the fact. Death
+was upon him; he would know the fact. He had looked facts in the face
+all his life, and when the mists gathered, he would face them still.
+
+High and splendid character, great moral qualities for after-ages to
+admire, he had beyond any man of modern times. But to suppose that in
+other respects he belonged to the ranks of mediocrity is not only a
+contradiction in terms, but utterly false. It was not character that
+fought the Trenton campaign and carried the revolution to victory.
+It was military genius. It was not character that read the future of
+America and created our foreign policy. It was statesmanship of the
+highest order. Without the great moral qualities which he possessed,
+his career would not have been possible; but it would have been quite
+as impossible if the intellect had not equaled the character. There is
+no need to argue the truism that Washington was a great man, for that
+is universally admitted. But it is very needful that his greatness
+should be rightly understood, and the right understanding of it is by
+no means universal. His character has been exalted at the expense of
+his intellect, and his goodness has been so much insisted upon both by
+admirers and critics that we are in danger of forgetting that he had a
+great mind as well as high moral worth.
+
+This false attitude both of praise and criticism has been so persisted
+in that if we accept the premises we are forced to the conclusion that
+Washington was actually dull, while with much more openness it is
+asserted that he was cold and at times even harsh. "In the mean time,"
+says Mr. McMaster, "Washington was deprived of the services of the
+only two men his cold heart ever really loved." "A Cromwell with the
+juice squeezed out," says Carlyle somewhere, in his rough and summary
+fashion. Are these judgments correct? Was Washington really, with
+all his greatness, dull and cold? He was a great general and a great
+President, first in war and first in peace and all that, says our
+caviler, but his relaxation was in farm accounts, and his business war
+and politics. He could plan a campaign, preserve a dignified manner,
+and conduct an administration, but he could write nothing more
+entertaining than a state paper or a military report. He gave himself
+up to great affairs, he was hardly human, and he shunned the graces,
+the wit, and all the salt of life, and passed them by on the other
+side.
+
+That Washington was serious and earnest cannot be doubted, for no man
+could have done what he did and been otherwise. He had little time
+for the lighter sides of life, and he never exerted himself to say
+brilliant and striking things. He was not a maker of phrases and
+proclamations, and the quality of the charlatan, so often found in men
+of the highest genius, was utterly lacking in him. He never talked or
+acted with an eye to dramatic effect, and this is one reason for the
+notion that he was dull and dry; for the world dearly loves a little
+charlatanism, and is never happier than in being brilliantly duped.
+But was he therefore really dull and juiceless, unlovable and
+unloving? Responsibility came upon him when a boy, and he was hardly
+of age when he was carrying in his hands the defense of his colony and
+the heavy burden of other human lives. Experience like this makes a
+man who is good for anything sober; but sobriety is not dullness, and
+if we look a little below the surface we find the ready refutation of
+such an idea. In his letters and even in the silent diaries we detect
+the keenest observation. He looked at the country, as he traveled,
+with the eye of the soldier and the farmer, and mastered its features
+and read its meaning with rapid and certain glance. It was not to him
+a mere panorama of fields and woods, of rivers and mountains. He
+saw the beauties of nature and the opportunities of the farmer, the
+trader, or the manufacturer wherever his gaze rested. He gathered
+in the same way the statistics of the people and of their various
+industries. In the West Indies, on the Virginian frontier, in his
+journeys when he was President, he read the story of all he saw as he
+would have read a book, and brought it home with him for use.
+
+[Illustration: NATHANAEL GREENE]
+
+In the same way he read and understood men, and had that power of
+choosing among them which is essential in its highest form to the
+great soldier or statesman. His selection never erred unless in a rare
+instance like that of Monroe, forced on him by political exigencies,
+or when the man of his choice would not serve. Congress chose Gates
+for the southern campaign, but Washington selected Greene, in whom he
+saw great military ability before any one else realized it. He took
+Hamilton, young and unknown, from the captaincy of an artillery
+company, and placed him on his personal staff. He bore with Hamilton's
+outbreak of temper, kept him ever in his confidence, and finally gave
+him the opportunity to prove himself the most brilliant of American
+statesmen. In the crowd of foreign volunteers, the men whom he
+especially selected and trusted were Lafayette and Steuben, each in
+his way of real value to the service. Even more remarkable than the
+ability to recognize great talent was his capacity to weigh and value
+with a nice exactness the worth of men who did not rise to the level
+of greatness. There is a recently published letter, too long for
+quotation here, in which he gives his opinions of all the leading
+officers of the Revolution,[1] and each one shows the most remarkable
+insight, as well as a sharp definiteness of outline that indicates
+complete mastery. These compact judgments were so sound that even the
+lapse of a century and all the study of historians and biographers
+find nothing in their keen analysis to alter and little to add. He did
+not expect to discover genius everywhere, or to find a marshal's
+baton in every knapsack, but he used men according to their value and
+possibilities, which is quite as essential as the preliminary work
+of selection. His military staff illustrated this faculty admirably.
+Every man, after a few trials and changes, fitted his place and did
+his particular task better than any one else could have done it.
+Colonel Meade, loyal and gallant, a good soldier and planter, said
+that Hamilton did the headwork of Washington's staff and he the
+riding. When the war was drawing to a close, Washington said one day
+to Hamilton, "You must go to the Bar, which you can reach in six
+months." Then turning to Meade, "Friend Dick, you must go to your
+plantation; you will make a good farmer, and an honest foreman of the
+grand jury."[2] The prediction was exactly fulfilled, with all that it
+implied, in both cases. But let it not be supposed that there was any
+touch of contempt in the advice to Meade. On the contrary, there was
+a little warmer affection, if anything, for he honored success in any
+honest pursuit, especially in farming, which he himself loved. But he
+distinguished the two men perfectly, and he knew what each was and
+what each meant. It seems little to say, but if we stop to think of
+it, this power to read men aright and see the truth in them and about
+them is a power more precious than any other bestowed by the kindest
+of fairy godmothers. The lame devil of Le Sage looked into the secrets
+of life through the roofs of houses, and much did he find of the
+secret story of humanity. But the great man looking with truth and
+kindliness into men's natures, and reading their characters and
+abilities in their words and acts, has a higher and better power than
+that attributed to the wandering sprite, for such a man holds in his
+hand the surest key to success. Washington, quiet and always on the
+watch, after the fashion of silent greatness, studied untiringly the
+ever recurring human problems, and his just conclusions were powerful
+factors in the great result. He was slow, when he had plenty of time,
+in adopting a policy or plan, or in settling a public question, but
+he read men very quickly. He was never under any delusion as to Lee,
+Gates, Conway, or any of the rest who engaged against him because they
+were restless from the first under the suspicion that he knew them
+thoroughly. Arnold deceived him because his treason was utterly
+inconceivable to Washington, and because his remarkable gallantry
+excused his many faults. But with this exception it may be safely
+said that Washington was never misled as to men, either as general or
+President. His instruments were not invariably the best and sometimes
+failed him, but they were always the best he could get, and he knew
+their defects and ran the inevitable risks with his eyes open. Such
+sure and rapid judgments of men and their capabilities were possible
+only to a man of keen perception and accurate observation, neither of
+which is characteristic of a slow or common-place mind.
+
+[Footnote 1: _Magazine of American History_, vol. iii., 1879, p. 81.]
+
+[Footnote 2: _Memoir of Rt. Rev. William Meade_, by Philip Slaughter,
+D.D., p. 7.]
+
+These qualities were, of course, gifts of nature, improved and
+developed by the training of a life of action on a great scale. He had
+received, indeed, little teaching except that of experience, and the
+world of war and politics had been to him both school and college. His
+education had been limited in the extreme, scarcely going beyond the
+most rudimentary branches except in mathematics, and this is very
+apparent in his early letters. He seems always to have written a
+handsome hand and to have been good at figures, but his spelling at
+the outset was far from perfect, and his style, although vigorous, was
+abrupt and rough. He felt this himself, took great pains to correct
+his faults in this respect, and succeeded, as he did in most things.
+Mr. Sparks has produced a false impression in this matter by smoothing
+and amending in very extensive fashion all the earlier letters, so as
+to give an appearance of uniformity throughout the correspondence; a
+process which not only destroyed much of the vigor and force of the
+early writings, but made them somewhat unnatural. The surveyor and
+frontier soldier wrote very differently from the general of the army
+and the President of the United States, and the improvements of Mr.
+Sparks only served to hide the real man.[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: These facts in regard to Washington's early letters,
+and to his correspondence generally, were first brought to public
+attention by the Reed letters, and by the controversy between Mr.
+Sparks and Lord Mahon. They have, of course, been long familiar to
+students of the original manuscripts. The full extent, however, of the
+changes made by Mr. Sparks, and of the mischief he wrought, and of the
+injustice thus done both to his hero and to posterity, has but lately
+been made known generally by the new edition of Washington's papers
+which have been published, under the supervision of Mr. W.C. Ford.
+Washington himself, when he undertook to arrange his military and
+state papers after his retirement from the presidency, began to
+correct the style of some of his earlier letters. This was natural
+enough, and he had a right to do what he pleased with his own, even
+if he thereby injured the material of the future historian and
+biographer. But he did not proceed far in his work, and the fact
+that he corrected a few of his own letters gave Mr. Sparks no right
+whatever to enter upon a wholesale revision.]
+
+If Washington had been of coarse fibre and heavy mind, this lack of
+education would have troubled him but little. His great success in
+that case would have served only to convince him of the uselessness of
+education except for inferior persons, who could not get along in the
+world without artificial aids. As it was, he never ceased to regret
+his deficiency in this respect, and when Humphreys urged him to
+prepare a history or memoirs of the war, he replied: "In a former
+letter I informed you, my dear Humphreys, that if I had talent for
+it, I have not leisure to turn my thoughts to commentaries. A
+consciousness of a defective education and a certainty of a want of
+time unfit me for such an undertaking." He was misled by his own
+modesty as to his capacity, but his strong feeling as to his lack of
+schooling haunted and troubled him always, although it did not make
+him either indifferent or bitter. He only admired more that which he
+himself had missed. He regarded education, and especially the higher
+forms, with an almost pathetic reverence, and its advancement was
+never absent from his thoughts. When he was made chancellor of the
+college of William and Mary, he was more deeply pleased than by any
+honor ever conferred upon him, and he accepted the position with a
+diffidence and a seriousness which were touching in such a man. In the
+same spirit he gave money to the Alexandria Academy, and every scheme
+to promote public education in Virginia had his eager support. His
+interest was not confined by state lines, for there was nothing so
+near his heart as the foundation of a national university. He urged
+its establishment upon Congress over and over again, and, as has been
+seen, left money in his will for its endowment.
+
+All his sympathies and tastes were those of a man of refined mind, and
+of a lover of scholarship and sound learning. Naturally a very modest
+man, and utterly devoid of any pretense, he underrated, as a matter of
+fact, his own accomplishments. He distrusted himself so much that he
+always turned to Hamilton, both during the Revolution and afterwards,
+as well as in the preparation of the farewell address, to aid him in
+clothing his thoughts in a proper dress, which he felt himself unable
+to give them. His tendency was to be too diffuse and too involved,
+but as a rule his style was sufficiently clear, and he could express
+himself with nervous force when the occasion demanded, and with a
+genuine and stately eloquence when he was deeply moved, as in the
+farewell to Congress at the close of the war. It is not a little
+remarkable that in his letters after the first years there is nothing
+to betray any lack of early training. They are the letters, not of a
+scholar or a literary man, but of an educated gentleman; and although
+he seldom indulged in similes or allusions, when he did so they were
+apt and correct. This was due to his perfect sanity of mind, and to
+his aversion to all display or to any attempt to shine in borrowed
+plumage. He never undertook to speak or write on any subject, or to
+make any reference, which he did not understand. He was a lover of
+books, collected a library, and read always as much as his crowded
+life would permit. When he was at Newburgh, at the close of the war,
+he wrote to Colonel Smith in New York to send him the following
+books:--
+
+ "Charles the XIIth of Sweden.
+ Lewis the XVth, 2 vols.
+ History of the Life and Reign of the Czar Peter the Great.
+ Campaigns of Marshal Turenne.
+ Locke on the Human Understanding.
+ Robertson's History of America, 2 vols.
+ Robertson's History of Charles V.
+ Voltaire's Letters.
+ Life of Gustavus Adolphus.
+ Sully's Memoirs.
+ Goldsmith's Natural History.
+ Mildman on Trees.
+ Vertot's Revolution of Rome, 3 vols.
+ Vertot's Revolution of Portugal, 3 vols.
+ {The Vertot's if they are in estimation.}
+
+ If there is a good Bookseller's shop in the City, I would thank
+ you for sending me a catalogue of the Books and their prices that
+ I may choose such as I want."
+
+His tastes ran to history and to works treating of war or agriculture,
+as is indicated both by this list and some earlier ones. It is not
+probable that he gave so much attention to lighter literature,
+although he wrote verses in his youth, and by an occasional allusion
+in his letters he seems to have been familiar with some of the great
+works of the imagination, like "Don Quixote."[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: At his death the appraisers of the estate found 863
+volumes in his library, besides a great number of pamphlets,
+magazines, and maps. This was a large collection of books for those
+days, and showed that the possessor, although purely a man of affairs,
+loved reading and had literary tastes.]
+
+He never freed himself from the self-distrust caused by his profound
+sense of his own deficiencies in education, on the one hand, and
+his deep reverence for learning, on the other. He had fought the
+Revolution, which opened the way for a new nation, and was at the
+height of his fame when he wrote to the French officers, who begged
+him to visit France, that he was "too old to learn French or to talk
+with ladies;" and it was this feeling in a large measure which kept
+him from ever being a maker of phrases or a sayer of brilliant things.
+In other words, the fact that he was modest and sensitive has been the
+chief cause of his being thought dull and cold. This idea, moreover,
+is wholly that of posterity, for there is not the slightest indication
+on the part of any contemporary that Washington could not talk well
+and did not appear to great advantage in society. It is posterity,
+looking with natural weariness at endless volumes of official letters
+with all the angles smoothed off by the editorial plane, that has
+come to suspect him of being dull in mind and heavy in wit. His
+contemporaries knew him to be dignified and often found him stern, but
+they never for a moment considered him stupid, or thought him a man at
+whom the shafts of wit could be shot with impunity. They were fully
+conscious that he was as able to hold his own in conversation as he
+was in the cabinet or in the field; and we can easily see the justice
+of contemporary opinion if we take the trouble to break through the
+official bark and get at the real man who wrote the letters. In many
+cases we find that he could employ irony and sarcasm with real force,
+and his powers of description, even if stilted at times, were vigorous
+and effective. All these qualities come out strongly in his letters,
+if carefully read, and his private correspondence in particular shows
+a keenness and point which the formalities of public intercourse
+veiled generally from view. We are fortunate in having the account of
+a disinterested and acute observer of the manner in which Washington
+impressed a casual acquaintance in conversation. The actor Bernard,
+whom we have already quoted, and whom we left with Washington at the
+gates of Mount Vernon, gives us the following vivid picture of what
+ensued:--
+
+"In conversation his face had not much variety of expression. A look
+of thoughtfulness was given by the compression of the mouth and the
+indentations of the brow (suggesting an habitual conflict with, and
+mastery over, passion), which did not seem so much to disdain a
+sympathy with trivialities as to be incapable of denoting them. Nor
+had his voice, so far as I could discover in our quiet talk,
+much change or richness of intonation, but he always spoke with
+earnestness, and his eyes (glorious conductors of the light within)
+burned with a steady fire which no one could mistake for mere
+affability; they were one grand expression of the well-known line: 'I
+am a man, and interested in all that concerns humanity.' In one hour
+and a half's conversation he touched on every topic that I brought
+before him with an even current of good sense, if he embellished it
+with little wit or verbal elegance. He spoke like a man who had felt
+as much as he had reflected, and reflected more than he had spoken;
+like one who had looked upon society rather in the mass than in
+detail, and who regarded the happiness of America but as the first
+link in a series of universal victories; for his full faith in the
+power of those results of civil liberty which he saw all around him
+led him to foresee that it would, erelong, prevail in other countries,
+and that the social millennium of Europe would usher in the political.
+When I mentioned to him the difference I perceived between the
+inhabitants of New England and of the Southern States, he remarked: 'I
+esteem those people greatly; they are the stamina of the Union and its
+greatest benefactors. They are continually spreading themselves too,
+to settle and enlighten less favored quarters. Dr. Franklin is a New
+Englander.' When I remarked that his observations were flattering to
+my country, he replied, with great good-humor, 'Yes, yes, Mr. Bernard,
+but I consider your country the cradle of free principles, not their
+armchair. Liberty in England is a sort of idol; people are bred up in
+the belief and love of it, but see little of its doings. They walk
+about freely, but then it is between high walls; and the error of its
+government was in supposing that after a portion of their subjects had
+crossed the sea to live upon a common, they would permit their friends
+at home to build up those walls about them.' A black coming in at this
+moment with a jug of spring water, I could not repress a smile, which
+the general at once interpreted. 'This may seem a contradiction,' he
+continued, 'but I think you must perceive that it is neither a crime
+nor an absurdity. When we profess, as our fundamental principle, that
+liberty is the inalienable right of every man, we do not include
+madmen or idiots; liberty in their hands would become a scourge. Till
+the mind of the slave has been educated to perceive what are the
+obligations of a state of freedom, and not confound a man's with a
+brute's, the gift would insure its abuse. We might as well be asked
+to pull down our old warehouses before trade has increased to demand
+enlarged new ones. Both houses and slaves were bequeathed to us by
+Europeans, and time alone can change them; an event, sir, which, you
+may believe me, no man desires more heartily than I do. Not only do I
+pray for it, on the score of human dignity, but I can already foresee
+that nothing but the rooting out of slavery can perpetuate the
+existence of our Union, by consolidating it in a common bond of
+principle.'
+
+"I now referred to the pleasant hours I had passed in Philadelphia,
+and my agreeable surprise at finding there so many men of talent, at
+which his face lit up vividly. 'I am glad to hear you, sir, who are an
+Englishman, say so, because you must now perceive how ungenerous are
+the assertions people are always making on your side of the water.
+One gentleman, of high literary standing,--I allude to the Abbé
+Raynal,--has demanded whether America has yet produced one great
+poet, statesman, or philosopher. The question shows anything but
+observation, because it is easy to perceive the causes which have
+combined to render the genius of this country scientific rather than
+imaginative. And, in this respect, America has surely furnished her
+quota. Franklin, Rittenhouse, and Rush are no mean names, to which,
+without shame, I may append those of Jefferson and Adams, as
+politicians; while I am told that the works of President Edwards of
+Rhode Island are a text-book in polemics in many European colleges.'
+
+"Of the replies which I made to his inquiries respecting England, he
+listened to none with so much interest as to those which described the
+character of my royal patron, the Prince of Wales. 'He holds out every
+promise,' remarked the general, 'of a brilliant career. He has been
+well educated by _events_, and I doubt not that, in his time, England
+will receive the benefit of her child's emancipation. She is at
+present bent double, and has to walk with crutches; but her offspring
+may teach her the secret of regaining strength, erectness, and
+independence.' In reference to my own pursuits he repeated the
+sentiments of Franklin. He feared the country was too poor to be a
+patron of the drama, and that only arts of a practical nature
+would for some time be esteemed. The stage he considered to be an
+indispensable resource for settled society, and a chief refiner; not
+merely interesting as a comment on the history of social happiness
+by its exhibition of manners, but an agent of good as a school for
+poetry, in holding up to honor the noblest principles. 'I am too old
+and too far removed,' he added, 'to seek for or require this pleasure
+myself, but the cause is not to droop on my account. There's my friend
+Mr. Jefferson has time and taste; he goes always to the play, and I'll
+introduce you to him,' a promise which he kept, and which proved to me
+the source of the greatest benefit and pleasure."
+
+This is by far the best account of Washington in the ordinary converse
+of daily life that has come down to us. The narrator belonged to the
+race who live by amusing their fellow-beings, and are in consequence
+quick to notice peculiarities and highly susceptible to being bored.
+Bernard, after the first interest of seeing a very eminent man had
+worn off, would never have lingered for an hour and a half of chat and
+then gone away reluctantly if his host had been either dull of speech
+or cold and forbidding of manner. It is evident that Washington talked
+well, easily, and simply, ranging widely over varied topics with a
+sure touch, and that he drew from the ample resources of a well-stored
+and reflective mind. The scraps of conversation which Bernard
+preserves are interesting and above the average of ordinary talk,
+without manifesting any attempt to be either brilliant or striking,
+and it is also apparent that Washington had the art of putting his
+guest entirely at his ease by his own pleasant and friendly manner. He
+had picked up the English actor on the road, liked his readiness to
+be helpful (always an attraction to him in any one), found him
+well-mannered and intelligent, and brought him home to rest and chat
+in the pleasant summer afternoon. To Bernard he was simply the plain
+Virginia gentleman, with a liberal and cultivated interest in men and
+things, and not a trace of oppressive and conscious greatness about
+him. It is to be suspected that he was by no means equally genial to
+the herd of sight-seers who pursued him in his retirement, but in this
+meeting he appeared as he must always have appeared to his family and
+friends.
+
+We get the same idea from the scattered allusions that we have to
+Washington in private life. Although silent and reserved as to
+himself, he was by no means averse to society, and in his own house
+all his guests, both great and small, felt at their ease with him,
+although with no temptation to be familiar. We know from more than
+one account that the dinners at the presidential house, as well as at
+Mount Vernon, were always agreeable. It was his wont to sit at table
+after the cloth was removed sipping a glass of wine and eating nuts,
+of which he was very fond, while he listened to the conversation and
+caused it to flow easily, not so much by what he said as by the kindly
+smile and ready sympathy which made all feel at home. We can gather
+an idea also of the charm which he had in the informal intercourse of
+daily life from some of his letters on trifling matters. Here is a
+little note written to Mrs. Stockton in acknowledgment of a pastoral
+poem which she had sent him:--
+
+ "MOUNT VERNON, February 18, 1784.
+
+ "Dear Madam: The intemperate weather and very great care which the
+ post riders take of themselves prevented your letter of the 4th of
+ last month from reaching my hands till the 10th of this. I was then in
+ the very act of setting off on a visit to my aged mother, from whence
+ I am just returned. These reasons I beg leave to offer as an apology
+ for my silence until now.
+
+ "It would be a pity indeed, my dear madam, if the muses should be
+ restrained in you; it is only to be regretted that the hero of your
+ poetical talents is not more deserving their lays. I cannot, however,
+ from motives of pure delicacy (because I happen to be the principal
+ character in your Pastoral) withhold my encomiums on the performance;
+ for I think the easy, simple, and beautiful strain with which the
+ dialogue is supported does great justice to your genius; and will not
+ only secure Lucinda and Amista from wits and critics, but draw from
+ them, however unwillingly, their highest plaudits; if they can
+ relish the praises that are given, as they must admire the manner of
+ bestowing them.
+
+ "Mrs. Washington, equally sensible with myself of the honor you have
+ done her, joins me in most affectionate compliments to yourself, and
+ the young ladies and gentlemen of your family.
+
+ "With sentiments of esteem, regard and respect,
+ I have the honor to be
+ ---- ----"
+
+This is not a matter of "great pith or moment," but it shows how
+pleasantly he could acknowledge a civility. The turn of the sentences
+smacks of the formality of the time. They sound a little labored,
+perhaps, to modern ears, but they were graceful according to the
+standard of his day, and they have a gentle courtesy which can never
+be out of fashion.
+
+He had the power also of paying a compliment in an impressive and
+really splendid manner whenever he felt it to be deserved. When
+Charles Thomson, who for fifteen years had been the honored secretary
+of the Continental Congress, wrote to announce his retirement,
+Washington replied: "The present age does so much justice to the
+unsullied reputation with which you have always conducted yourself in
+the execution of the duties of your office, and posterity will find
+your name so honorably connected with the verification of such a
+multitude of astonishing facts, that my single suffrage would add
+little to the illustration of your merits. Yet I cannot withhold any
+just testimonial in favor of so old, so faithful, and so able a
+public officer, which might tend to soothe his mind in the shades of
+retirement. Accept, then, this serious declaration, that your services
+have been important, as your patriotism was distinguished; and enjoy
+that best of all rewards, the consciousness of having done your duty
+well."
+
+Dull men do not write in this fashion. It is one thing to pay a
+handsome compliment, although even that is not by itself easy, but to
+give it in addition the note of sincerity which alone makes it of real
+value demands both art and good feeling. Let us take one more example
+of this sort before we drop the subject. When the French officers were
+leaving America Washington wrote to De Chastellux to bid him farewell.
+"Our good friend, the Marquis of Lafayette," he said, "prepared me,
+long before I had the honor to see you, for those impressions of
+esteem which opportunities and your own benevolent mind have since
+improved into a deep and lasting friendship; a friendship which
+neither time nor distance can eradicate. I can truly say that never in
+my life have I parted with a man to whom my soul clave more sincerely
+than it did to you. My warmest wishes will attend you in your voyage
+across the Atlantic to the rewards of a generous prince, the arms of
+affectionate friends; and be assured that it will be one of my highest
+gratifications to keep up a regular intercourse with you by letter."
+
+These letters exhibit not only the grace and point born of
+intelligence, but also the best of manners; by which I mean private
+manners, not those of the public man, of which there will be something
+to say hereafter. The attraction of Washington's society as a private
+gentleman lay in his good sense, breadth of knowledge, and good
+manners. Now the essence of good manners of the highest and most
+genuine kind is good feeling, which is thoughtful of others, and which
+is impossible to a cold, hard, or insensible nature. Such manners as
+we see in Washington's private letters and private life would have
+been strange offspring from the cold heart attributed to him by Mr.
+McMaster. In justice to Mr. McMaster, however, be it said, the charge
+is not a new one. It has been hinted at and spoken of elsewhere, and
+many persons have suspected that such was the case from the well-meant
+efforts of what may be called the cherry-tree school to elevate
+Washington's character by depicting him as a soulless, bloodless prig.
+The blundering efforts of the latter need not be noticed, but the
+reflections of serious critics cannot be passed by. The theory of the
+cold heart and the unfeeling nature seems to proceed in this wise.
+Washington was silent and reserved, he did not wear his heart upon his
+sleeve for daws to peck at, therefore he was cold; just as if mere
+noise and chatter had any relation to warm affections. He would take
+no salary from Congress, says Mr. McMaster, in fine antithesis, but
+he exacted his due from the family of the poor mason. This has an
+unpleasant sound, and suggests the man who is generous in public, and
+hard and grasping in private. Mr. McMaster in this sentence, however,
+whether intentionally or not, is not quite accurate in his facts, and
+conveys by his mode of statement an entirely false impression. The
+story to which he refers is given by Parkinson, who wrote a book about
+his experiences in America in 1798-1800. Parkinson had the story from
+one General Stone, and it was to this effect:[1] A room was plastered
+at Mount Vernon on one occasion, and was paid for during the owner's
+absence. When Washington returned he examined the work and had it
+measured, as was his habit. It then appeared that an error had been
+made, and that fifteen shillings too much had been paid. Meantime the
+plasterer had died. His widow married again, and her second husband
+advertised in the newspapers that he was prepared to pay the debts of
+his predecessor and collect all moneys due him. Thereupon Washington
+put in his claim, which was paid as a matter of course. He did not
+extort the debt from the family of the poor mason, but collected it
+from the second husband of the widow, in response to a voluntary
+advertisement. It was very careful and even close dealing, but it was
+neither harsh nor unjust, and the writer who has preserved the story
+would be not a little surprised at the interpretation that has
+been put upon it, for he cited it, as he expressly says, merely
+to illustrate the extraordinary regularity and method to which he
+attributed much of Washington's success.
+
+[Footnote 1: Parkinson's _Tour in America_, 1798-1800, 437 and ff.]
+
+Parkinson, in this same connection, tells several other stories,
+vague in origin, and sounding like mere gossip, but still worthy of
+consideration. According to one of them, Washington maintained a
+public ferry, which was customary among the planters, and the public
+paid regular tolls for its use. On one occasion General Stone, the
+authority for the previous anecdote, crossed the ferry and offered
+a moidore in payment. The ferryman objected to receiving it, on the
+ground that it was short weight, but Stone insisted, and it was
+finally accepted. On being given to Washington it was weighed, and
+being found three half-pence short, the ferryman was ordered to
+collect the balance due. On another occasion a tenant could not make
+the exact change in paying his rent, and Washington would not accept
+the money until the tenant went to Alexandria and brought back
+the precise sum. There is, however, still another anecdote, which
+completes this series, and which shows a different application of the
+same rule. Washington, in traveling, was in the habit of paying at
+inns the same for his servants as for himself. An innkeeper once
+charged him three shillings and ninepence for himself, and three
+shillings for his servant. Thereupon Washington sent for his host,
+said that his servant ate as much as he, and insisted on paying the
+additional ninepence.
+
+This extreme exactness in money matters, down even to the most
+trifling sums, was no doubt a foible, but it is well to observe that
+it was not a foible which sought only a selfish advantage, for the
+rule which he applied to others he applied also to himself. He meant
+to have his due, no matter how trivial, and he meant also that
+others should have theirs. In trifles, as in greater things, he was
+scrupulously just, and although he was always generous and ready to
+give, he insisted rigidly on what was justly his. A gift was one
+thing, a business transaction was another. The man himself who told
+these very stories was a good example of the kindliness which went
+hand in hand with this exactness in business affairs. Parkinson was
+an Englishman, of great narrowness of mind, who came out here to be a
+farmer, failed, and went home to write a book in denunciation of the
+country. America never had a more hostile critic. According to
+this profound observer, there was no good land in America, and no
+possibility of successful agriculture. The horses were bad, the cattle
+were bad, and sheep-raising was impossible. There was no game, the
+fish and oysters were poor and watery, and no one could ever hope in
+this wretchedly barren land for either wealth or comfort. It was a
+country fit only for the reception of convicts, and the cast-off
+mistress of an Englishman made a good wife for an American. A person
+who held such views as these was not likely to be biased in favor of
+anything American, and his evidence as to Washington may be safely
+trusted as not likely to be unduly favorable. He tells us that on his
+arrival at Mount Vernon, with letters of introduction, he was kindly
+received; that this hospitality was never relaxed; and that the
+general lent him money. He was at least grateful, and these are his
+last words as to Washington:--
+
+"To me he appeared a mild, friendly man, in company rather reserved,
+in private speaking with candor. His behavior to me was such that I
+shall ever revere his name.
+
+"General Washington lived a great man, and died the same.
+
+"I am of opinion that the general never knowingly did anything wrong,
+but did to all men as he would they should do to him."
+
+Evidently he appeared to Mr. Parkinson kindly and generous, as well
+as exactly just. It is well to have the truth about Washington, and
+nothing but the truth. Yet in escaping from the falsehoods of the
+eulogist and the myth-maker, let us beware of those which spring from
+the reaction against the current and accepted views. I have quoted
+the Parkinson stories at length, because they enforce this point
+admirably. No _a priori_ theory is safe, and to assume that Washington
+must have committed grave errors and been guilty of mean actions
+because they are common to humanity, and have not been admitted in his
+case, is just as misleading as to assume, as is usually done, that he
+was absolutely perfect and without fault.
+
+Let it be admitted that Washington, ever ready to pay his own dues,
+was strict, and sometimes severe, in demanding them of others; but
+let it be also remembered, this is the worst that can be said. He was
+always ready to overlook faults of omission or commission; he would
+pardon easily mismanagement or extravagance on his estate or in
+his household; but he had no mercy for anything that savored of
+ingratitude, treachery, or dishonesty, and he carried this same
+feeling into public as well as private affairs. No officer who had
+bravely done his best had anything to fear in defeat from Washington's
+anger. He was never unjust, and he was always kind to misfortune or
+mistake, but to the coward or the traitor he was entirely unforgiving.
+This it was which made Arnold's treason so bitter to him. Not only had
+he been deceived, but the country as well as himself had been most
+basely betrayed; and for this reason he was relentless to André, whom
+it is said he never saw, living or dead. The young Englishman had
+taken part in a wretched piece of treachery, and for the sake of the
+country, and as a warning to traitors, Washington would not spare him.
+He would never have ordered a political prisoner to be taken out and
+shot in a ditch, after the fashion of Napoleon; nor would he have
+dealt with any people as the Duke of Cumberland dealt with the
+clansmen after Culloden. Such performances would have seemed to him
+wanton as well as cruel, and he was too wise and too humane a man
+to be either. Indian atrocities, for instance, with which he was
+familiar, never led him to retaliate in kind. But he was perfectly
+prepared to exact the extremest penalty by just and recognized
+methods; and had it not been for the urgent entreaties of his friends,
+he would have sent Asgill to the scaffold, repugnant as it was to his
+feelings, because he felt that the murder of Huddy was a crime for
+which the English army was responsible, and which demanded a just and
+striking vengeance. He was, it may be freely confessed, of anything
+but a tame nature. There was a good deal of Berserker in his make-up,
+and he was fierce in his anger when he believed that a great wrong had
+been done. But because he was stern and unrelenting when he felt that
+justice and his duty required him to be so, no more proves that he had
+a cold heart than does the fact that he was silent, dignified, and
+reserved. Cold-blooded men are not fierce in seeking to redress the
+wrongs of others, nor are the fluent of speech the only kind and
+generous members of the human family.
+
+Washington's whole life, indeed, contradicts the charge that he was
+cold of heart and sluggish of feeling. The man who wrote as he did in
+his extreme youth, when Indians were harrying the frontier where he
+commanded, was not lacking in humanity or sympathy; and such as he
+then was he remained to the end of his life. A soldier by instinct and
+experience, he never grew indifferent to the miseries of war. Human
+suffering always appealed to him and moved him deeply, and when it was
+wantonly inflicted stirred him to anger and to the desire for the wild
+justice of revenge.
+
+The goodness and kindness of man's heart, however, are much more truly
+shown in the little details of life than in the great matters which
+affect classes or communities. Washington was considerate and helpful
+to all men, and if he was ever cold and distant in his manner, it was
+to the great, and not to the poor or humble. As has been indicated by
+his recognition of the actor Bernard, he had in high degree the royal
+gift of remembering names and faces. When he was at Senator Dalton's
+house in Newburyport, on his New England tour of 1789, he met an
+old servant whom he had not seen since the French war, thirty years
+before. He knew the man at once, spoke to him, and welcomed him. So it
+was with the old soldiers of the Revolution, who were always sure of a
+welcome, and, if he had ever seen them, of a recognition. No man ever
+turned from his presence wounded by a cold forgetfulness. When he was
+at Ipswich, on this same journey, Mr. Cleaveland, the minister of the
+town, was presented to him. As he approached, hat in hand, Washington
+said, "Put on your hat, parson, and I will shake hands with you." "I
+cannot wear my hat in your presence, general," was the reply, "when I
+think of what you have done for this country." "You did as much as I."
+"No, no," protested the parson. "Yes," said Washington, "you did what
+you could, and I've done no more." What a gracious, kindly courtesy is
+this, and not without the salt of wit! Does it not show the perfection
+of good manners which deals with all men for what they are, and is
+full of a warm sympathy born of a good heart? He was criticised
+for coldness and accused of monarchical leanings, because, at Mrs.
+Washington's receptions and his own public levees, he stood, dressed
+in black velvet, with one hand on the hilt of his sword and the other
+behind his back, and shook hands with no one, although he talked with
+all. He did this because he thought it became the President of the
+United States upon state occasions, and his sense of the dignity of
+his office was always paramount. But away from forms and ceremonies,
+with the old servant or the old soldier, or the country parson, his
+hand was never behind his back, and his manners were those of a great
+but simple gentleman, and came straight from a kind heart, full of
+sympathy and good feeling.
+
+He was, too, the most hospitable of men in the best sense, and his
+house was always open to all who came. When he was away during the war
+or the presidency, his instructions to his agents were to keep up the
+hospitality of Mount Vernon, just as if he had been there himself; and
+he was especially careful in directing that, if there were general
+distress, poor persons of the neighborhood should have help from his
+kitchen or his granaries.
+
+His own more immediate hospitality was of the same kind. He always
+entertained in the most liberal manner, both as general and President,
+and in a style which he thought befitted the station he occupied. But
+apart from all this, his table, whether at home or abroad, was never
+without its guest. "Dine with us," he wrote to Lear on July 31, 1797,
+"or we shall do what we have not done for twenty years, dine alone."
+The real hospitality which opens the door and spreads the board for
+the friend or stranger, admitting them to the family without form or
+ceremony, was his also. "My manner of living is plain," he wrote to
+a friend after the Revolution; "I do not mean to be put out of it. A
+glass of wine and a bit of mutton are always ready; and such as will
+be content to partake of them are always welcome. Those who expect
+more will be disappointed, but no change will be effected by
+it." Genuine hospitality as unstinted as it was sincere was not
+characteristic of a cold man, or of one who sought to avoid his
+fellows. It is one of the lighter graces of life, perhaps, but when it
+comes freely and simply, and not as a vehicle for the display or the
+aggrandizement of its dispenser, it is not without a meaning to the
+student of character.
+
+Washington was not much given to professions of friendship, nor was he
+one of the great men who keep a circle of intimates and sometimes of
+flatterers about them. He was extremely independent of the world and
+perfectly self-sufficing, but it is a mistake to suppose that because
+he unbosomed himself to scarcely any one, and had the loneliness of
+greatness and of high responsibilities, he was therefore without
+friends. He had as many friends as usually fall to the lot of any man;
+and although he laid bare his inmost heart to none, some were very
+close and all were very dear to him. In war and politics, as has
+already been said, the two men who came nearest to him were Hamilton
+and Knox, and his diary shows that when he was President he consulted
+with them nearly every day wholly apart from the regular cabinet
+meetings. They were the two advisers who were friends as well as
+secretaries, and who followed and sustained him as a matter of
+affection as much as politics. At home his neighbor, George Mason,
+although they came to differ, was a strong friend whom he liked and
+respected, and whose opinion, whether favorable or adverse, he always
+sought. His feeling to Patrick Henry was much deeper than mere
+political or official acquaintance, and the lovable qualities of the
+brilliant orator, clear even now across the gulf of a century, were
+evidently strongly felt by Washington. They differed about the
+Constitution, but Washington was eager at a later day to have Henry by
+his side in the cabinet, and in the last years they stood shoulder to
+shoulder in defense of the Union with a personal sympathy deeper than
+any born of a mere similarity of opinion. Henry Lee, the son of his
+old sweetheart, he loved with a tender and peculiar affection. He
+watched over him and helped him, rejoiced in the dashing gallantry
+which made him famous as Light-horse Harry, and, when he had won civil
+as well as military distinction, trusted him and counseled with him.
+Dr. Craik, the companion of his youth and his life-long physician, was
+always a dear and close friend, and the regard between the two is very
+pleasant to look at, as we see it glancing out here and there in the
+midst of state papers and official cases. For the officers of the army
+he had a peculiarly warm feeling, and he had among them many close
+friends, like Carrington of Virginia, and Charles Cotesworth Pinckney
+of South Carolina. His immediate staff he regarded with especial
+affection, and it is worthy of notice that they all not only admired
+their great chief, but followed him with a personal devotion which is
+not a little curious if Washington was cold of heart and distant of
+manner in the intimate association of a military family.
+
+This feeling for his soldiers and his officers extended also to those
+civilians who had stood by him and the army, and who had labored
+for victory in all those trying years. Such a one was old Governor
+Trumbull, "Brother Jonathan," who never failed to respond when a call
+was made for men and money, and upon whose friendship and advice
+Washington always leaned. Such, too, were Robert and Gouverneur
+Morris. The sacrifices and energy of the one and the zeal and
+brilliant abilities of the other endeared both to him, and his
+friendship for them never wavered when misfortune overtook the elder,
+and when the younger was driven by malice, both foreign and domestic,
+from the place he had filled so well. Another, again, of this kind was
+Franklin. In the dark days of the old French war, Washington had seen
+displayed for the first time the force and tact of Franklin, which
+alone obtained the necessary wagons and enabled Braddock's army
+to move. The early impression thus obtained was never lost, and
+Franklin's patriotism, his sympathy for the general and the army in
+the Revolution, as well as the stanch support he gave them, aroused in
+Washington a sense of obligation and friendship of the sincerest kind.
+In proportion as he loathed ingratitude was he grateful himself. He
+loved Franklin for his friendship and support, he admired him for
+his successful diplomacy, and he reverenced him for his scientific
+attainments. The only American whose fame could for a moment come
+in competition with his own, he regarded the old philosopher with
+affectionate veneration, and when, after his own fashion, and not at
+all after the fashion of the time, he arrived in Philadelphia on the
+exact day set for the Constitutional Convention, his first act was to
+call upon Dr. Franklin and pay his respects to him. The courtesy and
+kindliness of this little act on the part of a man who had come to the
+town in the midst of shouting crowds, with joy bells ringing above his
+head, speak well for the simple, honest heart that dictated it.
+
+After all, it may be said that a passing civility of this sort
+involved but little trouble, and was more a matter of good-breeding
+than anything else. Let us look, then, at another and widely different
+case. Of all the men whom the fortunes of war brought across
+Washington's path there was none who became dearer to him than
+Lafayette, for the generous, high-spirited young Frenchman, full of
+fresh enthusiasm and brave as a lion, appealed at once to Washington's
+heart. He quickly admitted him to his confidence, and the excellent
+service of Lafayette in the field, together with his invaluable
+help in securing the French alliance, deepened and strengthened the
+sympathy and affection which were entirely reciprocal. After Lafayette
+departed, a constant correspondence was maintained; and when the
+Bastille fell, it was to Washington that Lafayette sent its key, which
+still hangs on the wall of Mt. Vernon. As Lafayette rose rapidly to
+the dangerous heights of revolutionary leadership, he had at every
+step Washington's advice and sympathy. Then the tide turned; he fell
+headlong from power, and brought up in an Austrian prison. From that
+moment Washington spared no pains to help his unhappy friend, although
+his own position was one of extreme difficulty. Lafayette was not only
+the proscribed exile of one country, but also the political prisoner
+of another, and the President could not compromise the United States
+at that critical moment by showing too much interest in the fate of
+his unhappy friend. He nevertheless went to the very edge of prudence
+in trying to save him, and the ministers of the United States were
+instructed to use every private effort to secure Lafayette's release,
+or at least the mitigation of his confinement. All these attempts
+failed, but Washington was more successful in other directions. He
+sent money to Madame de Lafayette, who was absolutely beggared at the
+moment, and represented to her that it was in settlement of an account
+which he owed the marquis. When Lafayette's son and his own namesake
+came to this country for an asylum, he had him cared for in Boston and
+New York by his personal friends; George Cabot in the one case, and
+Hamilton in the other. As soon as public affairs made it proper for
+him to do it, he took the lad into his own household, treated him like
+a son, and kept him near him until events permitted the boy to return
+to Europe and rejoin his father. The sufferings and dangers of
+Lafayette and his family were indeed a source of great unhappiness
+to Washington, and we have the authority of Bradford, his
+attorney-general, that when the President attempted to talk about
+Lafayette he was so much affected that he shed tears,--a very rare
+exhibition of emotion in a man so intensely reserved.
+
+Absence had as little effect upon his memory of old friends as
+misfortune. The latter stimulated recollection, and the former could
+not dim it. He found time, in the very heat and fire of war and
+revolution, to write to Bryan Fairfax lamenting the death of "the good
+old lord" whose house had been open to him, and whose hand had ever
+helped him when he was a young and unknown man just beginning his
+career. When he returned to Mount Vernon after the presidency, full of
+years and honors, one of his first acts was to write to Mrs. Fairfax
+in England to assure her of his lasting remembrance, and to breathe
+a sigh over the changes time had brought, and over the by-gone years
+when they had been young together.
+
+The loyalty of nature which made his remembrance of old friends so
+real and lasting found expression also in the thoughtfulness which he
+showed toward casual acquaintances, and this was especially the case
+when he had received attention or service at any one's hands, or when
+he felt that he was able to give pleasure by a slight effort on his
+own part. A little incident which occurred during the first year of
+his presidency illustrates this trait in his character very well.
+Uxbridge was one among the many places where he stopped on his New
+England tour, and when he got to Hartford he wrote to Mr. Taft, who
+had been his host in the former town, and who evidently cherished for
+him a very keen admiration, the following note:--
+
+ "November 8, 1789.
+
+ "Sir: Being informed that you have given my name to one of your
+ sons, and called another after Mrs. Washington's family, and being
+ moreover very much pleased with the modest and innocent looks of
+ your two daughters, Patty and Polly, I do for these reasons send
+ each of these girls a piece of chintz; and to Patty, who bears the
+ name of Mrs. Washington, and who waited more upon us than Polly
+ did, I send five guineas, with which she may buy herself any
+ little ornament she may want, or she may dispose of them in any
+ other manner more agreeable to herself. As I do not give these
+ things with a view to having it talked of, or even to its being
+ known, the less there is said about the matter the better you will
+ please me; but, that I may be sure the chintz and money have got
+ safe to hand, let Patty, who I dare say is equal to it, write me
+ a line informing me thereof, directed to 'The President of the
+ United States at New York.' I wish you and your family well, and
+ am," etc.
+
+Let us turn now from friendship to nearer and closer relations.
+Washington was not only too reserved, but he had too much true
+sentiment, to leave his correspondence with Mrs. Washington behind
+him; for he knew that his vast collection of papers would become the
+material of history, and he had no mind that strangers should look
+into the sacred recesses of his private life. Only one letter to
+Mrs. Washington apparently has survived. It is simple and full of
+affection, as one would expect, and tells, as well as many volumes
+could, of the happy relations between husband and wife. Washington had
+many love affairs in his youth, but he proved in the end a constant
+lover. His wife was a high-bred, intelligent woman, simple and
+dignified in her manners, efficient in all ways to be the helpmate of
+her husband in the high places to which he was called. No shadow ever
+rested on their married life, and when the end came Mrs. Washington
+only said, "All is over now. I shall soon follow him." She could not
+conceive of life without the presence of the unchanging love and noble
+character which had been by her side so long.
+
+Children were denied to Washington, but although this was a
+disappointment it did not chill him nor narrow his sympathies, as is
+so often the case. He took to his heart his wife's children as if
+they were his own. He watched over them and cared for them, and their
+deaths caused him the deepest sorrow. He afterwards adopted his wife's
+two grandchildren, and watched over them, too, in the same way. In the
+midst of all the cares of the presidency, Washington found time always
+to write to George Custis, a boy at school or at college; while Nellie
+Custis was as dear to him as his own daughter, and her marriage a
+source of the most affectionate interest. Indeed, it is evident from
+various little anecdotes that he was much less strict with these
+children than was Mrs. Washington, and much more disposed to condone
+faults. Certain it is that they loved him tenderly, and in a way that
+only long years of loving-kindness could have made possible.
+
+He showed the same feeling to all his own kindred. His mother was ever
+the object of the most loyal affection, and even at the head of the
+armies he would turn aside to visit her with the same respect and
+devotion as when he was a mere boy. He was ever mindful of his
+brothers and sisters, and their fortunes. None of them were ever
+forgotten, and he was especially kind to the children of those who
+had been least fortunate and most needed his help. He educated and
+counseled his favorite nephew Bushrod, and did the same for the sons
+of George Steptoe Washington. Nothing is pleasanter than to read in
+the midst of official papers the long letters in which he gave these
+boys great store of wise and kindly advice, guided their education,
+strove to form their characters, and traced for them the honorable
+careers which he wished them to pursue. Very few men who had risen to
+the heights reached by Washington would have found time, in the midst
+of engrossing cares, to write such letters as he wrote to friends and
+kinsmen. A kind heart prompted them, but they were much more than
+merely kind, for when Washington undertook to do anything he did it
+thoroughly. Whether it was a treaty with England, the education of a
+boy, or the service of a friend, he gave it his best thought and his
+utmost care. Where those he loved were concerned, he was never too
+busy to think of them, and he spared no pains to help them; censuring
+faults where they existed, and giving praise in generous manner where
+praise was due.
+
+To any one who carefully studies his life, it is evident that
+Washington was as warm-hearted and affectionate as he was great in
+character and ability, and that he was so without noise or pretense.
+This really only amounts to saying that he was a well-balanced man,
+and yet even this cannot be said without admitting still another
+quality. The sanest of all senses is the sense of humor, and the
+nature in which it is wholly lacking cannot be thoroughly rounded and
+complete. Humor is not the most lofty of qualities, but it is one of
+the most essential, and it is generally assumed that Washington
+was very deficient in humor. This idea has arisen from a hasty
+consideration of the subject, and from a superficial conception of
+humor itself. To utter jests, or to say or write witty, brilliant, or
+amusing things, no doubt implies the possession of humor, but they are
+not the whole of it, for a man may have a fine sense of humor, and yet
+never make a joke nor utter a sarcasm. The distinction between humor
+and the want of it lies much deeper than word of mouth. The man
+without a sense of humor is sure to make a certain number of solemn
+blunders. They may be in matters of importance or in the merest
+trifles, but they are blunders none the less, and come from
+insensibility to the incongruous, the ludicrous, or the impossible. It
+may be said that common sense suffices to avoid these pitfalls, but
+this is really begging the question, inasmuch as common sense of a
+high order amounting almost to genius cannot exist without humor, for
+humor is the root and foundation of common sense. Let us apply this
+test to Washington and we shall find that there never was a man who
+made fewer mistakes than he, down even to matters of the smallest
+detail. Search his career from beginning to end, and there is not a
+solemn blunder to be found in it. He was attacked and assailed both as
+general and President, but he was never laughed at. In other words,
+he had a sense of humor which made it impossible for him to blunder
+solemnly, or to do or say anything which ridicule could touch.
+
+It is not, however, necessary to leave his possession of a sense of
+humor to inference from his career and his freedom from blunders. That
+he had humor strong, sane, and abundant is susceptible of much more
+direct proof; and the idea that he was lacking in this respect arose
+undoubtedly from the gravity of demeanor which was characteristic of
+the man. He had assumed the heavy responsibilities of an important
+military command in the French war at an age when most men are just
+leaving college and beginning to study a profession. This of itself
+sobered him, and added to his natural quiet and reserve, so that in
+estimating him in after-life this early and severe discipline at a
+most impressionable age ought never to be overlooked, for it had a
+very marked effect upon his character.
+
+He was not perhaps exactly joyous or gay of nature, but he had a
+contented and happy disposition, and, like all robust, well-balanced
+men, he possessed strong animal spirits and a keen sense of enjoyment.
+He loved a wild, open-air life, and was devoted to rough out-door
+sports. He liked to wrestle and run, to shoot, ride or dance, and
+to engage in all trials of skill and strength, for which his great
+muscular development suited him admirably. With such tastes, it
+followed almost as a matter of course that he loved laughter and fun.
+Good, hearty, country fun, a ludicrous mishap, a practical joke, all
+merriment of a simple, honest kind, were highly congenial to him,
+especially in his youth and early manhood. Here is the way, for
+example, in which he described in his diary a ball he attended in
+1760: "In a convenient room, detached for the purpose, abounded great
+plenty of bread and butter, some biscuits, with tea and coffee which
+the drinkers of could not distinguish from hot water sweetened. Be
+it remembered that pocket handkerchiefs served the purposes of
+tablecloths, and that no apologies were made for them. I shall
+therefore distinguish this ball by the style and title of the
+bread-and-butter ball." The wit is not brilliant, but there was a good
+hearty laugh in the young man who jots down this little memorandum in
+his diary.
+
+The years after the French war were happy years, free from care and
+full of simple pleasures. Then came the Revolution, bringing with it a
+burden such as has seldom been laid upon any man, and the seriousness
+bred by earlier experiences, came back with tenfold force. The popular
+saying was that Washington never smiled during the war, and, roughly
+speaking, this was quite true. In all those years of danger and trial,
+inasmuch as he was a man big of heart and brain, he had the gravity
+and the sadness born of responsibility, and the suffering sure to come
+to an unselfish mind. It was at this time that he began to be most
+closely observed of men, and hence came the idea that he never
+laughed, and therefore was a being devoid of humor, the most
+sympathetic of gifts. But as a matter of fact, the old sense of fun
+never left him. It would come to his aid at the most serious moments,
+just as an endless flow of stories brought relief to Lincoln and
+carried him round many jagged corners. With Washington it was hearty,
+laughing mirth at some ludicrous incident. Putnam riding into
+Cambridge with an old woman clinging behind him; Greene searching for
+his wig while it was on his head; a young braggart flung over the head
+of an unbroken colt; or a good, rollicking story from Colonel Seammel
+or Major Fairlie,--all these would delight Washington, and send him
+off into peals of inextinguishable laughter. It was ever the old,
+hearty love of fun born of animal spirits, which never left him, and
+which would always break out on sufficient provocation. Mr. Parton
+would have us believe that this was all, and that the common-place
+hero whom he describes never rose above the level of the humor
+conveyed by grinning through a horse-collar. Even admitting the truth
+of this, a real love of honest fun and of a hearty laugh is a kindly
+quality that all men like.
+
+But was this all? Is it quite true that Washington had only a love of
+boisterous fun, and nothing else? It is worth looking a little deeper
+than the current stories of the camp to find out, and yet one of these
+very camp-stories raises at once a strong suspicion that Mr. Parton's
+conclusion in this regard, like so many conclusions about Washington,
+is unfounded. When General Lee took the oath of allegiance to the
+United States, he remarked, in making abjuration of his former
+allegiance, that he was perfectly ready to abjure the king, but could
+not bring himself to abjure the Prince of Wales, at which bit of irony
+Washington was greatly amused. The wit of the remark is a little cold
+to-day, but at the moment, accompanying as it did a solemn act of
+abjuration, it was keen enough. Washington himself, moreover, was
+perfectly capable of good-natured banter. Colonel Humphreys challenged
+him one day to jump over a hedge. Washington, always ready to accept
+a challenge where riding was concerned, told the colonel to go on.
+Humphreys put his horse at the hedge, cleared it, and landed in
+a quagmire on the other side up to his horse's girths; whereupon
+Washington rode up, stopped, and looking blandly at his struggling
+friend, remarked, "Ah, colonel, you are too deep for me." "Take care,"
+he wrote to young Custis, when he sent him money for his college gown,
+"not to buy without advice; otherwise you may be more distinguished by
+your folly than your dress."
+
+We find in his letters here and there a good-natured raillery, and
+jesting, which show a sense of humor that goes beyond the limits of
+mere fun and horse-play. Here is a letter he wrote toward the close of
+the war, asking some ladies to dine with him in his quarters at West
+Point:--
+
+ "WEST POINT, August 16, 1779.
+
+ "Dear Doctor: I have asked Mrs. Cochran and Mrs. Livingston to
+ dine with me to-morrow; but ought I not to apprise you of their
+ fare? As I hate deception, even where imagination is concerned, I
+ will.
+
+ "It is needless to premise that my table is large enough to hold
+ the ladies: of this they had ocular demonstration yesterday. To
+ say how it is usually covered is rather more essential, and this
+ shall be the purport of my letter.
+
+ "Since my arrival at this happy spot, we have had a ham, sometimes
+ a shoulder of bacon, to grace the head of the table. A piece
+ of roast beef adorns the foot, and a small dish of green
+ beans--almost imperceptible--decorates the centre. When the cook
+ has a mind to cut a figure,--and this I presume he will attempt
+ to-morrow,--we have two beefsteak pies, or dishes of crabs, in
+ addition, one on each side of the centre dish, dividing the space,
+ and reducing the distance between dish and dish to about six feet,
+ which without them would be nearly twelve feet apart. Of late he
+ has had the surprising luck to discover that apples will make
+ pies; and it is a question if, amidst the violence of his efforts,
+ we do not get one of apples instead of having both of beef.
+
+ "If the ladies can put up with such entertainment, and submit to
+ partake of it on plates once tin, but now iron, not become so by
+ the labor of hard scouring, I shall be happy to see them."
+
+We may be sure that the ladies found their dinner a pleasant one, and
+that the writer of the note was neither a stiff nor unsocial host. A
+much more charming letter is one to Nellie Custis, on the occasion of
+her first ball. It is too long for quotation, but it is a model of
+affectionate wisdom tinged with a gentle humor, and designed to guide
+a young girl just beginning the world of society.
+
+Here, however, is another extract from a letter to Madame de
+Lafayette, of rather more serious purport, but in the same strain, and
+full of a simple and, as we should call it, an old-fashioned grace. He
+was replying to an invitation to visit France, which he felt obliged
+to decline. After giving his reasons, he said: "This, my dear
+Marchioness (indulge the freedom), is not the case with you. You have
+youth (and, if you should incline to leave your children, you can
+leave them with all the advantages of education), and must have a
+curiosity to see the country, young, rude, and uncultivated as it is,
+for the liberties of which your husband has fought, bled, and acquired
+much glory, where everybody admires, everybody loves him. Come, then,
+let me entreat you, and call my cottage your home; for your own doors
+do not open to you with more readiness than mine would. You will see
+the plain manner in which we live, and meet with rustic civility; and
+you shall taste the simplicity of rural life. It will diversify the
+scene, and may give you a higher relish for the gayeties of the court
+when you return to Versailles."
+
+There is also apparent in many of his letters a vein of worldly
+wisdom, shrewd but kindly, too gentle to be called cynical, and yet
+touched with the humor which reads and appreciates the foibles of
+humanity. Of an officer who grumbled at disappointments during the war
+he wrote: "General McIntosh is only experiencing upon a small scale
+what I have had an ample share of upon a large one; and must, as I
+have been obliged to do in a variety of instances, yield to necessity;
+that is, to use a vulgar phrase, 'shape his coat according to his
+cloth,' or in other words, if he cannot do as he wishes, he must do
+what he can." The philosophy is homely and common enough, but the
+manner in which the reproof was administered shows kindly tact, one
+of the most difficult of arts. Here is another passage, touching on
+something outside the range of war and politics. He was writing to
+Lund Washington in regard to Mrs. Washington's daughter-in-law, Mrs.
+Custis, who was contemplating a second marriage. "For my own part," he
+said, "I never did, nor do I believe I ever shall, give advice to a
+woman who is setting out on a matrimonial voyage: first, because I
+never could advise one to marry without her own consent; and secondly,
+because I know it is to no purpose to advise her to refrain when she
+has obtained it. A woman very rarely asks an opinion or requires
+advice on such an occasion till her resolution is formed; and then it
+is with the hope and expectation of obtaining a sanction, not that she
+means to be governed by your disapprobation, that she applies. In a
+word, the plain English of the application may be summed up in these
+words: 'I wish you to think as I do; but if unhappily you differ from
+me in opinion, my heart, I must confess, is fixed, and I have gone too
+far _now_ to retract.'"
+
+In the same spirit, but this time with a lurking smile at himself,
+did he write to the secretary of Congress for his commission: "If my
+commission is not necessary for the files of Congress, I should be
+glad to have it deposited among my own papers. It may serve _my
+grandchildren_, some fifty or a hundred years hence, for a theme to
+ruminate upon, if _they_ should be contemplatively disposed."
+
+He knew human nature well, and had a smile for its little weaknesses
+when they came to his mind. It was this same human sympathy which made
+him also love amusements of all sorts; but he was as little their
+slave as their enemy. No man ever carried great burdens with a higher
+or more serious spirit, but his cares never made him forbidding, nor
+rendered him impatient of the pleasure of others. He liked to amuse
+himself, and knew the value of a change of thought and scene, and he
+was always ready, when duty permitted, for a chat. He liked to take a
+comfortable seat and have his talk out, and he had the talent so rare
+in great men of being a good and appreciative listener. We hear of him
+playing cards at Tappan during the war, and he was always fond of a
+game in the evening, realizing the force of Talleyrand's remark to the
+despiser of cards: "Quelle triste vieillesse vous vous préparez." In
+1779 it is recorded that at a party he danced for three hours with
+Mrs. Greene without sitting down or resting, which speaks well for
+the health and spirits both of the lady and the gentleman. Even after
+Yorktown, he was ready to walk a minuet at a ball, and to the end
+he liked to see young people dance, as he had danced himself in his
+youth. As has been seen from his treatment of Bernard, he liked the
+theatre and the actors, and when he was in Philadelphia he was a
+constant attendant at the play, as he had been ever since he went to
+see "George Barnwell" in the Barbadoes. His love of horses stayed with
+him to the last. He not only rode and drove and trained horses,[1] but
+he enjoyed the sport of the race-course. He was probably aware, like
+the Shah of Persia who declined to go to the Derby, that one horse
+could run faster than another, but nevertheless he liked to see them
+run, and we hear of him, after he had reached the presidency, acting
+as judge at a race, and seeing his own colt Magnolia beaten, which he
+no doubt considered the next best thing to winning.
+
+[Footnote 1: The Marquis de Chastelleux speaks of the perfect training
+of Washington's saddle horses, and says the general broke them
+himself. He adds "He (the general) is an excellent and bold horseman,
+leaping the highest fences and going extremely quick, without standing
+upon his stirrups, bearing on the bridle or letting his horse run
+wild; circumstances which our young men look upon as so essential a part
+of English horsemanship, that they would rather break a leg or an arm
+than renounce them."]
+
+He had, indeed, in all ways a thoroughly well-balanced mind and
+temper. In great affairs he knew how to spare himself the details to
+which others could attend as well as he, and yet he was in no wise
+a despiser of small things. Before the Revolution, there was a warm
+discussion in the Truro parish as to the proper site for the Pohick
+Church. Washington and George Mason led respectively the opposing
+forces, and each confidently asserted that the site he preferred was
+the most convenient for the largest number of parishioners. Finally,
+after much debate and no conclusion, Washington appeared at a vestry
+meeting with a collection of statistics. He had measured the distance
+from each proposed site to the house of each parishioner, and found,
+as he declared, that his site was nearer to more people than the
+other. It is needless to add that he carried his point, and that the
+spot he desired for the church was the one chosen.
+
+The fact was that, if he confided a task of any sort to another, he
+let it go on without meddling; but if he undertook anything himself,
+he did it with the utmost thoroughness, and there is much success
+in this capacity to take pains even in small things. He managed his
+plantations entirely himself when he was at home, and did it well. He
+knew the qualities of each field, and the rotation of its crops. No
+improvement in agriculture and no ingenious invention escaped his
+attention, although he was not to be carried away by mere novelty,
+which had such a fascination for his ex-secretary at Monticello. Every
+resource of his estate was turned to good use, and his flour and
+tobacco commanded absolute confidence with his brand upon them. He
+followed in the same painstaking way all his business affairs, and his
+accounts, all in his own hand, are wonderfully minute and accurate. He
+was very exact in all business as well as very shrewd at a bargain,
+and the tradition is that his neighbors considered the general a
+formidable man in a horse-trade, that most difficult of transactions.
+Parkinson mentions that everything purchased or brought to the house
+was weighed, measured, or counted, generally in the presence of the
+master himself. Some of his letters to Lear, his private secretary,
+show that he looked after his china and servants, the packing and
+removal of his furniture with great minuteness. To some persons this
+appears evidence of a petty mind in a great man, but to those who
+reflect a little more deeply it will occur that this accuracy and
+care in trifles were the same qualities which kept the American army
+together, and enabled their owner to arrive on time and in full
+preparation at Yorktown and Trenton. The worst that can be said is
+that from his love of perfection and completeness he may in this
+respect have wasted time and strength, but his untiring industry and
+his capacity for work were so great that he accomplished so far as we
+can see all this drudgery without ever neglecting in the least more
+important duties. It was a satisfaction to him to do it; for he was
+methodical and exact to the last degree, and he was never happy unless
+he held everything in which he was concerned easily within his grasp.
+
+He had the same attention to details in external things, and he wished
+everything about him to be of the best, if not "express'd in fancy."
+He had the handsomest carriages and the finest horses always in his
+stables. It was necessary that the furniture of his house should be as
+good as could be procured, and he was most particular in regard to it.
+When he was preparing as President to move to Philadelphia, he made
+the most searching inquiries as to horses, stables, servants, schools
+for young Custis, and everything affecting the household. He sent at
+the same time most minute directions to his agents as to the furniture
+of his house, touching upon everything, down to the color of the
+curtains and the form of his wine-coolers. He had a like feeling in
+regard to dress. His fancy for handsome and appropriate dress in his
+youth has already been alluded to, but he never ceased to take an
+interest in it; and in a letter to McHenry, written in the last year
+of his life, he discusses with great care the details of the uniform
+to be prescribed for himself as commander-in-chief of the new army. It
+would be a mistake, of course, to infer that he was a dandy, or that
+he gave to dress and furniture the importance set upon them by shallow
+minds. He simply valued them rightly, and enjoyed the good things of
+this world. He had the best possible taste and the keenest sense of
+what was appropriate, and it was this good taste and sense of fitness
+which saved him from blundering in trifles, as much as his ability and
+his sense of humor preserved him from error in the conduct of great
+affairs.
+
+The value of all this to the country he served cannot be too often
+reiterated, for ridicule was a real danger to the Revolutionary cause
+when it started. The raw levies, headed by volunteer officers from the
+shop, the plough, the work-bench, or the trading vessel, despite their
+patriotism and the nobility of their cause, could easily have been
+made subjects of derision, a perilous enemy to all new undertakings.
+Men prefer to be shot at, if they are taken seriously, rather than to
+be laughed at and made objects of contempt. The same principle holds
+true of a revolution seeking the sympathy of a hostile world. When
+Washington drew his sword beneath the Cambridge elm and put himself at
+the head of the American army, effective ridicule became impossible,
+for the dignity of the cause was seen in that of its leader. The
+British generals soon found that they not only had a dangerous enemy
+to encounter, but that they were dealing with a man whose pride in his
+country and whose own sense of self-respect reduced any assumption of
+personal superiority on their part to speedy contempt. In the same way
+he brought dignity to the new government of the Constitution when
+he was placed at its head. The confederation had excited the just
+contempt of the world, and Washington as President, by the force of
+his own character and reputation, gave the United States at once the
+respect not only of the American people, but of those of Europe as
+well. Men felt instinctively that no government over which he presided
+could ever fall into feebleness or disrepute.
+
+In addition to the effect on the popular mind of his character and
+services was that of his personal presence. If contemporary testimony
+can be believed, few men have ever lived who had the power to impress
+those who looked upon them so profoundly as Washington. He was richly
+endowed by nature in all physical attributes. Well over six feet
+high,[1] large, powerfully built, and of uncommon muscular strength,
+he had the force that always comes from great physical power. He had
+a fine head, a strong face, with blue eyes set wide apart in deep
+orbits, and beneath, a square jaw and firm-set mouth which told of a
+relentless will. Houdon the sculptor, no bad judge, said he had no
+conception of the majesty and grandeur of Washington's form and
+features until he studied him as a subject for a statue. Pages might
+be filled with extracts from the descriptions of Washington given by
+French officers, by all sorts of strangers, and by his own countrymen,
+but they all repeat the same story. Every one who met him told of the
+commanding presence, and noble person, the ineffable dignity, and
+the calm, simple, and stately manners. No man ever left Washington's
+presence without a feeling of reverence and respect amounting almost
+to awe.
+
+[Footnote 1: Lear in his memoranda published recently in full in
+McClure's Magazine for February, 1898, states that Washington measured
+after death six feet three and one half inches in height, a foot
+and nine inches across the shoulders, two feet across the elbows;
+evidently a spare man with muscular arms, which we know to have been
+also of unusual length.]
+
+I will quote only a single one of the numerous descriptions of
+Washington, and I select it because, although it is the least
+favorable of the many I have seen, and is written in homely phrase, it
+displays the most evident and entire sincerity. The extract is from
+a letter written by David Ackerson of Alexandria, Va., in 1811, in
+answer to an inquiry by his son. Mr. Ackerson commanded a company in
+the Revolutionary war.
+
+"Washington was not," he wrote, "what ladies would call a pretty man,
+but in military costume a heroic figure, such as would impress the
+memory ever afterward."
+
+The writer had a good view of Washington three days before the
+crossing of the Delaware.
+
+"Washington," he says, "had a large thick nose, and it was very red
+that day, giving me the impression that he was not so moderate in the
+use of liquors as he was supposed to be. I found afterward that this
+was a peculiarity. His nose was apt to turn scarlet in a cold wind.
+He was standing near a small camp-fire, evidently lost in thought
+and making no effort to keep warm. He seemed six feet and a half in
+height, was as erect as an Indian, and did not for a moment relax from
+a military attitude. Washington's exact height was six feet two inches
+in his boots. He was then a little lame from striking his knee against
+a tree. His eye was so gray that it looked almost white, and he had
+a troubled look on his colorless face. He had a piece of woolen tied
+around his throat and was quite hoarse. Perhaps the throat trouble
+from which he finally died had its origin about then. Washington's
+boots were enormous. They were number 13. His ordinary walking-shoes
+were number 11. His hands were large in proportion, and he could not
+buy a glove to fit him and had to have his gloves made to order.
+His mouth was his strong feature, the lips being always tightly
+compressed. That day they were compressed so tightly as to be painful
+to look at. At that time he weighed two hundred pounds, and there was
+no surplus flesh about him. He was tremendously muscled, and the fame
+of his great strength was everywhere. His large tent when wrapped up
+with the poles was so heavy that it required two men to place it in
+the camp-wagon. Washington would lift it with one hand and throw it in
+the wagon as easily as if it were a pair of saddle-bags. He could hold
+a musket with one hand and shoot with precision as easily as other men
+did with a horse-pistol. His lungs were his weak point, and his voice
+was never strong. He was at that time in the prime of life. His hair
+was a chestnut brown, his cheeks were prominent, and his head was not
+large in contrast to every other part of his body, which seemed large
+and bony at all points. His finger-joints and wrists were so large as
+to be genuine curiosities. As to his habits at that period I found
+out much that might be interesting. He was an enormous eater, but was
+content with bread and meat, if he had plenty of it. But hunger seemed
+to put him in a rage. It was his custom to take a drink of rum or
+whiskey on awakening in the morning. Of course all this was changed
+when he grew old. I saw him at Alexandria a year before he died. His
+hair was very gray, and his form was slightly bent. His chest was very
+thin. He had false teeth, which did not fit and pushed his under lip
+outward."[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: This letter, recently printed, is in the collection of
+Dr. Toner, at Washington. It contains some obvious errors, as
+in regard to the color of the eyes, but it is nevertheless very
+interesting and valuable.]
+
+This description is certainly not a flattering one, and all other
+accounts as well as the best portraits prove that Washington was a
+much handsomer man than this letter would indicate. Yet the writer,
+despite his freedom from all illusions and his readiness to state
+frankly all defects, was profoundly impressed by Washington's
+appearance as he watched him meditating by the camp-fire at the crisis
+of the country's fate, and herein lies the principal interest of his
+description.
+
+This personal impressiveness, however, affected every one upon all
+occasions.
+
+Mr. Rush, for instance, saw Washington go on one occasion to open
+Congress. He drove to the hall in a handsome carriage of his own,
+with his servants dressed in white liveries. When he had alighted
+he stopped on the step, and pausing faced round to wait for his
+secretary. The vast crowd looked at him in dead silence, and then,
+when he turned away, broke into wild cheering. At his second
+inauguration he was dressed in deep mourning for the death of his
+nephew. He took the oath of office in the Senate Chamber, and Major
+Forman, who was present, wrote in his diary: "Every eye was on him.
+When he said, 'I, George Washington,' my blood seemed to run cold and
+every one seemed to start." At the inauguration of Adams, another
+eye-witness wrote that Washington, dressed in black velvet, with a
+military hat and black cockade, was the central figure in the scene,
+and when he left the chamber the crowds followed him, cheering and
+shouting to the door of his own house.
+
+There must have been something very impressive about a man who, with
+no pretensions to the art of the orator and with no touch of the
+charlatan, could so move and affect vast bodies of men by his presence
+alone. But the people, with the keen eye of affection, looked beyond
+the mere outward nobility of form. They saw the soldier who had given
+them victory, the great statesman who had led them out of confusion
+and faction to order and good government. Party newspapers might rave,
+but the instinct of the people was never at fault. They loved, trusted
+and well-nigh worshiped Washington living, and they have honored and
+reverenced him with an unchanging fidelity since his death, nearly a
+century ago.
+
+But little more remains to be said. Washington had his faults, for
+he was human; but they are not easy to point out, so perfect was his
+mastery of himself. He was intensely reserved and very silent, and
+these are the qualities which gave him the reputation in history
+of being distant and unsympathetic. In truth, he had not only warm
+affections and a generous heart, but there was a strong vein of
+sentiment in his composition. At the same time he was in no wise
+romantic, and the ruling element in his make-up was prose, good solid
+prose, and not poetry. He did not have the poetical and imaginative
+quality so strongly developed in Lincoln. Yet he was not devoid of
+imagination, although it was here that he was lacking, if anywhere. He
+saw facts, knew them, mastered and used them, and never gave much play
+to fancy; but as his business in life was with men and facts, this
+deficiency, if it was one, was of little moment. He was also a man of
+the strongest passions in every way, but he dominated them; they never
+ruled him. Vigorous animal passions were inevitable, of course, in a
+man of such a physical make-up as his. How far he gave way to them in
+his youth no one knows, but the scandals which many persons now desire
+to have printed, ostensibly for the sake of truth, are, so far as
+I have been able to learn, with one or two dubious exceptions, of
+entirely modern parentage. I have run many of them to earth; nearly
+all are destitute of contemporary authority, and they may be relegated
+to the dust-heaps.[1] If he gave way to these propensities in his
+youth, the only conclusion that I have been able to come to is that he
+mastered them when he reached man's estate.
+
+[Footnote 1: The charge in the pamphlet purporting to give an account
+of the trial of the New York conspirators in 1776 is of such doubtful
+origin and character that it hardly merits consideration, and the only
+other allusion is in the well-known intercepted letter of Harrison,
+which is of doubtful authenticity in certain passages, open to
+suspicion from having been intercepted and published by the enemy and
+quite likely to have been at best merely a coarse jest of a character
+very common at that period and entirely in keeping with the notorious
+habits of life and speech peculiar to the writer. (See Life of John
+Adams, iii. 35.)]
+
+He had, too, a fierce temper, and although he gradually subdued it, he
+would sometimes lose control of himself and burst out into a tempest
+of rage. When he did so he would use strong and even violent language,
+as he did at Kip's Landing and at Monmouth. Well-intentioned persons
+in their desire to make him a faultless being have argued at great
+length that Washington never swore, and but for their argument the
+matter would never have attracted much attention. He was anything but
+a profane man, but the evidence is beyond question that if deeply
+angered he would use a hearty English oath; and not seldom the action
+accompanied the word, as when he rode among the fleeing soldiers at
+Kip's Landing, striking them with his sword, and almost beside himself
+at their cowardice. Judge Marshall used to tell also of an occasion
+when Washington sent out an officer to cross a river and bring back
+some information about the enemy, on which the action of the morrow
+would depend. The officer was gone some time, came back, and found
+the general impatiently pacing his tent. On being asked what he had
+learned, he replied that the night was dark and stormy, the river full
+of ice, and that he had not been able to cross. Washington glared at
+him a moment, seized a large leaden inkstand from the table, hurled it
+at the offender's head, and said with a fierce oath, "Be off, and send
+me a _man_!" The officer went, crossed the river, and brought back the
+information.
+
+But although he would now and then give way to these tremendous bursts
+of anger, Washington was never unjust. As he said to one officer, "I
+never judge the propriety of actions by after events;" and in that
+sound philosophy is found the secret not only of much of his own
+success, but of the devotion of his officers and men. He might be
+angry with them, but he was never unfair. In truth, he was too
+generous to be unjust or even over-severe to any one, and there is not
+a line in all his writings which even suggests that he ever envied any
+man. So long as the work in hand was done, he cared not who had the
+glory, and he was perfectly magnanimous and perfectly at ease about
+his own reputation. He never showed the slightest anxiety to write his
+own memoirs, and he was not in the least alarmed when it was proposed
+to publish the memoirs of other people, like General Charles Lee,
+which would probably reflect upon him.
+
+He had the same confidence in the judgment of posterity that he had in
+the future beyond the grave. He regarded death with entire calmness
+and even indifference not only when it came to him, but when in
+previous years it had threatened him. He loved life and tasted of it
+deeply, but the courage which never forsook him made him ready to face
+the inevitable at any moment with an unruffled spirit. In this he was
+helped by his religious faith, which was as simple as it was profound.
+He had been brought up in the Protestant Episcopal Church, and to that
+church he always adhered; for its splendid liturgy and stately forms
+appealed to him and satisfied him. He loved it too as the church of
+his home and his childhood. Yet he was as far as possible from being
+sectarian, and there is not a word of his which shows anything but
+the most entire liberality and toleration. He made no parade of his
+religion, for in this as in other things he was perfectly simple and
+sincere. He was tortured by no doubts or questionings, but believed
+always in an overruling Providence and in a merciful God, to whom he
+knelt and prayed in the day of darkness or in the hour of triumph with
+a supreme and childlike confidence.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+As I bring these volumes to a close I am conscious that they speak, so
+far as they speak at all, in a tone of almost unbroken praise of the
+great man they attempt to portray. If this be so, it is because I
+could come to no other conclusions. For many years I have studied
+minutely the career of Washington, and with every step the greatness
+of the man has grown upon me, for analysis has failed to discover
+the act of his life which, under the conditions of the time, I could
+unhesitatingly pronounce to have been an error. Such has been my
+experience, and although my deductions may be wrong, they at least
+have been carefully and slowly made. I see in Washington a great
+soldier who fought a trying war to a successful end impossible without
+him; a great statesman who did more than all other men to lay the
+foundations of a republic which has endured in prosperity for more
+than a century. I find in him a marvelous judgment which was never at
+fault, a penetrating vision which beheld the future of America when it
+was dim to other eyes, a great intellectual force, a will of iron,
+an unyielding grasp of facts, and an unequaled strength of patriotic
+purpose. I see in him too a pure and high-minded gentleman of
+dauntless courage and stainless honor, simple and stately of manner,
+kind and generous of heart. Such he was in truth. The historian and
+the biographer may fail to do him justice, but the instinct of mankind
+will not fail. The real hero needs not books to give him worshipers.
+George Washington will always hold the love and reverence of men
+because they see embodied in him the noblest possibilities of
+humanity.
+
+
+
+
+INDEX for Volumes I & II
+
+
+ ACKERSON, DAVID,
+ describes Washington's personal appearance, ii. 386-388.
+
+ Adams, Abigail,
+ on Washington's appearance in 1775, i. 137.
+
+ Adams, John,
+ moves appointment of Washington as commander-in-chief, i. 134;
+ on political necessity for his appointment, 135;
+ and objections to it, 135;
+ statement as to Washington's difficulties, 163;
+ over-sanguine as to American prospects, 171;
+ finds fault with Washington, 214, 215;
+ one of few national statesmen, 252;
+ on Washington's opinion of titles, ii. 52;
+ advocates ceremony, 54;
+ returns to United States, 137;
+ attacked by Jefferson as a monarchist, 226;
+ praised by Democrats as superior to Washington, 251;
+ his administration upheld by Washington, 259;
+ advised by Washington, 260;
+ his inauguration, 276;
+ sends special mission to France, 284;
+ urges Washington to take command of provisional army, 285;
+ wishes to make Knox senior to Hamilton, 286;
+ censured by Washington, gives way, 287;
+ lack of sympathy with Washington, 287;
+ his nomination of Murray disapproved by Washington, 292, 293;
+ letter of Washington to, on immigration, 326.
+
+ Adams, J.Q.,
+ on weights and measures, ii. 81.
+
+ Adams, Samuel,
+ not sympathized with by Washington in working for independence, i. 131;
+ his inability to sympathize with Washington, 204;
+ an enemy of Constitution, ii. 71;
+ a genuine American, 309.
+
+ Alcudia, Duke de,
+ interviews with Pinckney, ii. 166.
+
+ Alexander, Philip,
+ hunts with Washington, i. 115.
+
+ Alien and Sedition Laws,
+ approved by Washington and Federalists, ii. 290, 297.
+
+ Ames, Fisher,
+ speech on behalf of administration in Jay treaty affair, ii. 210.
+
+ André, Major,
+ meets Arnold, i. 282;
+ announces capture to Arnold, 284;
+ confesses, 284;
+ condemned and executed, 287;
+ justice of the sentence, 287, 288;
+ Washington's opinion of, 288, ii. 357.
+
+ Armstrong, John, Major,
+ writes Newburg address, i. 335.
+
+ Army of the Revolution,
+ at Boston, adopted by Congress, i. 134;
+ its organization and character, 136-143;
+ sectional jealousies in, at New York, 162;
+ goes to pieces after defeat, 167, 175, 176;
+ condition in winter of 1777, 186;
+ difficulties between officers, 189;
+ with foreign officers, 190-192;
+ improvement as shown by condition after Brandywine and Germantown,
+ 200, 201;
+ hard winter at Valley Forge, 228;
+ maintained alive only by Washington, 227, 228, 232;
+ improved morale at Monmouth, 239;
+ mutinies for lack of pay, 258;
+ suffers during 1779, 270;
+ bad condition in 1780, 279;
+ again mutinies for pay, 291, 292, 295;
+ conduct of troops, 292, 293;
+ jealousy of people towards, 332;
+ badly treated by States and by Congress, 333;
+ grows mutinous, 334;
+ adopts Newburg addresses, 335, 336;
+ ready for a military dictatorship, 338, 340;
+ farewell of Washington to, 345.
+
+ Arnold, Benedict,
+ sent by Washington to attack Quebec, i. 144;
+ sent against Burgoyne, 210;
+ plans treason, 281;
+ shows loyalist letter to Washington, 282;
+ meets André, 282;
+ receives news of André's capture, 284;
+ escapes, 284, 285;
+ previous benefits from Washington, 286;
+ Washington's opinion of, 288;
+ ravages Virginia, 303;
+ sent back to New York, 303;
+ one of the few men who deceived Washington, ii. 336.
+
+ Arnold, Mrs.,
+ entertains Washington at time of her husband's treachery, i. 284, 285.
+
+ Articles of Confederation,
+ their inadequacy early seen by Washington, i. 297, 298; ii. 17.
+
+ Asgill, Capt.,
+ selected for retaliation for murder of Huddy, i. 328;
+ efforts for his release, 329;
+ release ordered by Congress, 330.
+
+
+ BACHE, B.F.,
+ publishes Jay treaty in "Aurora," ii. 185;
+ joins in attack on Washington, 238, 244;
+ rejoices over his retirement, 256.
+
+ Baker,----,
+ works out a pedigree for Washington, i. 31.
+
+ Ball, Joseph,
+ advises against sending Washington to sea, i. 49, 50.
+
+ Barbadoes,
+ Washington's description of, i. 64.
+
+ Beckley, John,
+ accuses Washington of embezzling, ii. 245.
+
+ Bernard, John,
+ his conversation with Washington referred to, i. 58, 107;
+ describes encounter with Washington, ii. 281-283;
+ his description of Washington's conversation, 343-348.
+
+ Blackwell, Rev. Dr.,
+ calls on Washington with Dr. Logan, ii. 264.
+
+ Blair, John,
+ appointed to Supreme Court, ii. 73.
+
+ Bland, Mary,
+ "Lowland Beauty," admired by Washington, i. 95, 96.
+
+ Blount, Governor,
+ pacifies Cherokees, ii. 94.
+
+ Boston,
+ visit of Washington to, i. 97, 99;
+ political troubles in, 120;
+ British measures against condemned by Virginia, 122, 123;
+ appeals to colonies, 124;
+ protests against Jay treaty, ii. 186;
+ answered by Washington, 190.
+
+ Botetourt, Lord, Governor of Virginia,
+ quarrels with Assembly, i. 121;
+ manages to calm dissension, 122;
+ on friendly terms with Washington, 122.
+
+ Braddock, General Edward,
+ arrives in Virginia, i. 82;
+ invites Washington to serve on his staff, 82;
+ respects him, 83;
+ his character and unfitness for his position, 83;
+ despises provincials, 83;
+ accepts Washington's advice as to dividing force, 84;
+ rebukes Washington for warning against ambush, 85;
+ insists on fighting by rule, 85;
+ defeated and mortally wounded, 85;
+ death and burial, 87.
+
+ Bradford, William,
+ succeeds Randolph, ii. 246.
+
+ Brandywine,
+ battle of, i. 196-198.
+
+ Bunker Hill,
+ question of Washington regarding battle of, i. 136.
+
+ Burgoyne, General John,
+ junction of Howe with, feared by Washington, i. 194, 195, 205, 206;
+ significance of his defeat, 202;
+ danger of his invasion foreseen by Washington, 203-206;
+ captures Ticonderoga, 207;
+ outnumbered and defeated, 210;
+ surrenders, 211.
+
+ Burke, Edmund,
+ understands significance of Washington's leadership, i. 202;
+ unsettled by French Revolution, ii. 294.
+
+
+ CABOT, GEORGE,
+ entertains Lafayette's son, ii. 366.
+
+ Cadwalader, General,
+ fails to cross Delaware to help Washington, i. 180;
+ duel with Conway, 226.
+
+ Calvert, Eleanor,
+ misgivings of Washington over her marriage to John Custis, i. 111.
+
+ Camden, battle of, i. 281.
+
+ Canada,
+ captured by Wolfe, i. 94;
+ expedition of Montgomery against, 143, 144;
+ project of Conway cabal against, 222; 253;
+ project of Lafayette to attack, 254;
+ plan considered dangerous by Washington, 254, 255;
+ not undertaken by France, 256.
+
+ Carleton, Sir Guy,
+ informs Washington of address of Commons for peace, i. 324;
+ suspected by Washington, 325;
+ remonstrates against retaliation by Washington for murder of
+ Huddy, 328;
+ disavows Lippencott, 328;
+ fears plunder of New York city, 345;
+ urges Indians to attack the United States, ii. 102, 175.
+
+ Carlisle, Earl of,
+ peace commissioner, i. 233.
+
+ Carlyle, Thomas,
+ sneers at Washington, i. 4, 14;
+ calls him "a bloodless Cromwell," i. 69, ii. 332;
+ fails to understand his reticence, i. 70;
+ despises him for not seizing power, 341.
+
+ Carmichael, William,
+ minister at Madrid, ii. 165;
+ on commission regarding the Mississippi, 166.
+
+ Carrington, Paul,
+ letter of Washington to, ii. 208;
+ Washington's friendship for, 363.
+
+ Cary, Mary,
+ early love affair of Washington with, i. 96.
+
+ Chamberlayne, Major,
+ entertains Washington at Williams' Ferry, i. 101.
+
+ Charleston,
+ siege and capture of, i. 273, 274, 276.
+
+ Chastellux, Marquis de,
+ Washington's friendship for and letter to, ii. 351;
+ on Washington's training of horses, 380.
+
+ Cherokees,
+ beaten by Sevier, ii. 89;
+ pacified by Blount, 94,101.
+
+ Chester, Colonel,
+ researches on Washington pedigree, i. 31.
+
+ Chickasaws,
+ desert from St. Clair, ii. 96.
+
+ China,
+ honors Washington, i. 6.
+
+ Choctaws,
+ peaceable in 1788, ii. 89.
+
+ Cincinnati, Society of the,
+ Washington's connection with, ii. 4.
+
+ Clarke, Governor,
+ thinks Washington is invading popular rights, i. 215.
+
+ Cleaveland, Rev.----,
+ complimented by Washington, ii. 359.
+
+ Clinton, George,
+ appealed to by Washington to attack Burgoyne, i. 210;
+ journey with Washington to Ticonderoga, 343;
+ enters New York city, 345;
+ letter of Washington to, ii. 1;
+ meets Washington on journey to inauguration, 45;
+ opponent of the Constitution, 71;
+ orders seizure of French privateers, 153.
+
+ Clinton, Sir Henry,
+ fails to help Burgoyne, i. 210;
+ replaces Howe at Philadelphia, his character, 232;
+ tries to cut off Lafayette, 233;
+ leaves Philadelphia, 234;
+ defeats Lee at Monmouth, 236;
+ retreats to New York, 238;
+ withdraws from Newport, 248;
+ makes a raid, 265;
+ fortifies Stony Point, 268;
+ his aimless warfare, 269, 270;
+ after capturing Charleston returns to New York, 276;
+ tries to save André, 287;
+ alarmed at attacks on New York, 306;
+ jealous of Cornwallis, refuses to send reinforcements, 308;
+ deceived by Washington, 311;
+ sends Graves to relieve Cornwallis, 312.
+
+ Congress, Continental,
+ Washington's journey to, i. 128;
+ its character and ability, 129;
+ its state papers, 129;
+ adjourns, 132;
+ in second session, resolves to petition the king, 133;
+ adopts Massachusetts army and makes Washington commander, 134;
+ reasons for his choice, 135;
+ adheres to short-term enlistments, 149;
+ influenced to declare independence by Washington, 160;
+ hampers Washington in campaign of New York, 167;
+ letters of Washington to, 170, 179, 212, 225, 229, 266, 278, 295,
+ 321, 323, 333;
+ takes steps to make army permanent, 171;
+ its over-confidence, 171;
+ insists on holding Forts Washington and Lee, 174;
+ dissatisfied with Washington's inactivity, 187;
+ criticises his proclamation requiring oath of allegiance, 189;
+ makes unwise appointments of officers, 189;
+ especially of foreigners, 190-192; 248, 249;
+ applauds Washington's efforts at Germantown, 200;
+ deposes Schuyler and St. Clair, 208;
+ appoints Gates, 210;
+ irritation against Washington, 212-215;
+ falls under guidance of Conway cabal, 221, 222;
+ discovers incompetence of cabal, 223;
+ meddles with prisoners and officers, 231;
+ rejects English peace offers, 233;
+ makes alliance with France, 241;
+ suppresses protests of officers against D'Estaing, 244;
+ decline in its character, 257;
+ becomes feeble, 258;
+ improvement urged by Washington, 259, 266;
+ appoints Gates to command in South, 268;
+ loses interest in war, 278;
+ asks Washington to name general for the South, 295;
+ considers reduction of army, 313;
+ elated by Yorktown, 323;
+ its unfair treatment of army, 333, 335;
+ driven from Philadelphia by Pennsylvania troops, 340;
+ passes half-pay act, 342;
+ receives commission of Washington, 347-349;
+ disbands army, ii. 6;
+ indifferent to Western expansion, 15;
+ continues to decline, 22;
+ merit of its Indian policy, 88.
+
+ Congress, Federal,
+ establishes departments, ii. 64;
+ opened by Washington, 78, 79;
+ ceremonial abolished by Jefferson, 79;
+ recommendations made to by Washington, 81-83;
+ acts upon them, 81-83;
+ creates commission to treat with Creeks, 90;
+ increases army, 94, 99;
+ fails to solve financial problems, 106;
+ debates Hamilton's report on credit, 107, 108;
+ establishes national bank, 109;
+ establishes protective revenue duties, 113;
+ imposes an excise tax, 123;
+ prepares for retaliation on Great Britain, 176;
+ Senate ratifies Jay treaty conditionally, 184;
+ House demands papers, 207;
+ debates over its right to concur in treaty, 208-210;
+ refuses to adjourn on Washington's birthday, 247;
+ prepares for war with France, 285;
+ passes Alien and Sedition Laws, 296.
+
+ Constitution, Federal,
+ necessity of, foreseen by Washington, ii. 17-18, 23, 24;
+ the Annapolis Convention, 23-29;
+ the Federal Convention, 30-36;
+ Washington's attitude in, 31,34;
+ his influence, 36;
+ campaign for ratification, 38-41.
+
+ Contrecoeur, Captain,
+ leader of French and Indians in Virginia, i. 75.
+
+ "Conway cabal,"
+ elements of in Congress, i. 214, 215;
+ in the army, 215;
+ organized by Conway, 217;
+ discovered by Washington, 220;
+ gets control of Board of War, 221;
+ tries to make Washington resign, 222, 224;
+ fails to invade Canada or provide supplies, 222, 223;
+ harassed by Washington's letters, 223,226;
+ breaks down, 226.
+
+ Conway, Moncure D.,
+ his life of Randolph, ii. 65, note, 196;
+ his defense of Randolph in Fauchet letter affair, 196;
+ on Washington's motives, 200;
+ on his unfair treatment of Randolph, 201, 202.
+
+ Conway, Thomas,
+ demand for higher rank refused by Washington, i. 216;
+ plots against him, 217;
+ his letter discovered by Washington, 221;
+ made inspector-general, 221, 222;
+ complains to Congress of his reception at camp, 225;
+ resigns, has duel with Cadwalader, 226;
+ apologizes to Washington and leaves country, 226.
+
+ Cooke, Governor,
+ remonstrated with by Washington for raising state troops, i. 186.
+
+ Cornwallis, Lord,
+ pursues Washington in New Jersey, i. 175;
+ repulsed at Assunpink, 181;
+ outgeneraled by Washington, 182;
+ surprises Sullivan at Brandywine, 197;
+ defeats Lee at Monmouth, 236;
+ pursues Greene in vain, 302;
+ wins battle of Guilford Court House, 302;
+ retreats into Virginia, 302;
+ joins British troops in Virginia, 303;
+ his dangerous position, 304;
+ urged by Clinton to return troops to New York, 306;
+ plunders Virginia, 307;
+ defeats Lafayette and Wayne, 307;
+ wishes to retreat South, 307;
+ ordered by ministry to stay on the Chesapeake, 307;
+ abandoned by Clinton, 308;
+ establishes himself at Yorktown, 308;
+ withdraws into town, 315;
+ besieged, 316, 317;
+ surrenders, 317;
+ outgeneraled by Washington, 319, 320.
+
+ Cowpens,
+ battle of, i. 301.
+
+ Craik, Dr.,
+ attends Washington in last illness, ii. 300-302;
+ Washington's friendship with, 363.
+
+ Creeks,
+ their relations with Spaniards, ii. 89, 90;
+ quarrel with Georgia, 90;
+ agree to treaty with United States, 91;
+ stirred up by Spain, 101.
+
+ Curwen, Samuel,
+ on Washington's appearance, i. 137.
+
+ Cushing, Caleb,
+ appointed to Supreme Court, ii. 72.
+
+ Custis, Daniel Parke,
+ first husband of Martha Washington, i. 101.
+
+ Custis, G.W.P.,
+ tells mythical story of Washington and the colt, i. 45;
+ Washington's care for, ii. 369.
+
+ Custis, John,
+ Washington's tenderness toward, i. 111;
+ care for his education and marriage, 111;
+ hunts with Washington, 141;
+ death of, 322.
+
+ Custis, Nellie,
+ marriage with Washington's nephew, ii. 281, 369;
+ letter of Washington to, 377.
+
+
+ DAGWORTHY, CAPTAIN,
+ claims to outrank Washington in Virginia army, i. 91, 97.
+
+ Dallas, Alexander,
+ protests to Genet against sailing of Little Sarah, ii. 155.
+
+ Dalton, Senator,
+ entertains Washington at Newburyport, ii. 359.
+
+ Deane, Silas,
+ promises commissions to foreign military adventurers, i. 190.
+
+ De Barras,
+ jealous of De Grasse, decides not to aid him, i. 310;
+ persuaded to do so by Washington and Rochambeau, 311;
+ reaches Chesapeake, 312.
+
+ De Grasse, Comte,
+ announces intention of coming to Washington, i. 305;
+ warned by Washington not to come to New York, 305;
+ sails to Chesapeake, 306;
+ asked to meet Washington there, 308;
+ reaches Chesapeake, 312;
+ repulses British fleet, 312;
+ wishes to return to West Indies, 315;
+ persuaded to remain by Washington, 315;
+ refuses to join Washington in attack on Charleston, 322;
+ returns to West Indies, 322.
+
+ De Guichen,----,
+ commander of French fleet in West Indies, i. 280;
+ appealed to for aid by Washington, 281;
+ returns home, 282.
+
+ Delancey, Oliver,
+ escapes American attack, i. 306.
+
+ Democratic party,
+ its formation as a French party, ii. 225;
+ furnished with catch-words by Jefferson, 226;
+ with a newspaper organ, 227;
+ not ready to oppose Washington for president in 1792, 235;
+ organized against treasury measure, 236;
+ stimulated by French Revolution, 238;
+ supports Genet, 237;
+ begins to attack Washington, 238;
+ his opinion of it, 239, 240, 258, 261, 267, 268;
+ forms clubs on French model, 241;
+ Washington's opinion of, 242, 243;
+ continues to abuse him, 244, 245, 250, 252;
+ exults at his retirement, 256;
+ prints slanders, 257.
+
+ Demont, William,
+ betrays plans of Fort Washington to Howe, i. 175.
+
+ D'Estaing, Admiral,
+ reaches America, i. 242;
+ welcomed by Washington, 243;
+ fails to cut off Howe and goes to Newport, 243;
+ after battle with Howe goes to Boston, 244;
+ letter of Washington to, 246;
+ sails to West Indies, 246;
+ second letter of Washington to, 247;
+ attacks Savannah, 248;
+ withdraws, 248.
+
+ De Rochambeau, Comte,
+ arrives at Newport, i. 277;
+ ordered to await second division of army, 278;
+ refuses to attack New York, 280;
+ wishes a conference with Washington, 282;
+ meets him at Hartford, 282;
+ disapproves attacking Florida, 301;
+ joins Washington before New York, 306;
+ persuades De Barras to join De Grasse, 311;
+ accompanies Washington to Yorktown, 314.
+
+ Dickinson, John,
+ commands scouts at Monmouth, i. 326.
+
+ Digby, Admiral,
+ bitter comments of Washington on, i. 325.
+
+ Dinwiddie, Governor,
+ remonstrates against French encroachments, i. 66;
+ sends Washington on mission to French, 66;
+ quarrels with the Virginia Assembly, 71;
+ letter of Washington to, 73;
+ wishes Washington to attack French, 79;
+ tries to quiet discussions between regular and provincial troops, 80;
+ military schemes condemned by Washington, 91;
+ prevents his getting a royal commission, 93.
+
+ Diplomatic History:
+ refusal by Washington of special privileges to French minister,
+ ii. 59-61;
+ slow growth of idea of non-intervention, 132, 133;
+ difficulties owing to French Revolution, 134;
+ to English retention of frontier posts, 135;
+ attitude of Spain, 135;
+ relations with Barbary States, 136;
+ mission of Gouverneur Morris to sound English feeling, 137;
+ assertion by Washington of non-intervention policy toward Europe,
+ 145, 146;
+ issue of neutrality proclamation, 147, 148;
+ its importance, 148;
+ mission of Genet, 148-162;
+ guarded attitude of Washington toward émigrés, 151;
+ excesses of Genet, 151;
+ neutrality enforced, 153, 154;
+ the Little Sarah episode, 154-157;
+ recall of Genet demanded, 158;
+ futile missions of Carmichael and Short to Spain, 165, 166;
+ successful treaty of Thomas Pinckney, 166-168;
+ question as to binding nature of French treaty of commerce, 169-171;
+ irritating relations with England, 173-176;
+ Jay's mission, 177-184;
+ the questions at issue, 180, 181;
+ terms of the treaty agreed upon, 182;
+ good and bad points, 183;
+ ratified by Senate, 184;
+ signing delayed by renewal of provision order, 185;
+ war with England prevented by signing, 205;
+ difficulties with France over Morris and Monroe, 211-214;
+ doings of Monroe, 212, 213;
+ United States compromised by him, 213, 214;
+ Monroe replaced by Pinckney, 214;
+ review of Washington's foreign policy, 216-219;
+ mission of Pinckney, Marshall, and Gerry to France, 284;
+ the X.Y.Z. affair, 285.
+
+ Donop, Count,
+ drives Griffin out of New Jersey, i. 180;
+ killed at Fort Mercer, 217.
+
+ Dorchester, Lord.
+ See Carleton.
+
+ Duane, James,
+ letters of Washington to, i. 294, 329.
+
+ Dumas, Comte,
+ describes enthusiasm of people for Washington, i. 288.
+
+ Dunbar, Colonel,
+ connection with Braddock's expedition, i. 84, 87.
+
+ Dunmore, Lord,
+ arrives in Virginia as governor, i. 122;
+ on friendly terms with Washington, 122, 123;
+ dissolves assembly, 123.
+
+ Duplaine, French consul,
+ exequatur of revoked, ii. 159.
+
+
+ EDEN, WILLIAM,
+ peace commissioner, i. 233.
+
+ Edwards, Jonathan,
+ a typical New England American, ii. 309.
+
+ Emerson, Rev. Dr.,
+ describes Washington's reforms in army before Boston, i. 140.
+
+ Emigrés,
+ Washington's treatment of, ii. 151, 253.
+
+ England,
+ honors Washington, i. 20;
+ arrogant behavior toward colonists, 80, 81, 82, 148;
+ its policy towards Boston condemned by Virginia, 119, 121, 123, 126;
+ by Washington, 124, 125,126;
+ sends incompetent officers to America, 155, 201, 202, 233;
+ stupidity of its operations, 203, 205, 206, 265;
+ sincerity of its desire for peace doubted by Washington, 324, 325;
+ arrogant conduct of toward the United States after peace, ii. 24, 25;
+ stirs up the Six Nations and Northwestern Indians, 92, 94, 101;
+ folly of her policy, 102;
+ sends Hammond as minister, 169;
+ its opportunity to win United States as ally against France, 171, 172;
+ adopts contrary policy of opposition, 172, 173;
+ adopts "provision order," 174;
+ incites Indians against United States, 175;
+ indignation of America against, 176;
+ receives Jay well, but refuses to yield points at issue, 180;
+ insists on monopoly of West India trade, 180;
+ and on impressment, 181;
+ later history of, 181;
+ renews provision order, 185;
+ danger of war with, 193;
+ avoided by Jay treaty, 205;
+ Washington said to sympathize with England, 252;
+ his real hostility toward, 254;
+ Washington's opinion of liberty in, 344.
+
+ Ewing, General James,
+ fails to help Washington at Trenton, i. 180.
+
+
+ FAIRFAX, BRYAN,
+ hunts with Washington, i. 115;
+ remonstrates with Washington against violence of patriots, 124;
+ Washington's replies to, 124, 126, 127;
+ letter of Washington to in Revolution, ii. 366.
+
+ Fairfax, George,
+ married to Miss Cary, i. 55;
+ accompanies Washington on surveying expedition, 58;
+ letter of Washington to, 133.
+
+ Fairfax, Mrs.----,
+ letter of Washington to, ii. 367.
+
+ Fairfax, Thomas, Lord,
+ his career in England, i. 55;
+ comes to his Virginia estates, 55;
+ his character, 55;
+ his friendship for Washington, 56;
+ sends him to survey estates, 56;
+ plans a manor across the Blue Ridge, 59;
+ secures for Washington position as public surveyor, 60;
+ probably influential in securing his appointment as envoy to
+ French, 66;
+ hunts with Washington, 115;
+ his death remembered by Washington, ii. 366.
+
+ Fairlie, Major,
+ amuses Washington, ii. 374.
+
+ Farewell Address, ii. 248, 249.
+
+ Fauchet, M.,----,
+ letter of, incriminating Randolph, ii. 195,196, 202.
+
+ Fauntleroy, Betsy,
+ love affair of Washington with, i. 97.
+
+ Fauquier, Francis, Governor,
+ at Washington's wedding, i. 101.
+
+ Federal courts,
+ suggested by Washington, i. 150.
+
+ "Federalist,"
+ circulated by Washington, ii. 40.
+
+ Federalist party,
+ begun by Hamilton's controversy with Jefferson, ii. 230;
+ supports Washington for reëlection, 235;
+ organized in support of financial measures, 236;
+ Washington looked upon by Democrats as its head, 244, 247;
+ only its members trusted by Washington, 246, 247, 259, 260, 261;
+ becomes a British party, 255;
+ Washington considers himself a member of, 269-274;
+ the only American party until 1800, 273;
+ strengthened by X, Y, Z affair, 285;
+ dissensions in, over army appointments, 286-290;
+ its horror at French Revolution, 294, 295;
+ attempts of Washington to heal divisions in, 298.
+
+ Fenno's newspaper,
+ used by Hamilton against the "National Gazette," ii. 230.
+
+ Finances of the Revolution,
+ effect of paper money on war, i. 258, 262;
+ difficulties in paying troops, 258;
+ labors of Robert Morris, 259, 264, 312;
+ connection of Washington with, 263;
+ continued collapse, 280, 290, 312.
+
+ Financial History,
+ bad condition in 1789, ii. 105;
+ decay of credit, paper, and revenue, 106;
+ futile propositions, 106;
+ Hamilton's report on credit, 107;
+ debate over assumption of state debt, 107;
+ bargain between Hamilton and Jefferson, 108;
+ establishment of bank, 109;
+ other measures adopted, 112;
+ protection in the first Congress, 112-115;
+ the excise tax imposed, 123;
+ opposition to, 123-127;
+ "Whiskey Rebellion," 127-128.
+
+ Fishbourn, Benjamin,
+ nomination rejected by Senate, ii. 63.
+
+ Fontanes, M. de,
+ delivers funeral oration on Washington, i. 1.
+
+ Forbes, General,
+ renews attack on French in Ohio, i. 93.
+
+ Forman, Major,
+ describes impressiveness of Washington, ii. 389.
+
+ Fox, Charles James,
+ understands significance of Washington's leadership, i. 202.
+
+ France,
+ pays honors to Washington, i. I, 6;
+ war with England, see French and Indian war;
+ takes possession of Ohio, 65;
+ considers Jumonville assassinated by Washington, 74;
+ importance of alliance with foreseen by Washington, 191;
+ impressed by battle of Germantown, 200;
+ makes treaty of alliance with United States, 241;
+ sends D'Estaing, 243;
+ declines to attack Canada, 256;
+ sends army and fleet, 274, 277;
+ relations of French to Washington, 318, 319;
+ absolute necessity of their naval aid, 318, 319;
+ Revolution in, applauded by America, ii. 138, 139, 142;
+ real character understood by Washington and others, 139-142, 295;
+ debate over in America, 142;
+ question of relations with United States, 143, 144;
+ warned by Washington, 144, 145;
+ neutrality toward declared, 147;
+ tries to drive United States into alliance, 149;
+ terms of the treaty with, 169;
+ latter held to be no longer binding, 169-171;
+ abrogates it, 171;
+ demands recall of Morris, 211;
+ mission of Monroe to, 211-214;
+ makes vague promises, 212, 213;
+ Washington's fairness toward, 253;
+ tries to bully or corrupt American ministers, 284;
+ the X, Y, Z affair, 285;
+ war with not expected by Washington, 291;
+ danger of concession to, 292, 293;
+ progress of Revolution in, 294.
+
+ Franklin, Benjamin,
+ gets wagons for Braddock's expedition, i. 84;
+ remark on Howe in Philadelphia, 219;
+ national, like Washington, 252, ii. 8;
+ despairs of success of Constitutional Convention, 35;
+ his unquestioned Americanism, 309;
+ respect of Washington for, 344, 346, 364.
+
+ Frederick II., the Great,
+ his opinion of Trenton campaign, i. 183;
+ of Monmouth campaign, 239.
+
+ French and Indian war, i. 64-94;
+ inevitable conflict, 65;
+ efforts to negotiate, 66, 67;
+ hostilities begun, 72;
+ the Jumonville affair, 74;
+ defeat of Washington, 76;
+ Braddock's campaign, 82-88;
+ ravages in Virginia, 90;
+ carried to a favorable conclusion by Pitt, 93, 94.
+
+ Freneau, Philip,
+ brought to Philadelphia and given clerkship by Jefferson, ii. 227;
+ attacks Adams, Hamilton, and Washington in "National Gazette," 227;
+ makes conflicting statements as to Jefferson's share in the paper,
+ 227, 228;
+ the first to attack Washington, 238.
+
+ Fry, Colonel,
+ commands a Virginia regiment against French and Indians, i. 71;
+ dies, leaving Washington in command, 75.
+
+
+ GAGE, GENERAL THOMAS,
+ conduct at Boston condemned by Washington, i. 126;
+ his treatment of prisoners protested against by Washington, 145;
+ sends an arrogant reply, 147;
+ second letter of Washington to, 147, 156.
+
+ Gallatin, Albert,
+ connection with Whiskey Rebellion, ii. 129.
+
+ Gates, Horatio,
+ visits Mt. Vernon, his character, i. 132;
+ refuses to cooperate with Washington at Trenton, 180;
+ his appointment as commander against Burgoyne urged, 208;
+ chosen by Congress, 209;
+ his part in defeating Burgoyne, 210;
+ neglects to inform Washington, 211;
+ loses his head and wishes to supplant Washington, 215;
+ forced to send troops South, 216, 217;
+ his attitude discovered by Washington, 221;
+ makes feeble efforts at opposition, 221, 223;
+ correspondence with Washington, 221, 223, 226;
+ becomes head of board of war, 221;
+ quarrels with Wilkinson, 223;
+ sent to his command, 226;
+ fears attack of British on Boston, 265;
+ sent by Congress to command in South, 268;
+ defeated at Camden, 281, 294;
+ loses support of Congress, 294.
+
+ Genet, Edmond Charles,
+ arrives as French minister, ii. 148;
+ his character, 149;
+ violates neutrality, 151;
+ his journey to Philadelphia, 151;
+ reception by Washington, 152;
+ complains of it, 153;
+ makes demands upon State Department, 153;
+ protests at seizure of privateers, 153;
+ insists on sailing of Little Sarah, 155;
+ succeeds in getting vessel away, 157;
+ his recall demanded, 158;
+ reproaches Jefferson, 158;
+ remains in America, 158;
+ threatens to appeal from Washington to Massachusetts, 159;
+ demands denial from Washington of Jay's statements, 159;
+ loses popular support, 160;
+ tries to raise a force to invade Southwest, 161;
+ prevented by state and federal authorities, 162;
+ his arrival the signal for divisions of parties, 237;
+ hurts Democratic party by his excesses, 241;
+ suggests clubs, 241.
+
+ George IV.,
+ Washington's opinion of, ii. 346.
+
+ Georgia,
+ quarrels with Creeks, asks aid of United States, ii. 90;
+ becomes dissatisfied with treaty, 91;
+ disregards treaties of the United States, 103.
+
+ Gerard, M.,
+ notifies Washington of return of D'Estaing, i. 246.
+
+ Germantown,
+ battle of, i. 199.
+
+ Gerry, Elbridge,
+ on special mission to France, ii. 284;
+ disliked by Washington, 292.
+
+ Giles, W.B.,
+ attacks Washington in Congress, ii. 251, 252.
+
+ Gist, Christopher,
+ accompanies Washington on his mission to French, i. 66;
+ wishes to shoot French Indians, 68.
+
+ Gordon,----,
+ letter of Washington to, i. 227.
+
+ Graves, Admiral,
+ sent to relieve Cornwallis, i. 312; defeated by De Grasse, 312.
+
+ Grayson, William,
+ hunts with Washington, i. 115; letter to, ii. 22.
+
+ Green Springs,
+ battle of, i. 307.
+
+ Greene, General Nathanael,
+ commands at Long Island, ill with fever, i. 164;
+ wishes forts on Hudson held, 174;
+ late in attacking at Germantown, 199;
+ conducts retreat, 200;
+ succeeds Mifflin as quartermaster-general, 232;
+ selected by Washington to command in South, 268;
+ commands army at New York in absence of Washington, 282;
+ appointed to command Southern army, 295;
+ retreats from Cornwallis, 302;
+ fights battle of Guilford Court House, 302;
+ clears Southern States of enemy, 302;
+ strong position, 304;
+ reinforced by Washington, 322;
+ letter to, 325;
+ his military capacity early recognized by Washington, ii. 334;
+ amuses Washington, 374.
+
+ Greene, Mrs.----,
+ dances three hours with Washington, ii. 380.
+
+ Grenville, Lord,
+ denies that ministry has incited Indians against United States,
+ ii. 175;
+ receives Jay, 180;
+ declines to grant United States trade with West Indies, 181.
+
+ Griffin, David,
+ commissioner to treat with Creeks, ii. 90.
+
+ Griffin,----,
+ fails to help Washington at Trenton, i. 180.
+
+ Grymes, Lucy,
+ the "Lowland Beauty," love affair of Washington with, i. 95;
+ marries Henry Lee, 96.
+
+
+ HALDIMAND, SIR FREDERICK,
+ leads Indians against colonists, i. 325.
+
+ Hale, Nathan, compared with André, i. 288.
+
+ Half-King,
+ kept to English alliance by Washington, i. 68;
+ his criticism of Washington's first campaign, 76.
+
+ Hamilton, Alexander,
+ forces Gates to send back troops to Washington, i. 216, 217;
+ remark on councils of war before Monmouth, 234;
+ informs Washington of Arnold's treason, 284;
+ sent to intercept Arnold, 285;
+ writes letters on government and finance, 298;
+ leads attack at Yorktown, i. 316;
+ requests release of Asgill, 329;
+ aids Washington in Congress, 333;
+ only man beside Washington and Franklin to realize American future,
+ ii. 7;
+ letters of Washington to on necessity of a strong government, 17, 18;
+ writes letters to Duane and Morris, 19;
+ speech in Federal Convention and departure, 35;
+ counseled by Washington, 39;
+ consulted by Washington as to etiquette, 54;
+ made secretary of treasury, 66;
+ his character, 67;
+ his report on the mint, 81;
+ on the public credit, 107;
+ upheld by Washington, 107, 108;
+ his arrangement with Jefferson, 108;
+ argument on the bank, 110;
+ his success largely due to Washington, 112;
+ his report on manufactures, 112, 114, 116;
+ advocates an excise, 122;
+ fails to realize its unpopularity, 123;
+ accompanies expedition to suppress Whiskey Rebellion, 128;
+ comprehends French Revolution, 139;
+ frames questions to cabinet on neutrality, 147;
+ urges decisive measures against Genet, 154;
+ argues against United States being bound by French treaty, 169;
+ selected for English mission, but withdraws, 177;
+ not likely to have done better than Jay, 183;
+ mobbed in defending Jay treaty, 187;
+ writes Camillus letters in favor of Jay treaty, 206;
+ intrigued against by Monroe, 212;
+ causes for his breach with Jefferson, 224;
+ his aristocratic tendencies, 225;
+ attacked by Jefferson and his friends, 228, 229;
+ disposes of the charges, 229;
+ retorts in newspapers with effect, 230;
+ ceases at Washington's request, 230, 234;
+ resigns from the cabinet, 234;
+ desires Washington's reëlection, 235;
+ selected by Washing, ton as senior general, 286;
+ appeals to Washington against Adams's reversal of rank, 286;
+ fails to soothe Knox's anger, 288;
+ report on army organization, 290;
+ letter of Washington to, condemning Adams's French mission, 293;
+ fears anarchy from Democratic success, 295;
+ approves Alien and Sedition Acts, 296;
+ his scheme of a military academy approved by Washington, 299;
+ Washington's affection for, 317, 362;
+ his ability early recognized by Washington, 334, 335;
+ aids Washington in literary points, 340;
+ takes care of Lafayette's son, 366.
+
+ Hammond, George,
+ protests against violations of neutrality, ii. 151;
+ his arrival as British minister, 169;
+ his offensive tone, 173;
+ does not disavow Lord Dorchester's speech to Indians, 176;
+ gives Fauchet letters to Wolcott, 195;
+ intrigues with American public men, 200.
+
+ Hampden, John,
+ compared with Washington, ii. 312, 313.
+
+ Hancock, John,
+ disappointed at Washington's receiving command of army, i. 135;
+ his character, ii. 74;
+ refuses to call first on Washington as President, 75;
+ apologizes and calls, 75, 76.
+
+ Hardin, Colonel,
+ twice surprised and defeated by Indians, ii. 93.
+
+ Harmar, Colonel,
+ invades Indian country, ii. 92;
+ attacks the Miamis, 93;
+ sends out unsuccessful expeditions and retreats, 93;
+ court-martialed and resigns, 93.
+
+ Harrison, Benjamin,
+ letters of Washington to, i. 259, 261; ii. 10.
+
+ Hartley, Mrs.----,
+ admired by Washington, i. 95.
+
+ Heard, Sir Isaac,
+ Garter King at Arms, makes out a pedigree for Washington, i. 30, 31.
+
+ Heath, General,
+ checks Howe at Frog's Point, i. 173;
+ left in command at New York, 311.
+
+ Henry, Patrick,
+ his resolutions supported by Washington, i. 119;
+ accompanies him to Philadelphia, 128;
+ his tribute to Washington's influence, 130;
+ ready for war, 132;
+ letters of Conway cabal to against Washington, 222;
+ letter of Washington to, 225;
+ appealed to by Washington on behalf of Constitution, ii. 38;
+ an opponent of the Constitution, 71;
+ urged by Washington to oppose Virginia resolutions, 266-268, 293;
+ a genuine American, 309;
+ offered secretaryship of state, 324;
+ friendship of Washington for, 362.
+
+ Hertburn, Sir William de,
+ ancestor of Washington family, i. 31, 33.
+
+ Hessians,
+ in Revolution, i. 194.
+
+ Hickey, Thomas,
+ hanged for plotting to murder Washington, i. 160.
+
+ Hobby,----, a sexton,
+ Washington's earliest teacher, i. 48.
+
+ Hopkinson, Francis,
+ letter of Washington to, ii. 3.
+
+ Houdon, J.A., sculptor,
+ on Washington's appearance, ii. 386.
+
+ Howe, Lord,
+ arrives at New York with power to negotiate and pardon, i. 161;
+ refuses to give Washington his title, 161;
+ tries to negotiate with Congress, 167;
+ escapes D'Estaing at Delaware, 244;
+ attacks D'Estaing off Newport, 244.
+
+ Howe, Sir William,
+ has controversy with Washington over treatment of prisoners, i. 148;
+ checked at Frog's Point, 173;
+ attacks cautiously at Chatterton Hill, 173;
+ retreats and attacks forts on Hudson, 174;
+ takes Fort Washington, 175;
+ goes into winter quarters in New York, 177, 186;
+ suspected of purpose to meet Burgoyne, 194, 195;
+ baffled in advance across New Jersey by Washington, 194;
+ goes by sea, 195;
+ arrives at Head of Elk, 196;
+ defeats Washington at Brandywine, 197;
+ camps at Germantown, 199;
+ withdraws after Germantown into Philadelphia, 201;
+ folly of his failure to meet Burgoyne, 205, 206;
+ offers battle in vain to Washington, 218;
+ replaced by Clinton, 232;
+ tries to cut off Lafayette, 233.
+
+ Huddy, Captain,
+ captured by English, hanged by Tories, i. 327.
+
+ Humphreys, Colonel,
+ letters of Washington to, ii. 13, 339;
+ at opening of Congress, 78;
+ commissioner to treat with Creeks, 90;
+ anecdote of, 375.
+
+ Huntington, Lady,
+ asks Washington's aid in Christianizing Indians, ii. 4.
+
+
+ IMPRESSMENT,
+ right of, maintained by England, ii. 181.
+
+ Independence,
+ not wished, but foreseen, by Washington, i. 131, 156;
+ declared by Congress, possibly through Washington's influence, 160.
+
+ Indians,
+ wars with in Virginia, i. 37, 38;
+ in French and Indian war, 67,68;
+ desert English, 76;
+ in Braddock's defeat, 85, 86, 88;
+ restless before Revolution, 122;
+ in War of Revolution, 266, 270;
+ punished by Sullivan, 269;
+ policy toward, early suggested by Washington, 344;
+ recommendations relative to in Washington's address to Congress,
+ ii. 82;
+ the "Indian problem" under Washington's administration, 83-105;
+ erroneous popular ideas of, 84, 85;
+ real character and military ability, 85-87;
+ understood by Washington, 87, 88;
+ a real danger in 1788, 88;
+ situation in the Northwest, 89;
+ difficulties with Cherokees and Creeks, 89, 90;
+ influence of Spanish intrigue, 90;
+ successful treaty with Creeks, 90, 91;
+ wisdom of this policy, 92;
+ warfare in the Northwest, 92;
+ defeats of Harmar and Hardin, 93;
+ causes for the failure, 93, 94;
+ intrigues of England, 92, 94, 175, 178;
+ expedition and defeat of St. Clair, 95-97;
+ results, 99;
+ expedition of Wayne, 100, 102;
+ his victory, 103;
+ success of Washington's policy toward, 104, 105.
+
+ Iredell, James,
+ appointed to Supreme Court, ii. 73.
+
+
+ JACKSON, MAJOR,
+ accompanies Washington to opening of Congress, ii. 78.
+
+ Jameson, Colonel,
+ forwards Andrews letter to Arnold, i. 284;
+ receives orders from Washington, 285.
+
+ Jay, John,
+ on opposition in Congress, to Washington, i. 222;
+ consulted by Washington as to etiquette, ii. 54;
+ appointed chief justice, 72;
+ publishes card against Genet, 159;
+ appointed on special mission to England, 177;
+ his character, 177;
+ instructions from Washington, 179;
+ his reception in England, 180;
+ difficulties in negotiating, 181;
+ concludes treaty, 182;
+ burnt in effigy while absent, 186;
+ execrated after news of treaty, 187;
+ hampered by Monroe in France, 213.
+
+ Jay treaty, ii. 180-184;
+ opposition to and debate over signing, 184-201;
+ reasons of Washington for signing, 205.
+
+ Jefferson, Thomas,
+ his flight from Cornwallis, i. 307;
+ discusses with Washington needs of government, ii. 9;
+ adopts French democratic phraseology, 27;
+ contrast with Washington, 27, 28, 69;
+ criticises Washington's manners, 56;
+ made secretary of state, 68;
+ his previous relations with Washington, 68;
+ his character, 69;
+ supposed to be a friend of the Constitution, 72;
+ his objections to President's opening Congress, 79;
+ on weights and measures, 81;
+ letter of Washington to on assumption of state debts, 107;
+ makes bargain with Hamilton, 108;
+ opposes a bank, 110;
+ asked to prepare neutrality instructions, 146;
+ upholds Genet, 153;
+ argues against him publicly, supports him privately, 154;
+ notified of French privateer Little Sarah, 155;
+ allows it to sail, 155;
+ retires to country and is censured by Washington, 156;
+ assures Washington that vessel will wait his decision, 156;
+ his un-American attitude, 157;
+ wishes to make terms of note demanding Genet's recall mild, 158;
+ argues that United States is bound by French treaty, 170, 171;
+ begs Madison to answer Hamilton's "Camillus" letters, 206;
+ his attitude upon first entering cabinet, 223;
+ causes for his breach with Hamilton, 224;
+ jealousy, incompatibility of temper, 224;
+ his democratic opinions, 225;
+ skill in creating party catch-words, 225;
+ prints "Rights of Man" with note against Adams, 226;
+ attacks him further in letter to Washington, 226;
+ brings Freneau to Philadelphia and gives him an office, 227;
+ denies any connection with Freneau's newspaper, 227;
+ his real responsibility, 228;
+ his purpose to undermine Hamilton, 228;
+ causes his friends to attack him, 229;
+ writes a letter to Washington attacking Hamilton's treasury measures,
+ 229;
+ fails to produce any effect, 230;
+ winces under Hamilton's counter attacks, 230;
+ reiterates charges and asserts devotion to Constitution, 231;
+ continues attacks and resigns, 234;
+ wishes reëlection of Washington, 235;
+ his charge of British sympathies resented by Washington, 252;
+ plain letter of Washington to, 259;
+ Washington's opinion of, 259;
+ suggests Logan's mission to France, 262, 265;
+ takes oath as vice-president, 276;
+ regarded as a Jacobin by Federalists, 294;
+ jealous of Washington, 306;
+ accuses him of senility, 307;
+ a genuine American, 309.
+
+ Johnson, William,
+ Tory leader in New York, i. 143.
+
+ Johnstone, Governor,
+ peace commissioner, i. 233.
+
+ Jumonville, De, French leader,
+ declared to have been assassinated by Washington, i. 74,79;
+ really a scout and spy, 75.
+
+
+ KENTUCKY RESOLUTIONS,
+ condemned by Washington, ii. 266-268.
+
+ King, Clarence,
+ his opinion that Washington was not American, ii. 308.
+
+ King, Rufus,
+ publishes card exposing Genet, ii. 159.
+
+ King's Bridge,
+ fight at, i. 170.
+
+ Kip's Landing,
+ fight at, i. 168.
+
+ Kirkland, Rev. Samuel,
+ negotiates with Six Nations, ii. 101.
+
+ Knox, Henry,
+ brings artillery to Boston from Ticonderoga, i. 152;
+ accompanies Washington to meet De Rochambeau, 283;
+ at West Point, 285;
+ sent by Washington to confer with governors of States, 295;
+ urged by Washington to establish Western posts, ii. 7;
+ letters of Washington to, 30, 39;
+ made secretary of war, 65;
+ his character, 65;
+ a Federalist, 71;
+ deals with Creeks, 91;
+ urges decisive measure against Genet, 154, 155;
+ letters of Washington to, 260;
+ selected by Washington as third major-general, 286;
+ given first place by Adams, 286;
+ angry at Hamilton's higher rank, 288;
+ refuses the office, 289;
+ his offer to serve on Washington's staff refused, 289;
+ Washington's affection for, 317, 362.
+
+
+ LAFAYETTE, Madame de,
+ aided by Washington, ii. 366;
+ letter of Washington to, 377.
+
+ Lafayette, Marquis de,
+ Washington's regard for, i. 192;
+ his opinion of Continental troops, 196;
+ sent on fruitless journey to the lakes by cabal, 222, 253;
+ encouraged by Washington, 225;
+ narrowly escapes being cut off by Clinton, 233;
+ appointed to attack British rear, 235;
+ superseded by Lee, 235;
+ urges Washington to come, 235;
+ letter of Washington to, regarding quarrel between D'Estaing and
+ Sullivan, 245;
+ regard of Washington for, 249;
+ desires to conquer Canada, 254;
+ his plan not supported in France, 256;
+ works to get a French army sent, 264;
+ brings news of French army and fleet, 274;
+ tries to get De Rochambeau to attack New York, 280;
+ accompanies Washington to meet De Rochambeau, 283;
+ told by Washington of Arnold's treachery, 285;
+ on court to try André, 287;
+ opinion of Continental soldiers, 293;
+ harasses Cornwallis, 307;
+ defeated at Green Springs, 307;
+ watches Cornwallis at Yorktown, 308;
+ reinforced by De Grasse, 312;
+ persuades him to remain, 315;
+ sends Washington French wolf-hounds, ii. 2;
+ letters of Washington to, 23, 26, 118, 144, 165, 222, 261;
+ his son not received by Washington, 253;
+ later taken care of, 277, 281, 366;
+ his worth, early seen by Washington, 334;
+ Washington's affection for, 365;
+ sends key of Bastile to Mt. Vernon, 365;
+ helped by Washington, 365,366.
+
+ Laurens, Henry,
+ letter of Conway cabal to, making attack on Washington, i. 222;
+ letters of Washington to, 254, 288;
+ sent to Paris to get loans, 299.
+
+ Lauzun, Duc de,
+ repulses Tarleton at Yorktown, i. 317.
+
+
+ Lear, Tobias,
+ Washington's secretary, ii. 263;
+ his account of Washington's last illness, 299-303, 385;
+ letters to, 361, 382.
+
+ Lee, Arthur,
+ example of Virginia gentleman educated abroad, i. 23.
+
+ Lee, Charles,
+ visits Mt. Vernon, his character, i. 132;
+ accompanies Washington to Boston, 136;
+ aids Washington in organizing army, 140;
+ disobeys orders and is captured, 175;
+ objects to attacking Clinton, 234;
+ first refuses, then claims command of van, 235;
+ disobeys orders and retreats, 236;
+ rebuked by Washington, 236, 237;
+ court martial of and dismissal from army, 237;
+ his witty remark on taking oath of allegiance, ii. 375.
+
+ Lee, Henry, marries Lucy Grymes,
+ Washington's "Lowland Beauty," i. 96.
+
+ Lee, Henry,
+ son of Lucy Grymes, Washington's "Lowland Beauty," i. 96; ii. 362;
+ captures Paulus Hook, i. 269;
+ letters of Washington to, ii. 23, 26, 149, 235, 239, 242, 252;
+ considered for command against Indians, 100;
+ commands troops to suppress Whiskey Rebellion, 127;
+ Washington's affection for, 362.
+
+ Lee, Richard Henry,
+ unfriendly to Washington, i. 214;
+ letter of Washington to, ii. 160.
+
+ Lewis, Lawrence,
+ at opening of Congress, ii. 78;
+ takes social duties at Mt. Vernon, 280.
+
+ Liancourt, Duc de,
+ refused reception by Washington, ii. 253.
+
+ Lincoln, Abraham,
+ compared with Washington, i. 349; ii. 308-313.
+
+ Lincoln, Benjamin,
+ sent by Washington against Burgoyne, i. 210;
+ fails to understand Washington's policy and tries to hold Charleston,
+ 273, 274;
+ captured, 276;
+ commissioner to treat with Creeks, ii. 90.
+
+ Lippencott, Captain,
+ orders hanging of Huddy, i. 327;
+ acquitted by English court martial, 328.
+
+ Little Sarah,
+ the affair of, 155-157.
+
+ Livingston, Chancellor,
+ administers oath at Washington's inauguration, ii. 46.
+
+ Livingston, Edward,
+ moves call for papers relating to Jay treaty, ii. 207.
+
+ Logan, Dr. George,
+ goes on volunteer mission to France, ii. 262;
+ ridiculed by Federalists, publishes defense, 263;
+ calls upon Washington, 263;
+ mercilessly snubbed, 263-265.
+
+ Long Island,
+ battle of, i. 164,165.
+
+ London, Lord,
+ disappoints Washington by his inefficiency, i. 91.
+
+ Lovell, James,
+ follows the Adamses in opposing Washington, i. 214;
+ wishes to supplant him by Gates, 215;
+ writes hostile letters, 222.
+
+
+ MACKENZIE, CAPTAIN,
+ letter of Washington to, i. 130.
+
+ Madison, James,
+ begins to desire a stronger government, ii. 19, 29;
+ letters of Washington to, 30, 39, 53;
+ chosen for French mission, but does not go, 211.
+
+ Magaw, Colonel,
+ betrayed at Fort Washington, i. 175.
+
+ "Magnolia,"
+ Washington's pet colt, beaten in a race, i. 99, 113; ii. 381.
+
+ Marshall, John,
+ Chief Justice, on special commission to France, ii. 284;
+ tells anecdote of Washington's anger at cowardice, 392.
+
+ Maryland, the Washington family in, i.36.
+
+ Mason, George,
+ discusses political outlook with Washington, i. 119;
+ letter of Washington to, 263;
+ an opponent of the Constitution, ii. 71;
+ friendship of Washington for, 362;
+ debates with Washington the site of Pohick Church, 381.
+
+ Mason, S.T.,
+ communicates Jay treaty to Bache, ii. 185.
+
+ Massey, Rev. Lee,
+ rector of Pohick Church, i. 44.
+
+ Mathews, George,
+ letter of Washington to, i. 294.
+
+ Matthews, Edward,
+ makes raids in Virginia, i. 269.
+
+ Mawhood, General,
+ defeated at Princeton, i. 182.
+
+ McGillivray, Alexander,
+ chief of the Creeks, ii. 90;
+ his journey to New York and interview with Washington, 91.
+
+ McHenry, James,
+ at West Point, i. 284;
+ letters to, 325, ii. 22, 278, 287, 384;
+ becomes secretary of war, 246;
+ advised by Washington not to appoint Democrats, 260, 261.
+
+ McKean, Thomas, given letters to Dr. Logan, ii. 265.
+
+ McMaster, John B.,
+ calls Washington "an unknown man," i. 7, ii. 304;
+ calls him cold, 332, 352;
+ and avaricious in small ways, 352.
+
+ Meade, Colonel Richard,
+ Washington's opinion of, ii. 335.
+
+ Mercer, Hugh,
+ killed at Princeton, i. 182.
+
+ Merlin,----,
+ president of Directory, interview with Dr. Logan, ii. 265.
+
+ Mifflin, Thomas,
+ wishes to supplant Washington by Gates, i. 216;
+ member of board of war, 221;
+ put under Washington's orders, 226;
+ replies to Washington's surrender of commission, 349;
+ meets Washington on journey to inauguration, ii. 44;
+ notified of the Little Sarah, French privateer, 154;
+ orders its seizure, 155.
+
+ Militia,
+ abandon Continental army, i. 167;
+ cowardice of, 168;
+ despised by Washington, 169;
+ leave army again, 175;
+ assist in defeat of Burgoyne, 211.
+
+ Mischianza, i. 232.
+
+ Monmouth,
+ battle of, i. 235-239.
+
+ Monroe, James,
+ appointed minister to France, ii. 211;
+ his character, 212;
+ intrigues against Hamilton, 212;
+ effusively received in Paris, 212;
+ acts foolishly, 213;
+ tries to interfere with Jay, 213;
+ upheld, then condemned and recalled by Washington, 213, 214;
+ writes a vindication, 215;
+ Washington's opinion of him, 215, 216;
+ his selection one of Washington's few mistakes, 334.
+
+ Montgomery, General Richard,
+ sent by Washington to invade Canada, i. 143.
+
+ Morgan, Daniel,
+ sent against Burgoyne by Washington, i. 208;
+ at Saratoga, 210;
+ wins battle of Cowpens, joins Greene, 301.
+
+ Morris, Gouverneur,
+ letters of Washington to, i. 248, 263;
+ efforts towards financial reform, 264;
+ quotes speech of Washington at Federal convention in his eulogy,
+ ii. 31;
+ discussion as to his value as an authority, 32, note;
+ goes to England on unofficial mission, 137;
+ balked by English insolence, 137;
+ comprehends French Revolution, 139;
+ letters of Washington to, on the Revolution, 140,142,145;
+ recall demanded by France, 211;
+ letter of Washington to, 217,240, 254;
+ Washington's friendship for, 363.
+
+ Morris, Robert,
+ letter of Washington to, i. 187;
+ helps Washington to pay troops, 259;
+ efforts towards financial reform, 264;
+ difficulty in helping Washington in 1781, 309, 312;
+ considered for secretary of treasury, ii. 66;
+ his bank policy approved by Washington, 110;
+ Washington's friendship for, 363.
+
+ Moustier,
+ demands private access to Washington, ii. 59;
+ refused, 59, 60.
+
+ Murray, Vans, minister in Holland,
+ interview with Dr. Logan, ii. 264;
+ nominated for French mission by Adams, 292;
+ written to by Washington, 292.
+
+ Muse, Adjutant,
+ trains Washington in tactics and art of war, i. 65.
+
+
+ NAPOLEON,
+ orders public mourning for Washington's death, i. 1.
+
+ Nelson, General,
+ letter of Washington to, i. 257.
+
+ Newburgh,
+ addresses, ii. 335.
+
+ New England,
+ character of people, i. 138;
+ attitude toward Washington, 138, 139;
+ troops disliked by Washington, 152;
+ later praised by him, 152, 317, 344;
+ threatened by Burgoyne's invasion, 204;
+ its delegates in Congress demand appointment of Gates, 208;
+ and oppose Washington, 214;
+ welcomes Washington on tour as President, ii. 74;
+ more democratic than other colonies before Revolution, 315;
+ disliked by Washington for this reason, 316.
+
+ Newenham, Sir Edward,
+ letter of Washington to on American foreign policy, ii. 133.
+
+ New York,
+ Washington's first visit to, i. 99, 100;
+ defense of, in Revolution, 159-169;
+ abandoned by Washington, 169;
+ Howe establishes himself in, 177;
+ reoccupied by Clinton, 264;
+ Washington's journey to, ii. 44;
+ inauguration in, 46;
+ rioting in, against Jay treaty, 187.
+
+ Nicholas, John,
+ letter of Washington to, ii. 259.
+
+ Nicola, Col.,
+ urges Washington to establish a despotism, i. 337.
+
+ Noailles, Vicomte de, French émigré,
+ referred to State Department, ii. 151, 253.
+
+
+ O'FLINN, CAPTAIN,
+ Washington's friendship with, ii. 318.
+
+ Organization of the national government,
+ absence of materials to work with, ii. 51;
+ debate over title of President, 52;
+ over his communications with Senate, 53;
+ over presidential etiquette, 53-56;
+ appointment of officials to cabinet offices established by Congress,
+ 64-71;
+ appointment of supreme court judges, 72.
+
+ Orme,----,
+ letter of Washington to, i. 84.
+
+
+ PAINE, THOMAS,
+ his "Rights of Man" reprinted by Jefferson, ii. 226.
+
+ Parkinson, Richard,
+ says Washington was harsh to slaves, i. 105;
+ contradicts statement elsewhere, 106;
+ tells stories of Washington's pecuniary exactness, ii. 353, 354, 382;
+ his character, 355;
+ his high opinion of Washington, 356.
+
+ Parton, James,
+ considers Washington as good but commonplace, ii. 330, 374.
+
+ Peachey, Captain,
+ letter of Washington to, i. 92.
+
+ Pendleton, Edmund,
+ Virginia delegate to Continental Congress, i. 128.
+
+ Pennsylvania,
+ refuses to fight the French, i. 72,83;
+ fails to help Washington, 225;
+ remonstrates against his going into winter quarters, 229;
+ condemned by Washington, 229;
+ compromises with mutineers, 292.
+
+ Philipse, Mary,
+ brief love-affair of Washington with, i. 99, 100.
+
+ Phillips, General,
+ commands British troops in Virginia, i. 303;
+ death of, 303.
+
+ Pickering, Colonel, quiets Six Nations, ii. 94.
+
+ Pickering, Timothy,
+ letter of Washington to, on French Revolution, ii. 140;
+ on failure of Spanish negotiations, 166;
+ recalls Washington to Philadelphia to receive Fauchet letter, 195;
+ succeeds Randolph, 246;
+ letters of Washington to, on party government, 247;
+ appeals to Washington against Adams's reversal of Hamilton's rank,
+ 286;
+ letters of Washington to, 292, 324;
+ criticises Washington as a commonplace person, 307.
+
+ Pinckney, Charles C.,
+ letter of Washington to, ii. 90;
+ appointed to succeed Monroe as minister to France, 214;
+ refused reception, 284;
+ sent on special commission, 284;
+ named by Washington as general, 286;
+ accepts without complaint of Hamilton's higher rank, 290;
+ Washington's friendship with, 363.
+
+ Pinckney, Thomas,
+ sent on special mission to Spain, ii. 166;
+ unsuccessful at first, 166;
+ succeeds in making a good treaty, 167;
+ credit of his exploit, 168;
+ letter of Washington to, 325.
+
+ Pitt, William,
+ his conduct of French war, i. 93, 94.
+
+ Princeton,
+ battle of, i. 181-3.
+
+ Privateers,
+ sent out by Washington, i. 150.
+
+ "Protection"
+ favored in the first Congress, ii. 113-115;
+ arguments of Hamilton for, 114, 115;
+ of Washington, 116-122.
+
+ Provincialism,
+ of Americans, i. 193;
+ with regard to foreign officers, 193, 234, 250-252;
+ with regard to foreign politics, ii. 131, 132, 163, 237, 255.
+
+ Putnam, Israel,
+ escapes with difficulty from New York, i. 169;
+ fails to help Washington at Trenton, 180;
+ warned to defend the Hudson, 195;
+ tells Washington of Burgoyne's surrender, 211;
+ rebuked by Washington, 217;
+ amuses Washington, ii. 374.
+
+
+ RAHL, COLONEL,
+ defeated and killed at Trenton, i. 181.
+
+ Randolph, Edmund,
+ letter of Washington to, ii. 30, 39;
+ relations with Washington, 64;
+ appointed attorney-general, 64;
+ his character, 64, 65;
+ a friend of the Constitution, 71;
+ opposes a bank, 110;
+ letter of Washington to, on protective bounties, 118;
+ drafts neutrality proclamation, 147;
+ vacillates with regard to Genet, 154;
+ argues that United States is bound by French alliance, 170;
+ succeeds Jefferson as secretary of state, 184;
+ directed to prepare a remonstrance against English "provision order,"
+ 185;
+ opposed to Jay treaty, 188;
+ letter of Washington to, on conditional ratification, 189, 191, 192,
+ 194;
+ guilty, apparently, from Fauchet letter, of corrupt practices, 196;
+ his position not a cause for Washington's signing treaty, 196-200;
+ receives Fauchet letter, resigns, 201;
+ his personal honesty, 201;
+ his discreditable carelessness, 202;
+ fairly treated by Washington, 203, 204;
+ his complaints against Washington, 203;
+ letter of Washington to, concerning Monroe, 213;
+ at first a Federalist, 246.
+
+ Randolph, John,
+ on early disappearance of Virginia colonial society, i. 15.
+
+ Rawdon, Lord,
+ commands British forces in South, too distant to help Cornwallis,
+ i. 304.
+
+ Reed, Joseph,
+ letters of Washington to, i. 151, 260.
+
+ Revolution, War of,
+ foreseen by Washington, i. 120, 122;
+ Lexington and Concord, 133;
+ Bunker Hill, 136;
+ siege of Boston, 137-154;
+ organization of army, 139-142;
+ operations in New York, 143;
+ invasion of Canada, 143, 144;
+ question as to treatment of prisoners, 145-148;
+ causes of British defeat, 154, 155;
+ campaign near New York, 161-177;
+ causes for attempted defense of Brooklyn, 163, 164;
+ battle of Long Island, 164-165;
+ escape of Americans, 166;
+ affair at Kip's Bay, 168;
+ at King's Bridge, 170;
+ at Frog's Point, 173;
+ battle of White Plains, 173;
+ at Chatterton Hill, 174;
+ capture of Forts Washington and Lee, 174, 175;
+ pursuit of Washington into New Jersey, 175-177;
+ retirement of Howe to New York, 177;
+ battle of Trenton, 180, 181;
+ campaign of Princeton, 181-183;
+ its brilliancy, 183;
+ Philadelphia campaign, 194-202;
+ British march across New Jersey prevented by Washington, 194;
+ sea voyage to Delaware, 195;
+ battle of the Brandywine, 196-198;
+ causes for defeat, 198;
+ defeat of Wayne, 198;
+ Philadelphia taken by Howe, 199;
+ battle of Germantown, 199;
+ its significance, 200, 201;
+ Burgoyne's invasion, 203-211;
+ Washington's preparations for, 204-206;
+ Howe's error in neglecting to cooperate, 205;
+ capture of Ticonderoga, 207;
+ battles of Bennington, Oriskany, Fort Schuyler, 210;
+ battle of Saratoga, 211;
+ British repulse at Fort Mercer, 217;
+ destruction of the forts, 217;
+ fruitless skirmishing before Philadelphia, 218;
+ Valley Forge, 228-232;
+ evacuation of Philadelphia, 234;
+ battle of Monmouth, 235-239;
+ its effect, 239;
+ cruise and failure of D'Estaing at Newport, 243, 244;
+ failure of D'Estaing at Savannah, 247, 248;
+ storming of Stony Point, 268, 269;
+ Tory raids near New York, 269;
+ standstill in 1780, 272;
+ siege and capture of Charleston, 273, 274, 276;
+ operations of French and Americans near Newport, 277, 278;
+ battle of Camden, 281;
+ treason of Arnold, 281-289;
+ battle of Cowpens, 301;
+ retreat of Greene before Cornwallis, 302;
+ battle of Guilford Court House, 302;
+ successful operations of Greene, 302, 303;
+ Southern campaign planned by Washington, 304-311;
+ feints against Clinton, 306;
+ operations of Cornwallis and Lafayette in Virginia, 307;
+ naval supremacy secured by Washington, 310, 311;
+ battle of De Grasse and Graves off Chesapeake, 312;
+ transport of American army to Virginia, 311-313;
+ siege and capture of Yorktown, 315-318;
+ masterly character of campaign, 318-320;
+ petty operations before New York, 326;
+ treaty of peace, 342.
+
+ Rives,
+ on Washington's doubts of constitutionality of Bank, ii. 110.
+
+ Robinson, Beverly,
+ speaker of Virginia House of Burgesses, his compliment to Washington,
+ i. 102.
+
+ Robinson, Colonel,
+ loyalist, i. 282.
+
+ Rumsey, James,
+ the inventor, asks Washington's consideration of his steamboat, ii. 4.
+
+ Rush, Benjamin,
+ describes Washington's impressiveness, ii. 389.
+
+ Rutledge, John,
+ letter of Washington to, i. 281;
+ nomination rejected by Senate, ii. 63;
+ nominated to Supreme Court, 73.
+
+
+ ST. CLAIR, Arthur,
+ removed after loss of Ticonderoga, i. 208;
+ appointed to command against Indians, ii. 94;
+ receives instructions and begins expedition, 95;
+ defeated, 96;
+ his character, 99;
+ fair treatment by Washington, 99;
+ popular execration of, 105.
+
+ St. Pierre, M. de,
+ French governor in Ohio, i. 67.
+
+ St. Simon, Count,
+ reinforces Lafayette, i. 312.
+
+ Sandwich, Lord,
+ calls all Yankees cowards, i. 155.
+
+ Saratoga,
+ anecdote concerning, i. 202.
+
+ Savage, Edward,
+ characteristics of his portrait of Washington, i. 13.
+
+ Savannah,
+ siege of, i. 247.
+
+ Scammel, Colonel,
+ amuses Washington, ii. 374.
+
+ Schuyler, Philip,
+ accompanies Washington to Boston, i. 136;
+ appointed military head in New York, 136;
+ directed by Washington how to meet Burgoyne, 204;
+ fails to carry out directions, 207;
+ removed, 208;
+ value of his preparations, 209.
+
+ Scott, Charles, commands expedition against Indians, ii. 95.
+
+ Sea-power,
+ its necessity seen by Washington, i. 283, 303, 304, 306, 310, 318, 319.
+
+ Sectional feeling,
+ deplored by Washington, ii. 222.
+
+ Sharpe, Governor,
+ offers Washington a company, i. 80;
+ Washington's reply to, 81.
+
+ Shays's Rebellion,
+ comments of Washington and Jefferson upon, ii. 26, 27.
+
+ Sherman, Roger,
+ makes sarcastic remark about Wilkinson, i. 220.
+
+ Shirley, Governor William,
+ adjusts matter of Washington's rank, i. 91, 97.
+
+ Short, William, minister to Holland,
+ on commission regarding opening of Mississippi, ii. 166.
+
+ Six Nations,
+ make satisfactory treaties, ii. 88;
+ stirred up by English, 94;
+ but pacified, 94, 101.
+
+ Slavery,
+ in Virginia, i. 20;
+ its evil effects, 104;
+ Washington's attitude toward slaves, 105;
+ his condemnation of the system, 106, 107;
+ gradual emancipation favored, 107, 108.
+
+ Smith, Colonel,
+ letter of Washington to, ii. 340.
+
+ Spain,
+ instigates Indians to hostilities, ii. 89, 94, 101;
+ blocks Mississippi, 135;
+ makes treaty with Pinckney opening Mississippi, 167, 168;
+ angered at Jay treaty, 210.
+
+ Sparks, Jared,
+ his alterations of Washington's letters, ii. 337, 338.
+
+ Spotswood, Alexander,
+ asks Washington's opinion of Alien and Sedition Acts, ii. 297.
+
+ Stamp Act,
+ Washington's opinion of, i. 119, 120.
+
+ Stark, General,
+ leads attack at Trenton, i. 181.
+
+ States, in the Revolutionary war,
+ appeals of Washington to, i. 142, 186, 204, 259, 277, 295, 306, 323,
+ 324, 326, 344;
+ issue paper money, 258;
+ grow tired of the war, 290;
+ alarmed by mutinies, 294;
+ try to appease soldiers, 295, 296;
+ their selfishness condemned by Washington, 333; ii. 21, 23;
+ thwart Indian policy of Congress, 88.
+
+ Stephen, Adam,
+ late in attacking at Germantown, i. 199.
+
+ Steuben, Baron,
+ Washington's appreciation of, i. 192, 249;
+ drills the army at Valley Forge, 232;
+ annoys Washington by wishing higher command, 249;
+ sent on mission to demand surrender of Western posts, 343;
+ his worth recognized by Washington, ii. 334.
+
+ Stirling, Lord,
+ defeated and captured at Long Island, i. 165.
+
+ Stockton, Mrs.,
+ letter of Washington to, ii. 349.
+
+ Stone, General,
+ tells stories of Washington's closeness, ii. 353, 354.
+
+ Stuart, David,
+ letters of Washington to, ii. 107, 221, 222, 258.
+
+ Stuart, Gilbert,
+ his portrait of Washington contrasted with Savage's, i. 13.
+
+ Sullivan, John, General,
+ surprised at Long Island, i. 165;
+ attacks at Trenton, 180;
+ surprised and crushed at Brandywine, 197, 198;
+ unites with D'Estaing to attack Newport, 243;
+ angry at D'Estaing's desertion, 244;
+ soothed by Washington, 244;
+ sent against Indians, 266, 269.
+
+ Supreme Court,
+ appointed by Washington, ii. 72.
+
+
+ TAFT,----,
+ kindness of Washington toward, ii. 367.
+
+ Talleyrand,
+ eulogistic report to Napoleon on death of Washington, i. 1, note;
+ remark on Hamilton, ii. 139;
+ refused reception by Washington, 253.
+
+ Tarleton, Sir Banastre,
+ tries to escape at Yorktown, i. 317.
+
+ Thatcher, Dr.,
+ on Washington's appearance when taking command of army, i. 137.
+
+ Thomson, Charles,
+ complimented by Washington on retiring from secretary-ship of
+ Continental Congress, ii. 350.
+
+ Tories,
+ hated by Washington, i. 156;
+ his reasons, 157;
+ active in New York, 158;
+ suppressed by Washington, 159;
+ in Philadelphia, impressed by Continental army, 196;
+ make raids on frontier, 266;
+ strong in Southern States, 267;
+ raids under Tryon, 269.
+
+ Trent, Captain,
+ his incompetence in dealing with Indians and French, i. 72.
+
+ Trenton, campaign of, i. 180-183.
+
+ Trumbull, Governor,
+ letter of Washington to, refusing to stand for a third term,
+ ii. 269-271;
+ other letters, 298.
+
+ Trumbull, John,
+ on New England army before Boston, i. 139.
+
+ Trumbull, Jonathan,
+ his message on better government praised by Washington, ii. 21;
+ letters to, 42;
+ Washington's friendship for, 363.
+
+ Tryon, Governor,
+ Tory leader in New York, i. 143;
+ his intrigues stopped by Washington, 158, 159;
+ conspires to murder Washington, 160;
+ makes raids in Connecticut, 269.
+
+
+ VALLEY FORGE,
+ Continental Army at, i. 228-232.
+
+ Van Braam, Jacob,
+ friend of Lawrence Washington, trains George in fencing, i. 65;
+ accompanies him on mission to French, 66.
+
+ Vergennes,
+ requests release of Asgill, i. 329, 330;
+ letter of Washington to, 330;
+ proposes to submit disposition of a subsidy to Washington, 332.
+
+ Virginia, society in,
+ before the Revolution, i. 15-29;
+ its entire change since then, 15, 16;
+ population, distribution, and numbers, 17, 18;
+ absence of towns, 18;
+ and town life, 19;
+ trade and travel in, 19;
+ social classes, 20-24;
+ slaves and poor whites, 20;
+ clergy, 21;
+ planters and their estates, 22;
+ their life, 22;
+ education, 23;
+ habits of governing, 24;
+ luxury and extravagance, 25;
+ apparent wealth, 26;
+ agreeableness of life, 27;
+ aristocratic ideals, 28;
+ vigor of stock, 29;
+ unwilling to fight French, 71;
+ quarrels with Dinwiddie, 71;
+ thanks Washington after his French campaign, 79;
+ terrified at Braddock's defeat, 88;
+ gives Washington command, 89;
+ fails to support him, 89, 90, 93;
+ bad economic conditions in, 104,105;
+ local government in, 117;
+ condemns Stamp Act, 119;
+ adopts non-importation, 121;
+ condemns Boston Port Bill, 123;
+ asks opinion of counties, 124;
+ chooses delegates to a congress, 127;
+ prepares for war, 132;
+ British campaign in, 307, 315-318;
+ ratifies Constitution, ii. 40;
+ evil effect of free trade upon, 116, 117;
+ nullification resolutions, 266;
+ strength of its aristocracy, 315.
+
+
+ WADE, COLONEL,
+ in command at West Point after Arnold's flight, i. 285.
+
+ Walker, Benjamin,
+ letter of Washington to, ii. 257.
+
+ Warren, James,
+ letters of Washington to, i. 262, ii. 118.
+
+ Washington,
+ ancestry, i. 30-40;
+ early genealogical researches concerning, 30-32;
+ pedigree finally established, 32;
+ origin of family, 33;
+ various members during middle ages, 34;
+ on royalist side in English civil war, 34, 36;
+ character of family, 35;
+ emigration to Virginia, 35, 36;
+ career of Washingtons in Maryland, 37;
+ in Virginia history, 38;
+ their estates, 39.
+
+ Washington, Augustine, father of George Washington,
+ birth, i. 35;
+ death, 39;
+ character, 39;
+ his estate, 41;
+ ridiculous part played by in Weems's anecdotes, 44, 47.
+
+ Washington, Augustine, half brother of George Washington,
+ keeps him after his father's death, i. 48.
+
+ Washington, Bushrod,
+ refused appointment as attorney by Washington, ii. 62;
+ educated by him, 370.
+
+ Washington, George,
+ honors to his memory in France, i. 1;
+ in England, 2;
+ grief in America, 3, 4;
+ general admission of his greatness, 4;
+ its significance, 5, 6;
+ tributes from England, 6;
+ from other countries, 6, 7;
+ yet an "unknown" man, 7;
+ minuteness of knowledge concerning, 8;
+ has become subject of myths, 9;
+ development of the Weems myth about, 10, 11;
+ necessity of a new treatment of, 12;
+ significant difference of real and ideal portraits of, 13;
+ his silence regarding himself, 14;
+ underlying traits, 14.
+
+ _Early Life_.
+ Ancestry, 30-41;
+ birth, 39;
+ origin of Weems's anecdotes about, 41-44;
+ their absurdity and evil results, 45-48;
+ early schooling, 48;
+ plan to send him to sea, 49, 50;
+ studies to be a surveyor, 51;
+ his rules of behavior, 52;
+ his family connections with Fairfaxes, 54, 55;
+ his friendship with Lord Fairfax, 56;
+ surveys Fairfax's estate, 57, 58, 59;
+ made public surveyor, 60;
+ his life at the time, 60, 61;
+ influenced by Fairfax's cultivation, 62;
+ goes to West Indies with his brother, 62;
+ has the small-pox, 63;
+ observations on the voyage, 63, 64;
+ returns to Virginia, 64;
+ becomes guardian of his brother's daughter, 64.
+
+ _Service against the French and Indians_.
+ Receives military training, 65;
+ a military appointment, 66;
+ goes on expedition to treat with French, 66;
+ meets Indians, 67;
+ deals with French, 67;
+ dangers of journey, 68;
+ his impersonal account, 69, 70;
+ appointed to command force against French, 71, 72;
+ his anger at neglect of Virginia Assembly, 73;
+ attacks and defeats force of Jumonville, 74;
+ called murderer by the French, 74;
+ surrounded by French at Great Meadows, 76;
+ surrenders, 76;
+ recklessness of his expedition, 77, 78;
+ effect of experience upon, 79;
+ gains a European notoriety, 79;
+ thanked by Virginia, 79;
+ protests against Dinwiddie's organization of soldiers, 80;
+ refuses to serve when ranked by British officers, 81;
+ accepts position on Braddock's staff, 82;
+ his treatment there, 82;
+ advises Braddock, 84;
+ rebuked for warning against surprise, 85;
+ his bravery in the battle, 86;
+ conducts retreat, 86, 87;
+ effect of experience on him, 87;
+ declines to solicit command of Virginia troops, 88;
+ accepts it when offered, 88;
+ his difficulties with Assembly, 89;
+ and with troops, 90;
+ settles question of rank, 91;
+ writes freely in criticism of government, 91, 92;
+ retires for rest to Mt. Vernon, 93;
+ offers services to General Forbes, 93;
+ irritated at slowness of English, 93, 94;
+ his love affairs, 95, 96;
+ journey to Boston, 97-101;
+ at festivities in New York and Philadelphia, 99;
+ meets Martha Custis, 101;
+ his wedding, 101, 102;
+ elected to House of Burgesses, 102;
+ confused at being thanked by Assembly, 102;
+ his local position, 103;
+ tries to farm his estate, 104;
+ his management of slaves, 105, 106, 108, 109;
+ cares for interests of old soldiers, 109;
+ rebukes a coward, 110;
+ cares for education of stepson, 111;
+ his furnishing of house, 112;
+ hunting habits, 113-115;
+ punishes a poacher, 116;
+ participates in colonial and local government, 117;
+ enters into society, 117, 118.
+
+ _Congressional delegate from Virginia_.
+ His influence in Assembly, 119;
+ discusses Stamp Act with Mason, 119;
+ foresees result to be independence, 119;
+ rejoices at its repeal, but notes Declaratory Act, 120;
+ ready to use force to defend colonial rights, 120;
+ presents non-importation resolutions to Burgesses, 121;
+ abstains from English products, 121;
+ notes ominous movements among Indians, 122;
+ on good terms with royal governors, 122, 123;
+ observes fast on account of Boston Port Bill, 123;
+ has controversy with Bryan Fairfax over Parliamentary policy,
+ 124, 125, 126;
+ presides at Fairfax County meeting, 126;
+ declares himself ready for action, 126;
+ at convention of counties, offers to march to relief of Boston, 127;
+ elected to Continental Congress, 127;
+ his journey, 128;
+ silent in Congress, 129;
+ writes to a British officer that independence is not
+ desired, but war is certain, 130, 131;
+ returns to Virginia, 132;
+ aids in military preparations, 132;
+ his opinion after Concord, 133;
+ at second Continental Congress, wears uniform, 134;
+ made commander-in-chief, 134;
+ his modesty and courage in accepting position, 134, 135;
+ political motives for his choice, 135;
+ his popularity, 136;
+ his journey to Boston, 136, 137;
+ receives news of Bunker Hill, 136;
+ is received by Massachusetts Provincial Assembly, 137.
+
+ _Commander of the Army_.
+ Takes command at Cambridge, 137;
+ his impression upon people, 137, 138, 139;
+ begins reorganization of army, 139;
+ secures number of troops, 140;
+ enforces discipline, his difficulties, 140, 141;
+ forced to lead Congress, 142;
+ to arrange rank of officers, 142;
+ organizes privateers, 142;
+ discovers lack of powder, 143;
+ plans campaigns in Canada and elsewhere, 143, 144;
+ his plans of attack on Boston overruled by council of war, 144;
+ writes to Gage urging that captives be treated as prisoners of war,
+ 145;
+ skill of his letter, 146;
+ retorts to Gage's reply, 147;
+ continues dispute with Howe, 148;
+ annoyed by insufficiency of provisions, 149;
+ and by desertions, 149;
+ stops quarrel between Virginia and Marblehead soldiers, 149;
+ suggests admiralty committees, 150;
+ annoyed by army contractors, 150;
+ and criticism, 151;
+ letter to Joseph Reed, 151;
+ occupies Dorchester Heights, 152;
+ begins to like New England men better, 152;
+ rejoices at prospect of a fight, 153;
+ departure of British due to his leadership, 154;
+ sends troops immediately to New York, 155;
+ enters Boston, 156;
+ expects a hard war, 156;
+ urges upon Congress the necessity of preparing for a long struggle,
+ 156;
+ his growing hatred of Tories, 156, 157;
+ goes to New York, 157, 158;
+ difficulties of the situation, 158;
+ suppresses Tories, 159;
+ urges Congress to declare independence, 159, 160;
+ discovers and punishes a conspiracy to assassinate, 160;
+ insists on his title in correspondence with Howe, 161;
+ justice of his position, 162;
+ quiets sectional jealousies in army, 162;
+ his military inferiority to British, 163;
+ obliged by political considerations to attempt defense of New York,
+ 163, 164;
+ assumes command on Long Island, 164;
+ sees defeat of his troops, 165;
+ sees plan of British fleet to cut off retreat, 166;
+ secures retreat of army, 167;
+ explains his policy of avoiding a pitched battle, 167;
+ anger at flight of militia at Kip's Bay, 168;
+ again secures safe retreat, 169;
+ secures slight advantage in a skirmish, 170;
+ continues to urge Congress to action, 170, 171;
+ success of his letters in securing a permanent army, 171;
+ surprised by advance of British fleet, 172;
+ moves to White Plains, 173;
+ blocks British advance, 174;
+ advises abandonment of American forts, 174;
+ blames himself for their capture, 175;
+ leads diminishing army through New Jersey, 175;
+ makes vain appeals for aid, 176;
+ resolves to take the offensive, 177;
+ desperateness of his situation, 178;
+ pledges his estate and private fortune to raise men, 179;
+ orders disregarded by officers, 180;
+ crosses Delaware and captures Hessians, 180, 181;
+ has difficulty in retaining soldiers, 181;
+ repulses Cornwallis at Assunpink, 181;
+ outwits Cornwallis and wins battle at Princeton, 182;
+ excellence of his strategy, 183;
+ effect of this campaign in saving Revolution, 183, 184;
+ withdraws to Morristown, 185;
+ fluctuations in size of army, 186;
+ his determination to keep the field, 186, 187;
+ criticised by Congress for not fighting, 187;
+ hampered by Congressional interference, 188;
+ issues proclamation requiring oath of allegiance, 188;
+ attacked in Congress for so doing, 189;
+ annoyed by Congressional alterations of rank, 189;
+ and by foreign military adventurers, 191;
+ value of his services in suppressing them, 192;
+ his American feelings, 191, 193;
+ warns Congress in vain that Howe means to attack Philadelphia, 193;
+ baffles Howe's advance across New Jersey, 195;
+ learning of his sailing, marches to defend Philadelphia, 195;
+ offers battle at Brandywine, 196, 197;
+ out-generaled and beaten, 197;
+ rallies army and prepares to fight again, 198;
+ prevented by storm, 199;
+ attacks British at Germantown, 199;
+ defeated, 200;
+ exposes himself in battle, 200;
+ real success of his action, 201;
+ despised by English, 202;
+ foresees danger of Burgoyne's invasion, 203;
+ sends instructions to Schuyler, 204;
+ urges use of New England and New York militia, 304;
+ dreads northern advance of Howe, 205;
+ determines to hold him at all hazards, 206, 207;
+ not cast down by loss of Ticonderoga, 207;
+ urges New England to rise, 208;
+ sends all possible troops, 208;
+ refuses to appoint a commander for Northern army, 208;
+ his probable reasons, 209;
+ continues to send suggestions, 210;
+ slighted by Gates after Burgoyne's surrender, 211;
+ rise of opposition in Congress, 212;
+ arouses ill-feeling by his frankness, 212, 213;
+ distrusted by Samuel and John Adams, 214;
+ by others, 214, 215;
+ formation of a plan to supplant him by Gates, 215;
+ opposed by Gates, Mifflin, and Conway, 215, 216;
+ angers Conway by preventing his increase in rank, 216;
+ is refused troops by Gates, 217;
+ defends and loses Delaware forts, 217;
+ refuses to attack Howe, 218;
+ propriety of his action, 219;
+ becomes aware of cabal, 220;
+ alarms them by showing extent of his knowledge, 221;
+ attacked bitterly in Congress, 222;
+ insulted by Gates, 223;
+ refuses to resign, 224;
+ refuses to notice cabal publicly, 224;
+ complains privately of slight support from Pennsylvania, 225;
+ continues to push Gates for explanations, 226;
+ regains complete control after collapse of cabal, 226, 227;
+ withdraws to Valley Forge, 227;
+ desperation of his situation, 228;
+ criticised by Pennsylvania legislature for going into winter quarters,
+ 229;
+ his bitter reply, 229;
+ his unbending resolution, 230;
+ continues to urge improvements in army organization, 231;
+ manages to hold army together, 232;
+ sends Lafayette to watch Philadelphia, 233;
+ determines to fight, 234;
+ checked by Lee, 234;
+ pursues Clinton, 235;
+ orders Lee to attack British rearguard, 235;
+ discovers his force retreating, 236;
+ rebukes Lee and punishes him, 236, 237;
+ takes command and stops retreat, 237;
+ repulses British and assumes offensive, 238;
+ success due to his work at Valley Forge, 239;
+ celebrates French alliance, 241;
+ has to confront difficulty of managing allies, 241, 242;
+ welcomes D'Estaing, 243;
+ obliged to quiet recrimination after Newport failure, 244;
+ his letter to Sullivan, 244;
+ to Lafayette, 245;
+ to D'Estaing, 246;
+ tact and good effect of his letters, 246;
+ offers to cooperate in an attack on New York, 247;
+ furnishes admirable suggestions to D'Estaing, 247;
+ not dazzled by French, 248;
+ objects to giving rank to foreign officers, 248, 249;
+ opposes transfer of Steuben from inspectorship to the line, 249;
+ his thoroughly American position, 250;
+ absence of provinciality, 251, 252;
+ a national leader, 252;
+ opposes invasion of Canada, 253;
+ foresees danger of its recapture by France, 254, 255;
+ his clear understanding of French motives, 255, 256;
+ rejoices in condition of patriot cause, 257;
+ foresees ruin to army in financial troubles, 258;
+ has to appease mutinies among unpaid troops, 258;
+ appeals to Congress, 259;
+ urges election of better delegates to Congress, 259;
+ angry with speculators, 260, 261;
+ futility of his efforts, 261, 262;
+ his increasing alarm at social demoralization, 263;
+ effect of his exertions, 264;
+ conceals his doubts of the French, 264;
+ watches New York, 264;
+ keeps dreading an English campaign, 265;
+ labors with Congress to form a navy, 266;
+ plans expedition to chastise Indians, 266;
+ realizes that things are at a standstill in the North, 267;
+ sees danger to lie in the South, but determines to remain himself near
+ New York, 267;
+ not consulted by Congress in naming general for Southern army, 268;
+ plans attack on Stony Point, 268;
+ hatred of ravaging methods of British warfare, 270;
+ again has great difficulties in winter quarters, 270;
+ unable to act on offensive in the spring, 270, 272;
+ unable to help South, 272;
+ advises abandonment of Charleston, 273;
+ learns of arrival of French army, 274;
+ plans a number of enterprises with it, 275, 276;
+ refuses, even after loss of Charleston, to abandon Hudson, 276;
+ welcomes Rochambeau, 277;
+ writes to Congress against too optimistic feelings, 278, 279;
+ has extreme difficulty in holding army together, 280;
+ urges French to attack New York, 280;
+ sends Maryland troops South after Camden, 281;
+ arranges meeting with Rochambeau at Hartford, 282;
+ popular enthusiasm over him, 283;
+ goes to West Point, 284;
+ surprised at Arnold's absence, 284;
+ learns of his treachery, 284, 285;
+ his cool behavior, 285;
+ his real feelings, 286;
+ his conduct toward André, 287;
+ its justice, 287, 288;
+ his opinion of Arnold, 288, 289;
+ his responsibility in the general breakdown of the Congress and army,
+ 290;
+ obliged to quell food mutinies in army, 291, 292;
+ difficulty of situation, 292;
+ his influence the salvation of army, 293;
+ his greatness best shown in this way, 293;
+ rebukes Congress, 294;
+ appoints Greene to command Southern army, 295;
+ sends Knox to confer with state governors, 296;
+ secures temporary relief for army, 296;
+ sees the real defect is in weak government, 296;
+ urges adoption of Articles of Confederation, 297;
+ works for improvements in executive, 298,299;
+ still keeps a Southern movement in mind, 301;
+ unable to do anything through lack of naval power, 303;
+ rebukes Lund Washington for entertaining British at Mt. Vernon, 303;
+ still unable to fight, 304;
+ tries to frighten Clinton into remaining in New York, 305;
+ succeeds with aid of Rochambeau, 306;
+ explains his plan to French and to Congress, 306;
+ learns of De Grasse's approach, prepares to move South, 306;
+ writes to De Grasse to meet him in Chesapeake, 308;
+ fears a premature peace, 308;
+ pecuniary difficulties, 309;
+ absolute need of command of sea, 310;
+ persuades De Barras to join De Grasse, 311;
+ starts on march for Chesapeake, 311;
+ hampered by lack of supplies, 312;
+ and by threat of Congress to reduce army, 313;
+ passes through Mt. Vernon, 314;
+ succeeds in persuading De Grasse not to abandon him, 315;
+ besieges Cornwallis, 315;
+ sees capture of redoubts, 316;
+ receives surrender of Cornwallis, 317;
+ admirable strategy and management of campaign, 318;
+ his personal influence the cause of success, 318;
+ especially his use of the fleet, 319;
+ his management of Cornwallis through Lafayette, 319;
+ his boldness in transferring army away from New York, 320;
+ does not lose his head over victory, 321;
+ urges De Grasse to repeat success against Charleston, 322;
+ returns north, 322;
+ saddened by death of Custis, 322;
+ continues to urge Congress to action, 323;
+ writes letters to the States, 323;
+ does not expect English surrender, 324;
+ urges renewed vigor, 324;
+ points out that war actually continues, 325;
+ urges not to give up army until peace is actually secured, 325;
+ failure of his appeals, 326;
+ reduced to inactivity, 326;
+ angered at murder of Huddy, 327;
+ threatens Carleton with retaliation, 328;
+ releases Asgill at request of Vergennes and order of Congress,
+ 329, 330;
+ disclaims credit, 330;
+ justification of his behavior, 330;
+ his tenderness toward the soldiers, 331;
+ jealousy of Congress toward him, 332;
+ warns Congress of danger of further neglect of army, 333, 334;
+ takes control of mutinous movement, 335;
+ his address to the soldiers, 336;
+ its effect, 336;
+ movement among soldiers to make him dictator, 337;
+ replies to revolutionary proposals, 337;
+ reality of the danger, 339;
+ causes for his behaviour, 340, 341;
+ a friend of strong government, but devoid of personal ambition, 342;
+ chafes under delay to disband army, 343;
+ tries to secure Western posts, 343;
+ makes a journey through New York, 343;
+ gives Congress excellent but futile advice, 344;
+ issues circular letter to governors, 344;
+ and farewell address to army, 345;
+ enters New York after departure of British, 345;
+ his farewell to his officers, 345;
+ adjusts his accounts, 346;
+ appears before Congress, 347;
+ French account of his action, 347;
+ makes speech resigning commission, 348, 349.
+
+ _In Retirement_.
+ Returns to Mt. Vernon, ii. I;
+ tries to resume old life, 2;
+ gives up hunting, 2;
+ pursued by lion-hunters and artists, 3;
+ overwhelmed with correspondence, 3;
+ receives letters from Europe, 4;
+ from cranks, 4;
+ from officers, 4;
+ his share in Society of Cincinnati, 4;
+ manages his estate, 5;
+ visits Western lands, 5;
+ family cares, 5, 6;
+ continues to have interest in public affairs, 6;
+ advises Congress regarding peace establishment, 6;
+ urges acquisition of Western posts, 7;
+ his broad national views, 7;
+ alone in realizing future greatness of country, 7, 8;
+ appreciates importance of the West, 8;
+ urges development of inland navigation, 9;
+ asks Jefferson's aid, 9, 10;
+ lays canal scheme before Virginia legislature, 10;
+ his arguments, 10;
+ troubled by offer of stock, 11;
+ uses it to endow two schools, 12;
+ significance of his scheme, 12, 13;
+ his political purposes in binding West to East, 13;
+ willing to leave Mississippi closed for this purpose, 14, 15, 16;
+ feels need of firmer union during Revolution, 17;
+ his arguments, 18, 19;
+ his influence starts movement for reform, 20;
+ continues to urge it during retirement, 21;
+ foresees disasters of confederation, 21;
+ urges impost scheme, 22;
+ condemns action of States, 22, 23, 25;
+ favours commercial agreement between Maryland and Virginia, 23;
+ stung by contempt of foreign powers, 24;
+ his arguments for a national government, 24;
+ points out designs of England, 25;
+ works against paper money craze in States, 26;
+ his opinion of Shays's rebellion, 26;
+ his position contrasted with Jefferson's, 27;
+ influence of his letters, 28, 29;
+ shrinks from participating in Federal convention, 29;
+ elected unanimously, 30;
+ refuses to go to a feeble convention, 30, 31;
+ finally makes up his mind, 31.
+
+ _In the Federal Convention_.
+ Speech attributed to Washington by Morris on duties of delegates,
+ 31, 32;
+ chosen to preside, 33;
+ takes no part in debate, 34;
+ his influence in convention, 34, 35;
+ despairs of success, 35;
+ signs the Constitution, 36;
+ words attributed to him, 36;
+ silent as to his thoughts, 36, 37;
+ sees clearly danger of failure to ratify, 37;
+ tries at first to act indifferently, 38;
+ begins to work for ratification, 38;
+ writes letters to various people, 38, 39;
+ circulates copies of "Federalist," 40;
+ saves ratification in Virginia, 40;
+ urges election of Federalists to Congress, 41;
+ receives general request to accept presidency, 41;
+ his objections, 41, 42;
+ dreads failure and responsibility, 42;
+ elected, 42;
+ his journey to New York, 42-46;
+ speech at Alexandria, 43;
+ popular reception at all points, 44, 45;
+ his feelings, 46;
+ his inauguration, 46.
+
+ _President_.
+ His speech to Congress, 48;
+ urges no specific policy, 48, 49;
+ his solemn feelings, 49;
+ his sober view of necessities of situation, 50;
+ question of his title, 52;
+ arranges to communicate with Senate by writing, 52, 53;
+ discusses social etiquette, 53;
+ takes middle ground, 54;
+ wisdom of his action, 55;
+ criticisms by Democrats, 55, 56;
+ accused of monarchical leanings, 56, 57;
+ familiarizes himself with work already accomplished under
+ Confederation, 58;
+ his business habits, 58;
+ refuses special privileges to French minister, 59, 60;
+ skill of his reply, 60, 61;
+ solicited for office, 61;
+ his views on appointment, 62;
+ favors friends of Constitution and old soldiers, 62;
+ success of his appointments, 63;
+ selects a cabinet, 64;
+ his regard for Knox 65;
+ for Morris, 66;
+ his skill in choosing, 66;
+ his appreciation of Hamilton, 67;
+ his grounds for choosing Jefferson, 68;
+ his contrast with Jefferson, 69;
+ his choice a mistake in policy, 70;
+ his partisan characteristics, 70, 71;
+ excludes anti-Federalists, 71;
+ nominates justices of Supreme Court, 72;
+ their party character, 73;
+ illness, 73;
+ visits the Eastern States, 73;
+ his reasons, 74;
+ stirs popular enthusiasm, 74;
+ snubbed by Hancock in Massachusetts, 75;
+ accepts Hancock's apology, 75;
+ importance of his action, 76;
+ success of journey, 76;
+ opens Congress, 78, 79;
+ his speech and its recommendations, 81;
+ how far carried out, 81-83;
+ national character of the speech, 83;
+ his fitness to deal with Indians, 87;
+ his policy, 88;
+ appoints commission to treat with Creeks, 90;
+ ascribes its failure to Spanish intrigue, 90;
+ succeeds by a personal interview in making treaty, 91;
+ wisdom of his policy, 92;
+ orders an expedition against Western Indians, 93;
+ angered at its failure, 94;
+ and at conduct of frontiersmen, 94;
+ prepares St. Clair's expedition, 95;
+ warns against ambush, 95;
+ hopes for decisive results, 97;
+ learns of St. Clair's defeat, 97;
+ his self-control, 97;
+ his outburst of anger against St. Clair, 97, 98;
+ masters his feelings, 98;
+ treats St. Clair kindly, 99;
+ determines on a second campaign, 100;
+ selects Wayne and other officers, 100;
+ tries to secure peace with tribes, 101;
+ efforts prevented by English influence, 101, 102;
+ and in South by conduct of Georgia, 103;
+ general results of his Indian policy, 104;
+ popular misunderstandings and criticism, 104, 105;
+ favors assumption of state debts by the government, 107, 108;
+ satisfied with bargain between Hamilton and Jefferson, 108;
+ his respectful attitude toward Constitution, 109;
+ asks opinions of cabinet on constitutionality of bank, 110;
+ signs bill creating it, 110;
+ reasons for his decision, 111;
+ supports Hamilton's financial policy, 112;
+ supports Hamilton's views on protection, 115, 116;
+ appreciates evil economic condition of Virginia, 116, 117;
+ sees necessity for self-sufficient industries in war time, 117;
+ urges protection, 118, 119, 120;
+ his purpose to build up national feeling, 121;
+ approves national excise tax, 122, 123;
+ does not realize unpopularity of method, 123;
+ ready to modify but insists on obedience, 124, 125;
+ issues proclamation against rioters, 125;
+ since Pennsylvania frontier continues rebellious, issues second
+ proclamation threatening to use force, 127;
+ calls out the militia, 127;
+ his advice to leaders and troops, 128;
+ importance of Washington's firmness, 129;
+ his good judgment and patience, 130;
+ decides success of the central authority, 130;
+ early advocacy of separation of United States from European politics,
+ 133;
+ studies situation, 134, 135;
+ sees importance of binding West with Eastern States, 135;
+ sees necessity of good relations with England, 137;
+ authorizes Morris to sound England as to exchange of ministers and a
+ commercial treaty, 137;
+ not disturbed by British bad manners, 138;
+ succeeds in establishing diplomatic relations, 138;
+ early foresees danger of excess in French Revolution, 139, 140;
+ states a policy of strict neutrality, 140, 142, 143;
+ difficulties of his situation, 142;
+ objects to action of National Assembly on tobacco and oil, 144;
+ denies reported request by United States that England mediate with
+ Indians, 145;
+ announces neutrality in case of a European war, 146;
+ instructs cabinet to prepare a neutrality proclamation, 147;
+ importance of this step not understood at time, 148, 149;
+ foresees coming difficulties, 149, 150;
+ acts cautiously toward _émigrés_, 151;
+ contrast with Genet, 152;
+ greets him coldly, 152;
+ orders steps taken to prevent violations of neutrality, 153, 154;
+ retires to Mt. Vernon for rest, 154;
+ on returning finds Jefferson has allowed Little Sarah to escape, 156;
+ writes a sharp note to Jefferson, 156;
+ anger at escape, 157;
+ takes matters out of Jefferson's hands, 157;
+ determines on asking recall of Genet, 158;
+ revokes exequatur of Duplaine, French consul, 159;
+ insulted by Genet, 159, 160;
+ refuses to deny Jay's card, 160;
+ upheld by popular feeling, 160;
+ his annoyance at the episode, 160;
+ obliged to teach American people self-respect, 162, 163;
+ deals with troubles incited by Genet in the West, 162, 163;
+ sympathizes with frontiersmen, 163;
+ comprehends value of Mississippi, 164, 165;
+ sends a commission to Madrid to negotiate about free navigation, 166;
+ later sends Thomas Pinckney, 166;
+ despairs of success, 166;
+ apparent conflict between French treaties and neutrality, 169, 170;
+ value of Washington's policy to England, 171;
+ in spite of England's attitude, intends to keep peace, 177;
+ wishes to send Hamilton as envoy, 177;
+ after his refusal appoints Jay, 177;
+ fears that England intends war, 178;
+ determines to be prepared, 178;
+ urges upon Jay the absolute necessity of England's giving up Western
+ posts, 179;
+ dissatisfied with Jay treaty but willing to sign it, 184;
+ in doubt as to meaning of conditional ratification, 184;
+ protests against English "provision order" and refuses signature, 185;
+ meets uproar against treaty alone, 188;
+ determines to sign, 189;
+ answers resolutions of Boston town meeting, 190;
+ refuses to abandon his judgment to popular outcry, 190;
+ distinguishes temporary from permanent feeling, 191;
+ fears effect of excitement upon French government, 192;
+ his view of dangers of situation, 193, 194;
+ recalled to Philadelphia by cabinet, 195;
+ receives intercepted correspondence of Fauchet, 195, 196;
+ his course of action already determined, 197, 198;
+ not influenced by the Fauchet letter, 198;
+ evidence of this, 199, 200;
+ reasons for ratifying before showing letter to Randolph, 199, 200;
+ signs treaty, 201;
+ evidence that he did not sacrifice Randolph, 201, 202;
+ fairness of his action, 203;
+ refuses to reply to Randolph's attack, 204;
+ reasons for signing treaty, 205;
+ justified in course of time, 206;
+ refuses on constitutional grounds the call of representatives for
+ documents, 208;
+ insists on independence of treaty-making by executive and Senate, 209;
+ overcomes hostile majority in House, 210;
+ wishes Madison to succeed Morris at Paris, 211;
+ appoints Monroe, 216;
+ his mistake in not appointing a political supporter, 212;
+ disgusted at Monroe's behavior, 213, 214;
+ recalls Monroe and appoints C.C. Pinckney, 214;
+ angered at French policy, 214;
+ his contempt for Monroe's self-justification, 215, 216;
+ review of foreign policy, 216-219;
+ his guiding principle national independence, 216;
+ and abstention from European politics, 217;
+ desires peace and time for growth, 217, 218;
+ wishes development of the West, 218, 219;
+ wisdom of his policy, 219;
+ considers parties dangerous, 220;
+ but chooses cabinet from Federalists, 220;
+ prepared to undergo criticism, 221;
+ willingness to bear it, 221;
+ desires to learn public feeling, by travels, 221, 222;
+ feels that body of people will support national government, 222;
+ sees and deplores sectional feelings in the South, 222, 223;
+ objects to utterances of newspapers, 223;
+ attacked by "National Gazette," 227;
+ receives attacks on Hamilton from Jefferson and his friends, 228, 229;
+ sends charges to Hamilton, 229;
+ made anxious by signs of party division, 229;
+ urges both Hamilton and Jefferson to cease quarrel, 230, 231;
+ dreads an open division in cabinet, 232;
+ desirous to rule without party, 233;
+ accomplishes feat of keeping both secretaries in cabinet, 233;
+ keeps confidence in Hamilton, 234;
+ urged by all parties to accept presidency again, 235;
+ willing to be reelected, 235;
+ pleased at unanimous vote, 235;
+ his early immunity from attacks, 237;
+ later attacked by Freneau and Bache, 238;
+ regards opposition as dangerous to country, 239;
+ asserts his intention to disregard them, 240;
+ his success in Genet affair, 241;
+ disgusted at "democratic" societies, 242;
+ thinks they fomented Whiskey Rebellion, 242;
+ denounces them to Congress, 243;
+ effect of his remarks, 244;
+ accused of tyranny after Jay treaty, 244;
+ of embezzlement, 245;
+ of aristocracy, 245;
+ realizes that he must compose cabinet of sympathizers, 246;
+ reconstructs it, 246;
+ states determination to govern by party, 247;
+ slighted by House, 247;
+ refuses a third term, 248;
+ publishes Farewell Address, 248;
+ his justification for so doing, 248;
+ his wise advice, 249;
+ address Attacked by Democrats, 250, 251;
+ assailed in Congress by Giles, 251;
+ resents charge of being a British sympathizer, 252;
+ his scrupulously fair conduct toward France, 253;
+ his resentment at English policy, 254;
+ his retirement celebrated by the opposition, 255;
+ remarks of the "Aurora," 256;
+ forged letters of British circulated, 257;
+ he repudiates them, 257;
+ his view of opposition, 259.
+
+ _In Retirement_.
+ Regards Adams's administration as continuation of his own, 259;
+ understands Jefferson's attitude, 259;
+ wishes generals of provisional army to be Federalist, 260;
+ doubts fidelity of opposition as soldiers, 260;
+ dreads their poisoning mind of army, 261;
+ his condemnation of Democrats, 261, 262;
+ snubs Dr. Logan for assuming an unofficial mission to France, 263-265;
+ alarmed at Virginia and Kentucky resolutions, 266;
+ urges Henry to oppose Virginia resolutions, 267;
+ condemns the French party as unpatriotic, 267;
+ refuses request to stand again for presidency, 269;
+ comments on partisanship of Democrats, 269;
+ believes that he would be no better candidate than any other
+ Federalist, 270, 271;
+ error of statement that Washington was not a party man, 271, 272;
+ slow to relinquish non-partisan position, 272;
+ not the man to shrink from declaring his position, 273;
+ becomes a member of Federalist party, 273, 274;
+ eager for end of term of office, 275;
+ his farewell dinner, 275;
+ at Adams's inauguration, 276;
+ popular enthusiasm at Philadelphia, 276;
+ at Baltimore, 277;
+ returns to Mt. Vernon, 279;
+ describes his farm life, 278, 279;
+ burdened by necessities of hospitality, 280;
+ account of his meeting with Bernard, 281-283;
+ continued interest in politics, 284;
+ accepts command of provisional army, 285;
+ selects Hamilton, Pinckney, and Knox as major-generals, 286;
+ surprised at Adams's objection to Hamilton, 286;
+ rebukes Adams for altering order of rank of generals, 286, 287;
+ not influenced by intrigue, 287;
+ annoyed by Adams's conduct, 288;
+ tries to soothe Knox's irritation, 289;
+ fails to pacify him, 289;
+ carries out organization of army, 290;
+ does not expect actual war, 291;
+ disapproves of Gerry's conduct, 292;
+ disapproves of Adams's nomination of Vans Murray, 292;
+ his dread of French Revolution, 295;
+ distrusts Adams's attempts at peace, 296;
+ approves Alien and Sedition laws, 296;
+ his defense of them, 297;
+ distressed by dissensions among Federalists, 298;
+ predicts their defeat, 298;
+ his sudden illness, 299-302;
+ death, 303.
+
+ _Character_,
+ misunderstood, 304;
+ extravagantly praised, 304;
+ disliked on account of being called faultless, 305;
+ bitterly attacked in lifetime, 306;
+ sneered at by Jefferson, 306;
+ by Pickering, 307;
+ called an Englishman, not an American, 307, 308;
+ difference of his type from that of Lincoln, 310;
+ none the less American, 311, 312;
+ compared with Hampden, 312;
+ his manners those of the times elsewhere in America, 314;
+ aristocratic, but of a non-English type, 314-316;
+ less affected by Southern limitations than his neighbors, 316;
+ early dislike of New England changed to respect, 316, 317;
+ friendly with people of humble origin, 317, 318;
+ never an enemy of democracy, 318;
+ but opposes French excesses, 318;
+ his self-directed and American training, 319, 320;
+ early conception of a nation, 321;
+ works toward national government during Revolution, 321;
+ his interest in Western expansion, 321, 322;
+ national character of his Indian policy, 322;
+ of his desire to secure free Mississippi navigation, 322;
+ of his opposition to war as a danger to Union, 323;
+ his anger at accusation of foreign subservience, 323;
+ continually asserts necessity for independent American policy,
+ 324, 325;
+ opposes foreign educational influences, 325, 326;
+ favors foundation of a national university, 326;
+ breadth and strength of his national feeling, 327;
+ absence of boastfulness about country, 328;
+ faith in it, 328;
+ charge that he was merely a figure-head, 329;
+ its injustice, 330;
+ charged with commonplaceness of intellect, 330;
+ incident of the deathbed explained, 330, 331;
+ falsity of the charge, 331;
+ inability of mere moral qualities to achieve what he did, 331;
+ charged with dullness and coldness, 332;
+ his seriousness, 333;
+ responsibility from early youth, 333;
+ his habits of keen observation, 333;
+ power of judging men, 334;
+ ability to use them for what they were worth, 335;
+ anecdote of advice to Hamilton and Meade, 335;
+ deceived only by Arnold, 336;
+ imperfect education, 337;
+ continual efforts to improve it, 337, 338;
+ modest regarding his literary ability, 339, 340;
+ interested in education, 339;
+ character of his writing, 340;
+ tastes in reading, 341;
+ modest but effective in conversation, 342;
+ his manner and interest described by Bernard, 343-347;
+ attractiveness of the picture, 347, 348;
+ his pleasure in society, 348;
+ power of paying compliments, letter to Mrs. Stockton, 349;
+ to Charles Thompson, 350;
+ to De Chastellux, 351;
+ his warmth of heart, 352;
+ extreme exactness in pecuniary matters, 352;
+ illustrative anecdotes, 353,354;
+ favorable opinion of teller of anecdotes, 356;
+ stern towards dishonesty or cowardice, 357;
+ treatment of André and Asgill, 357, 358;
+ sensitive to human suffering, 357, 358;
+ kind and courteous to poor, 359;
+ conversation with Cleaveland, 359;
+ sense of dignity in public office, 360;
+ hospitality at Mt. Vernon, 360, 361;
+ his intimate friendships, 361,362;
+ relations with Hamilton, Knox, Mason, Henry Lee, Craik, 362, 363;
+ the officers of the army, 363;
+ Trumbull, Robert and Gouverneur Morris, 363;
+ regard for and courtesy toward Franklin, 364;
+ love for Lafayette, 365;
+ care for his family, 366;
+ lasting regard for Fairfaxes, 366, 367;
+ kindness to Taft family, 367, 368;
+ destroys correspondence with his wife, 368;
+ their devoted relationship, 368;
+ care for his step-children and relatives, 369, 370;
+ charged with lack of humor, 371;
+ but never made himself ridiculous, 372;
+ not joyous in temperament, 372;
+ but had keen pleasure in sport, 373;
+ enjoyed a joke, even during Revolution, 374;
+ appreciates wit, 375;
+ writes a humorous letter, 376-378;
+ not devoid of worldly wisdom, 378, 379;
+ enjoys cards, dancing, the theatre, 380;
+ loves horses, 380;
+ thorough in small affairs as well as great, 381;
+ controversy over site of church, 381;
+ his careful domestic economy, 382;
+ love of method, 383;
+ of excellence in dress and furniture, 383, 384;
+ gives dignity to American cause, 385;
+ his personal appearance, 385;
+ statements of Houdon, 386;
+ of Ackerson, 386, 387;
+ his tremendous muscular strength, 388;
+ great personal impressiveness, 389, 390;
+ lacking in imagination, 391;
+ strong passions, 391;
+ fierce temper, 392;
+ anecdotes of outbreaks, 392;
+ his absence of self-love, 393;
+ confident in judgment of posterity, 393;
+ religious faith, 394;
+ summary and conclusion, 394, 395.
+
+ _Characteristics of_.
+ General view, ii. 304-395;
+ general admiration for, i. 1-7;
+ myths about, i. 9-12, ii. 307 ff.;
+ comparisons with Jefferson, ii. 69;
+ with Lincoln, ii. 310-312;
+ with Hampden, ii. 312, 313;
+ absence of self-seeking, i. 341;
+ affectionateness, i. 111, 285,331,345, ii. 332, 362-371;
+ agreeableness, ii. 344-347, 377;
+ Americanism, ii. 307-328;
+ aristocratic habits, ii. 314, 316;
+ business ability, i. 105, 109, ii. 5, 352, 382;
+ coldness on occasion, i. 223, 224, 263, ii. 318;
+ courage, i. 77, 78, 86, 127, 168, 292;
+ dignity, i. 81,161, ii. 52-57, 76;
+ hospitality, ii. 360;
+ impressiveness, i. 56, 83, 130, 138, 319, ii. 385;
+ indomitableness, i. 177, 181, 227;
+ judgments of men, i. 295, ii. 64, 86, 334, 335;
+ justice and sternness, i. 287, 330, ii. 203, 352-358, 389;
+ kindliness, ii. 349-356, 359;
+ lack of education, i. 62, ii. 337;
+ love of reading, i. 62, ii. 341, 342;
+ love of sport, i. 56, 98, 113-116, 118, ii. 380;
+ manners, ii. 282-283, 314;
+ military ability, i. 154, 166, 174, 183, 197, 204, 207, 239, 247,
+ 265, 267, 305-320, ii. 331;
+ modesty, i. 102, 134;
+ not a figure-head, ii. 329, 330;
+ not a prig, i. 10-12, 41-47;
+ not cold and inhuman, ii. 332, 342;
+ not dull or commonplace, ii. 330, 332;
+ not superhuman and distant, i. 9, 10, 12, ii. 304, 305;
+ open-mindedness, ii. 317;
+ passionateness, i. 58, 73, 90;
+ personal appearance, i. 57, 136, 137, ii. 282, 343, 385-389;
+ religious views, i. 321, ii. 393;
+ romantic traits, i. 95-97;
+ sense of humor, ii. 371-377;
+ silence regarding self, i. 14, 69, 70, 116, 129, 285; ii. 37, 336;
+ simplicity, i. 59, 69, 348; ii. 50, 340;
+ sobriety, i. 49, 52, 134; ii. 43, 45, 333, 373;
+ tact, i. 162, 243, 244-246;
+ temper, i. 73, 92, 110, 168, 236, 237, 260; ii. 98, 392;
+ thoroughness, i. 112, 323, 341, ii. 381.
+
+ _Political Opinions_.
+ On Alien and Sedition Acts, ii. 196;
+ American nationality, i. 191, 250, 251, 255, 262, 279, ii. 7, 61,
+ 133, 145, 324, 325, 327, 328;
+ Articles of Confederation, i. 297, ii. 17, 24;
+ bank, ii. 110, 111;
+ colonial rights, i. 120, 124-126, 130;
+ Constitution, i. 38-41;
+ democracy, ii. 317-319;
+ Democratic party, ii. 214, 239, 240, 258, 261, 267, 268;
+ disunion, ii. 22;
+ duties of the executive, ii. 190;
+ education, ii. 81, 326, 330;
+ Federalist party, ii. 71, 246, 247, 259, 260, 261, 269-274, 298;
+ finance, ii. 107, 108, 112, 122;
+ foreign relations, ii. 25, 134, 142, 145, 147, 179, 217-219, 323;
+ French Revolution, ii. 139, 140, 295, 318;
+ independence of colonies, i. 131, 159, 160;
+ Indian policy, ii. 82, 87, 88, 91, 92, 104, 105;
+ Jay treaty, ii. 184-205;
+ judiciary, i. 150;
+ nominations to office, ii. 62;
+ party, ii. 70, 222, 233, 249;
+ protection, ii. 116-122;
+ slavery, i. 106-108;
+ Stamp Act, i. 119;
+ strong government, i. 298, ii. 18, 24, 129, 130;
+ treaty power, ii. 190, 207-210;
+ Virginia and Kentucky Resolutions, ii. 266, 267;
+ Western expansion, ii. 6, 8-16, 135, 163-165, 218, 322.
+
+ Washington, George Steptoe,
+ his sons educated by Washington, ii. 370.
+
+ Washington, John, brother of George,
+ letter of Washington, to, i. 132.
+
+ Washington, Lawrence, brother of George Washington,
+ educated in England, i. 54;
+ has military career, 54;
+ returns to Virginia and builds Mt. Vernon, 54;
+ marries into Fairfax family, 54, 55;
+ goes to West Indies for his health, 62;
+ dies, leaving George guardian of his daughter, 64;
+ chief manager of Ohio Company, 65;
+ gives George military education, 65.
+
+ Washington, Lund,
+ letter of Washington to, i. 152;
+ rebuked by Washington for entertaining British, ii. 303.
+
+ Washington, Martha, widow of Daniel P. Custis,
+ meets Washington, i. 101;
+ courtship of, and marriage, 101, 102;
+ hunts with her husband, 114;
+ joins him at Boston, 151;
+ holds levees as wife of President, ii. 54;
+ during his last illness, 300;
+ her correspondence destroyed, 368;
+ her relations with her husband, 368, 369.
+
+ Washington, Mary,
+ married to Augustine Washington, i. 39;
+ mother of George Washington, 39;
+ limited education but strong character, 40, 41;
+ wishes George to earn a living, 49;
+ opposes his going to sea, 49;
+ letters to, 88;
+ visited by her son, ii. 5.
+
+ Waters, Henry E.,
+ establishes Washington pedigree, i. 32.
+
+ Wayne, Anthony,
+ defeated after Brandywine, i. 198;
+ his opinion of Germantown, 199;
+ at Monmouth urges Washington to come, 235;
+ ready to attack Stony Point, 268;
+ his successful exploit, 269;
+ joins Lafayette in Virginia, 307;
+ appointed to command against Indians, ii. 100;
+ his character, 100;
+ organizes his force, 101;
+ his march, 102;
+ defeats the Indians, 103.
+
+ Weems, Mason L.,
+ influence of his life of Washington on popular opinion, i. 10;
+ originates idea of his priggishness, 11;
+ his character, 41, 43;
+ character of his book, 42;
+ his mythical "rectorate" of Mt. Vernon, 43, 44;
+ invents anecdotes of Washington's childhood, 44;
+ folly of cherry-tree and other stories, 46;
+ their evil influence, 47.
+
+ West, the,
+ its importance realized by Washington, ii. 7-16;
+ his influence counteracted by inertia of Congress, 8;
+ forwards inland navigation, 9;
+ desires to bind East to West, 9-11, 14;
+ formation of companies, 11-13;
+ on Mississippi navigation, 14-16, 164;
+ projects of Genet in, 162;
+ its attitude understood by Washington, 163, 164;
+ Washington wishes peace in order to develop it, 218, 219, 321.
+
+ "Whiskey Rebellion,"
+ passage of excise law, ii. 123;
+ outbreaks of violence in Pennsylvania and North Carolina, 124;
+ proclamation issued warning rioters to desist, 125;
+ renewed outbreaks in Pennsylvania, 125, 126;
+ the militia called out, 127;
+ suppression of the insurrection, 128;
+ real danger of movement, 129;
+ its suppression emphasizes national authority, 129, 130;
+ supposed by Washington to have been stirred up by Democratic clubs,
+ 242.
+
+ White Plains,
+ battle at, i. 173.
+
+ Wilkinson, James,
+ brings Gates's message to Washington at Trenton, i. 180;
+ brings news of Saratoga to Congress, 220;
+ nettled at Sherman's sarcasm, discloses Conway cabal, 220;
+ quarrels with Gates, 223;
+ resigns from board of war, 223, 226;
+ leads expedition against Indians, ii. 95.
+
+ Willett, Colonel,
+ commissioner to Creeks, his success, ii. 91.
+
+ William and Mary College,
+ Washington Chancellor of, ii. 339.
+
+ Williams,
+ Washington's teacher, i. 48, 51.
+
+ Willis, Lewis,
+ story of Washington's school days, i. 95.
+
+ Wilson, James,
+ appointed to Supreme Court, ii. 72.
+
+ Wilson, James, "of England,"
+ hunts with Washington, i. 115.
+
+ Wolcott, Oliver,
+ receives Fauchet letter, ii. 195;
+ succeeds Hamilton as Secretary of Treasury, 246.
+
+ Wooster, Mrs.,
+ letter of Washington to, ii. 61.
+
+
+ YORKTOWN,
+ siege of, i. 315-318.
+
+ "Young Man's Companion,"
+ used by George Washington, origin of his rules of conduct, i. 52.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's George Washington, Vol. II, by Henry Cabot Lodge
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK GEORGE WASHINGTON, VOL. II ***
+
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+ "HTML Tidy for Windows (vers 1st March 2004), see www.w3.org" />
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+ <title>GEORGE WASHINGTON vol. II</title>
+<style type="text/css">
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+<pre>
+
+Project Gutenberg's George Washington, Vol. II, by Henry Cabot Lodge
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: George Washington, Vol. II
+
+Author: Henry Cabot Lodge
+
+Release Date: June 19, 2004 [EBook #12653]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK GEORGE WASHINGTON, VOL. II ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Juliet Sutherland, Tim Koeller and PG Distributed
+Proofreaders
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+ <p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+ <h5>American Statesmen</h5>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h1>GEORGE WASHINGTON</h1>
+
+ <h4>In Two Volumes</h4>
+
+ <h3>VOL. II.</h3>
+
+ <h4>By</h4>
+
+ <h3>HENRY CABOT LODGE</h3>
+
+ <h4>1899</h4>
+
+ <p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+ <p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+ <div class="figcenter" style="width:50%;">
+ <a href="images/illus0455.jpg"><img width="100%" src=
+ "images/illus0455.jpg" alt="MARTHA WASHINGTON" /></a><br />
+ <i>Frontispiece I</i>.<br />
+ MARTHA WASHINGTON
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="figcenter" style="width:50%;">
+ <a href="images/illus0457.jpg"><img width="100%" src=
+ "images/illus0457.jpg" alt="Mount Vernon" /></a><br />
+ <i>Frontispiece II</i>.<br />
+ Mount Vernon
+ </div>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h2>Table of Contents</h2>
+
+ <p><a href="#I">Chapter I</a> &nbsp;&mdash;&nbsp; WORKING FOR
+ UNION</p>
+
+ <p><a href="#II">Chapter II</a> &nbsp;&mdash;&nbsp; STARTING THE
+ GOVERNMENT</p>
+
+ <p><a href="#III">Chapter III</a> &nbsp;&mdash;&nbsp; DOMESTIC
+ AFFAIRS</p>
+
+ <p><a href="#IV">Chapter IV</a> &nbsp;&mdash;&nbsp; FOREIGN
+ RELATIONS</p>
+
+ <p><a href="#V">Chapter V</a> &nbsp;&mdash;&nbsp; WASHINGTON AS A
+ PARTY MAN</p>
+
+ <p><a href="#VI">Chapter VI</a> &nbsp;&mdash;&nbsp; THE LAST
+ YEARS</p>
+
+ <p><a href="#VII">Chapter VII</a> &nbsp;&mdash;&nbsp;GEORGE
+ WASHINGTON</p>
+
+ <p><a href="#INDEX">INDEX</a></p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h2>List of Illustrations</h2>
+
+ <p><a href="images/illus0455.jpg">MARTHA WASHINGTON</a></p>
+
+ <p>From the painting by Gilbert Stuart in the Museum of Fine
+ Arts, Boston. This painting is owned by the Boston Athen&aelig;um
+ and is known as the Athen&aelig;um portrait.</p>
+
+ <p>Autograph from letter written from Valley Forge, March 7,
+ 1778, now in the possession of Hon. Winslow Warren.</p>
+
+ <p><a href="images/illus0457.jpg">VIGNETTE of MOUNT
+ VERNON.</a></p>
+
+ <p>From a photograph.</p>
+
+ <p><a href="images/illus0459.jpg">WASHINGTON RESIGNING HIS
+ COMMISSION AT ANNAPOLIS</a></p>
+
+ <p>From the original painting by Trumbull in the Art Gallery of
+ Yale University.</p>
+
+ <p><a href="images/illus0461.jpg">LAFAYETTE</a></p>
+
+ <p>From a contemporary French folio engraving in the Emmet
+ collection, New York Public Library, Lenox Building.</p>
+
+ <p><a href="images/illus0463.jpg">HENRY KNOX</a></p>
+
+ <p>From the original portrait by Gilbert Stuart in the Museum of
+ Fine Arts, Boston.</p>
+
+ <p>Autograph from Winsor's "America."</p>
+
+ <p><a href="images/illus0465.jpg">NATHANAEL GREENE</a></p>
+
+ <p>From the original painting by C.W. Peale, by kind permission
+ of its present owner, Mrs. Wm. Brenton Greene, Jr., Princeton,
+ N.J.</p>
+
+ <p>Autograph from Winsor's "America."</p>
+
+ <p>&nbsp;</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h2>GEORGE WASHINGTON</h2>
+
+ <h2><a name="I" id="I"></a>CHAPTER I</h2>
+
+ <h2>WORKING FOR UNION</h2>
+
+ <p>Having resigned his commission, Washington stood not upon the
+ order of his going, but went at once to Virginia, and reached
+ Mount Vernon the next day, in season to enjoy the Christmas-tide
+ at home. It was with a deep sigh of relief that he sat himself
+ down again by his own fireside, for all through the war the one
+ longing that never left his mind was for the banks of the
+ Potomac. He loved home after the fashion of his race, but with
+ more than common intensity, and the country life was dear to him
+ in all its phases. He liked its quiet occupations and wholesome
+ sports, and, like most strong and simple natures, he loved above
+ all an open-air existence. He felt that he had earned his rest,
+ with all the temperate pleasures and employments which came with
+ it, and he fondly believed that he was about to renew the habits
+ which he had abandoned for eight weary years. Four days after his
+ return he wrote to Governor Clinton: "The scene is at last
+ closed. I feel myself eased of a load of public care. I hope to
+ spend the remainder of my days in cultivating the affections of
+ good men and in the practice of the domestic virtues." That the
+ hope was sincere we may well suppose, but that it was more than a
+ hope may be doubted. It was a wish, not a belief, for Washington
+ must have felt that there was still work which he would surely be
+ called to do. Still for the present the old life was there, and
+ he threw himself into it with eager zest, though age and care put
+ some of the former habits aside. He resumed his hunting, and
+ Lafayette sent him a pack of splendid French wolf-hounds. But
+ they proved somewhat fierce and unmanageable, and were given up,
+ and after that the following of the hounds was never resumed. In
+ other respects there was little change. The work of the
+ plantation and the affairs of the estate, much disordered by his
+ absence, once more took shape and moved on successfully under the
+ owner's eye. There were, as of old, the long days in the saddle,
+ the open house and generous hospitality, the quiet evenings, and
+ the thousand and one simple labors and enjoyments of rural life.
+ But with all this were the newer and deeper cares, born of the
+ change which had been wrought in the destiny of the country. The
+ past broke in and could not be pushed aside, the future knocked
+ at the door and demanded an answer to its questionings.</p>
+
+ <p>He had left home a distinguished Virginian; he returned one of
+ the most famous men in the world, and such celebrity brought its
+ usual penalties. Every foreigner of any position who came to the
+ country made a pilgrimage to Mount Vernon, and many Americans did
+ the same. Their coming was not allowed to alter the mode of life,
+ but they were all hospitably received, and they consumed many
+ hours of their host's precious time. Then there were the artists
+ and sculptors, who came to paint his portrait or model his bust.
+ "<i>In for a penny, in for a pound</i> is an old adage," he wrote
+ to Hopkinson in 1785. "I am so hackneyed to the touches of
+ painters' pencils that I am now altogether at their beck, and sit
+ 'like patience on a monument,' whilst they are delineating the
+ lines of my face. It is a proof, among many others, of what habit
+ and custom can accomplish." Then there were the people who
+ desired to write his memoirs, and the historians who wished to
+ have his reminiscences, in their accounts of the Revolution. Some
+ of these inquiring and admiring souls came in person, while
+ others assailed him by letter and added to the vast flood of
+ correspondence which poured in upon him by every post. His
+ correspondence, in fact, in the needless part of it, was the most
+ formidable waste of his time. He seems to have formed no correct
+ idea of his own fame and what it meant, for he did not have a
+ secretary until he found not only that he could not arrange his
+ immense mass of papers, but that he could not even keep up with
+ his daily letters. His correspondence came from all parts of his
+ own country, and of Europe as well. The French officers who had
+ been his companions in arms wrote him with affectionate interest,
+ and he was urged by them, one and all, and even by the king and
+ queen, to visit France. These were letters which he was only too
+ happy to answer, and he would fain have crossed the water in
+ response to their kindly invitation; but he professed himself too
+ old, which was a mere excuse, and objected his ignorance of the
+ language, which to a man of his temperament was a real obstacle.
+ Besides these letters of friendship, there were the schemers
+ everywhere who sought his counsel and assistance. The notorious
+ Lady Huntington, for example, pursued him with her project of
+ Christianizing the Indians by means of a missionary colony in our
+ western region, and her persistent ladyship cost him a good deal
+ of time and thought, and some long and careful letters. Then
+ there was the inventor Kumsey, with his steamboat, to which he
+ gave careful attention, as he did to everything that seemed to
+ have merit. Another class of correspondents were his officers,
+ who wanted his aid with Congress and in a thousand other ways,
+ and to these old comrades he never turned a deaf ear. In this
+ connection also came the affairs of the Society of the
+ Cincinnati. He took an active part in the formation of the
+ society, became its head, steered it through its early
+ difficulties, and finally saved it from the wreck with which it
+ was threatened by unreasoning popular prejudice. All these things
+ were successfully managed, but at much expense of time and
+ thought.</p>
+
+ <div class="figcenter" style="width:100%;">
+ <a href="images/illus0459.jpg"><img width="100%" src=
+ "images/illus0459.jpg" alt=
+ "WASHINGTON RESIGNING HIS COMMISSION AT ANNAPOLIS" /></a>
+ WASHINGTON RESIGNING HIS COMMISSION AT ANNAPOLIS
+ </div>
+
+ <p>Then again, apart from this mass of labor thrust upon him by
+ outsiders, there were his own concerns. His personal affairs
+ required looking after, and he regulated accounts, an elaborate
+ business always with him, put his farms in order, corresponded
+ with his merchants in England, and introduced agricultural
+ improvements, which always interested him deeply. He had large
+ investments in land, of which from boyhood he had been a bold and
+ sagacious purchaser. These investments had been neglected and
+ needed his personal inspection; so in September, 1784, he mounted
+ his horse, and with a companion and a servant rode away to the
+ western country to look after his property. He camped out, as in
+ the early days, and heartily enjoyed it, although reports that
+ the Indians were moving in a restless and menacing manner
+ shortened his trip, and prevented his penetrating beyond his
+ settled lands to the wild tracts which he owned to the westward.
+ Still he managed to ride some six hundred and eighty miles and
+ get a good taste of that wild life which he never ceased to love,
+ besides gathering a stock of information on many points of deeper
+ and wider interest than his own property.</p>
+
+ <p>In the midst of all these employments, too, he attended
+ closely to his domestic duties. At frequent intervals he
+ journeyed to Fredericksburg to visit his mother, who still lived,
+ and to whom he was always a dutiful and affectionate son. He
+ watched over Mrs. Washington's grandchildren, and two or three
+ nephews of his own, whose education he had undertaken, with all
+ the solicitude of a father, and at the expense again of much
+ thought and many wise letters of instruction and advice.</p>
+
+ <p>Even from this brief list it is possible to gain some idea of
+ the occupations which filled Washington's time, and the only
+ wonder is that he dealt with them so easily and effectively. Yet
+ the greatest and most important work, that which most deeply
+ absorbed his mind, and which affected the whole country, still
+ remains to be described. With all his longing for repose and
+ privacy, Washington could not separate himself from the great
+ problems which he had solved, or from the solution of the still
+ greater problems which he had done more than any man to bring
+ into existence. In reality, despite his reiterated wish for the
+ quiet of home, he never ceased to labor at the new questions
+ which confronted the country, and the old issues which were the
+ legacy of the Revolution.</p>
+
+ <p>In the latter class was the peace establishment, on which he
+ advised Congress, much in vain; for their idea of a peace
+ establishment was to get rid of the army as rapidly as possible,
+ and retain only a corporal's guard in the service of the
+ confederation. Another question was that concerning the western
+ posts. As has been already pointed out, Washington's keen eye had
+ at once detected that this was the perilous point in the treaty,
+ and he made a prompt but unavailing effort to secure these posts
+ in the first flush of good feeling when peace had just been made.
+ After he had retired he observed with regret the feebleness of
+ Congress in this matter, and he continued to write about it. He
+ wrote especially to Knox, who was in charge of the war
+ department, and advised him to establish posts on our side, since
+ we could not obtain the withdrawal of the British. This deep
+ anxiety as to the western posts was due not merely to his
+ profound distrust of the intention of England, but to his extreme
+ solicitude as to the unsettled regions of the West. He repeatedly
+ referred to the United States, even before the close of the war,
+ as an infant empire, and he saw before any one else the destined
+ growth of the country.</p>
+
+ <p>No man of that time, with the exception of Hamilton, ever
+ grasped and realized as he did the imperial future which
+ stretched before the United States. It was a difficult thing for
+ men who had been born colonists to rise to a sense of national
+ opportunities, but Washington passed at a single step from being
+ a Virginian to being an American, and in so doing he stood alone.
+ He was really and thoroughly national from the beginning of the
+ war, at a time when, except for a few oratorical phrases, no one
+ had ever thought of such a thing as a practical and living
+ question. In the same way he had passed rapidly to an accurate
+ conception of the probable growth and greatness of the country,
+ and again he stood alone. Hamilton, born outside the colonies,
+ unhampered by local prejudices and attachments, and living in
+ Washington's family, as soon as he turned his mind to the
+ subject, became, like his chief, entirely national and imperial
+ in his views; but the other American statesmen of that day, with
+ the exception of Franklin, only followed gradually and sometimes
+ reluctantly in adopting their opinions. Some of them never
+ adopted them at all, but remained imbedded in local ideas, and
+ very few got beyond the region of words and actually grasped the
+ facts with the absolutely clear perception which Washington had
+ from the outset. Thus it was that when the war closed, one of the
+ two ruling ideas in Washington's mind was to assure the future
+ which he saw opening before the country. He perceived at a glance
+ that the key and the guarantee of that future were in the wild
+ regions of the West. Hence his constant anxiety as to the western
+ posts, as to our Indian policy, and as to the maintenance of a
+ sufficient armed force upon our borders to check the aggressions
+ of Englishmen or of savages, and to secure free scope for
+ settlement. In advancing these ideas on a national scale,
+ however, he was rendered helpless by the utter weakness of
+ Congress, which even his influence was powerless to overcome. He
+ therefore began, immediately after his retreat to private life,
+ to formulate and bring into existence such practical measures as
+ were possible for the development of the West, believing that if
+ Congress could not act, the people would, if any opportunity were
+ given to their natural enterprise.</p>
+
+ <p>The scheme which he proposed was to open the western country
+ by means of inland navigation. The thought had long been in his
+ mind. It had come to him before the Revolution, and can be traced
+ back to the early days when he was making surveys, buying wild
+ lands, and meditating very deeply, but very practically, on the
+ possible commercial development of the colonies. Now the idea
+ assumed much larger proportions and a much graver aspect. He
+ perceived in it the first step toward the empire which he
+ foresaw, and when he had laid down his sword and awoke in the
+ peaceful morning at Mount Vernon, "with a strange sense of
+ freedom from official cares," he directed his attention at once
+ to this plan, in which he really could do something, despite an
+ inert Congress and a dissolving confederation. His first letter
+ on the subject was written in March, 1784, and addressed to
+ Jefferson, who was then in Congress, and who sympathized with
+ Washington's views without seeing how far they reached. He told
+ Jefferson how he despaired of government aid, and how he
+ therefore intended to revive the scheme of a company, which he
+ had started in 1775, and which had been abandoned on account of
+ the war. He showed the varying interests which it was necessary
+ to conciliate, asked Jefferson to see the governor of Maryland,
+ so that that State might be brought into the undertaking, and
+ referred to the danger of being anticipated and beaten by New
+ York, a chord of local pride which he continued to touch most
+ adroitly as the business proceeded. Very characteristically, too,
+ he took pains to call attention to the fact that by his ownership
+ of land he had a personal interest in the enterprise. He looked
+ far beyond his own lands, but he was glad to have his property
+ developed, and with his usual freedom from anything like
+ pretense, he drew attention to the fact of his personal
+ interests.</p>
+
+ <p>On his return from his tour in the autumn, he proceeded to
+ bring the matter to public attention and to the consideration of
+ the legislature. With this end in view he addressed a long letter
+ to Governor Harrison, in which he laid out his whole scheme.
+ Detroit was to be the objective point, and he indicated the
+ different routes by which inland navigation could thence be
+ obtained, thus opening the Indian trade, and affording an outlet
+ at the same time for the settlers who were sure to pour in when
+ once the fear of British aggression was removed. He dwelt
+ strongly upon the danger of Virginia losing these advantages by
+ the action of other States, and yet at the same time he suggested
+ the methods by which Maryland and Pennsylvania could be brought
+ into the plan. Then he advanced a series of arguments which were
+ purely national in their scope. He insisted on the necessity of
+ binding to the old colonies by strong ties the Western States,
+ which might easily be decoyed away if Spain or England had the
+ sense to do it. This point he argued with great force, for it was
+ now no longer a Virginian argument, but an argument for all the
+ States.</p>
+
+ <p>The practical result was that the legislature took the
+ question up, more in deference to the writer's wishes and in
+ gratitude for his services, than from any comprehension of what
+ the scheme meant. The companies were duly organized, and the
+ promoter was given a hundred and fifty shares, on the ground that
+ the legislature wished to take every opportunity of testifying
+ their sense of "the unexampled merits of George Washington
+ towards his country." Washington was much touched and not a
+ little troubled by this action. He had been willing, as he said,
+ to give up his cherished privacy and repose in order to forward
+ the enterprise. He had gone to Maryland even, and worked to
+ engage that State in the scheme, but he could not bear the idea
+ of taking money for what he regarded as part of a great public
+ policy. "I would wish," he said, "that every individual who may
+ hear that it was a favorite plan of mine may know also that I had
+ no other motive for promoting it than the advantage of which I
+ conceived it would be productive to the Union, and to this State
+ in particular, by cementing the eastern and western territory
+ together, at the same time that it will give vigor and increase
+ to our commerce, and be a convenience to our citizens."</p>
+
+ <p>"How would this matter be viewed, then, by the eye of the
+ world, and what would be the opinion of it, when it comes to be
+ related that George Washington has received twenty thousand
+ dollars and five thousand pounds sterling of the public money as
+ an interest therein?" He thought it would make him look like a
+ "pensioner or dependent" to accept this gratuity, and he recoiled
+ from the idea. There is something entirely frank and human in the
+ way in which he says "George Washington," instead of using the
+ first pronoun singular. He always saw facts as they were; he
+ understood the fact called "George Washington" as perfectly as
+ any other, and although he wanted retirement and privacy, he had
+ no mock modesty in estimating his own place in the world. At the
+ same time, while he wished to be rid of the kindly gift, he
+ shrank from putting on what he called the appearance of
+ "ostentatious disinterestedness" by refusing it. Finally he took
+ the stock and endowed two charity schools with the dividends. The
+ scheme turned out successfully, and the work still endures, like
+ the early surveys and various other things of a very different
+ kind to which Washington put his hand. In the greater forces
+ which were presently set in motion for the preservation of the
+ future empire, the inland navigation, started in Virginia,
+ dropped out of sight, and became merely one of the rills which
+ fed the mighty river. But it was the only really practical
+ movement possible at the precise moment when it was begun, and it
+ was characteristic of its author, who always found, even in the
+ most discouraging conditions, something that could be done. It
+ might be only a very little something, but still that was better
+ than nothing to the strong man ever dealing with facts as they
+ actually were on this confused earth, and not turning aside
+ because things were not as they ought to be. Thus many a battle
+ and campaign had been saved, and so inland navigation played its
+ part now. It helped, among other things, to bring Maryland and
+ Virginia together, and their combination was the first step
+ toward the Constitution of the United States. There is nothing
+ fanciful in all this. No one would pretend that the Constitution
+ of the United States was descended from Washington's James River
+ and Potomac River companies. But he worked at them with that end
+ in view, and so did what was nearest to his hand and most
+ practical toward union, empire, and the development of national
+ sentiment.</p>
+
+ <p>Ah, says some critic in critic's fashion, you are carried away
+ by your subject; you see in a simple business enterprise,
+ intended merely to open western lands, the far-reaching ideas of
+ a statesman. Perhaps our critic is right, for as one goes on
+ living with this Virginian soldier, studying his letters and his
+ thoughts, one comes to believe many things of him, and to detect
+ much meaning in his sayings and doings. Let us, however, show our
+ evidence at least. Here is what he wrote to his friend Humphreys
+ a year after his scheme was afoot: "My attention is more
+ immediately engaged in a project which I think big with great
+ political as well as commercial consequences to the States,
+ especially the middle ones;" and then he went on to argue the
+ necessity of fastening the Western States to the Atlantic
+ seaboard and thus thwarting Spain and England. This looks like
+ more than a money-making scheme; in fact, it justifies all that
+ has been said, especially if read in connection with certain
+ other letters of this period. Great political results, as well as
+ lumber and peltry, were what Washington intended to float along
+ his rivers and canals.</p>
+
+ <p>In this same letter to Humphreys he touched also on another
+ point in connection with the development of the West, which was
+ of vast importance to the future of the country, and was even
+ then agitating men's minds. He said: "I may be singular in my
+ ideas, but they are these: that, to open a door to, and make easy
+ the way for those settlers to the westward (who ought to advance
+ regularly and compactly), before we make any stir about the
+ navigation of the Mississippi, and before our settlements are far
+ advanced towards that river, would be our true line of policy."
+ Again he wrote: "However singular the opinion may be, I cannot
+ divest myself of it, that the navigation of the Mississippi,
+ <i>at this time</i> [1785], ought to be no object with us. On the
+ contrary, until we have a little time allowed to open and make
+ easy the ways between the Atlantic States and the western
+ territory, the obstructions had better remain." He was right in
+ describing himself as "singular" in his views on this matter,
+ which just then was exciting much attention.</p>
+
+ <p>At that time indeed much feeling existed, and there were many
+ sharp divisions about the Mississippi question. One party, for
+ the sake of a commercial treaty with Spain, and to get a
+ troublesome business out of the way, was ready to give up our
+ claims to a free navigation of the great river; and this was
+ probably the prevalent sentiment in Congress, for to most of the
+ members the Mississippi seemed a very remote affair indeed. On
+ the other side was a smaller and more violent party, which was
+ for obtaining the free navigation immediately and at all hazards,
+ and was furious at the proposition to make such a sacrifice as
+ its opponents proposed. Finally, there was Spain herself
+ intriguing to get possession of the West, holding out free
+ navigation as a bait to the settlers of Kentucky, and keeping
+ paid agents in that region to foster her schemes. Washington saw
+ too far and too clearly to think for one moment of giving up the
+ navigation of the Mississippi, but he also perceived what no one
+ else seems to have thought of, that free navigation at that
+ moment would give the western settlements "the habit of trade"
+ with New Orleans before they had formed it with the Atlantic
+ seaboard, and would thus detach them from the United States. He
+ wished, therefore, to have the Mississippi question left open,
+ and all our claims reserved, so that trade by the river should be
+ obstructed until we had time to open our inland navigation and
+ bind 'the western people to us by ties too strong to be broken.
+ The fear that the river would be lost by waiting did not disturb
+ him in the least, provided our claims were kept alive. He wrote
+ to Lee in June, 1786: "Whenever the new States become so
+ populous, and so extended to the westward, as really to need it,
+ there will be no power which can deprive them of the use of the
+ Mississippi." Again, a year later, while the convention was
+ sitting in Philadelphia, he said: "My sentiments with respect to
+ the navigation of the Mississippi have been long fixed, and are
+ not dissimilar to those which are expressed in your letter. I
+ have ever been of opinion that the true policy of the Atlantic
+ States, instead of contending prematurely for the free navigation
+ of that river (which eventually, and perhaps as soon as it will
+ be our true interest to obtain it, must happen), would be to open
+ and improve the natural communications with the western country."
+ The event justified his sagacity in all respects, for the
+ bickerings went on until the United States were able to compel
+ Spain to give what was wanted to the western communities, which
+ by that time had been firmly bound to those of the Atlantic
+ coast.</p>
+
+ <p>Much as Washington thought about holding fast the western
+ country, there was yet one idea that overruled it as well as all
+ others. There was one plan which he knew would be a quick
+ solution of the dangers and difficulties for which inland
+ navigation and trade connections were at best but palliatives. He
+ had learned by bitter experience, as no other man had learned,
+ the vital need and value of union. He felt it as soon as he took
+ command of the army, and it rode like black care behind him from
+ Cambridge to Yorktown. He had hoped something from the
+ confederation, but he soon saw that it was as worthless as the
+ utter lack of system which it replaced, and amounted merely to
+ substituting one kind of impotence and confusion for another.
+ Others might be deceived by phrases as to nationality and a
+ general government, but he had dwelt among hard facts, and he
+ knew that these things did not exist. He knew that what passed
+ for them, stood in their place and wore their semblance, were
+ merely temporary creations born of the common danger, and doomed,
+ when the pressure of war was gone, to fall to pieces in
+ imbecility and inertness. To the lack of a proper union, which
+ meant to his mind national and energetic government, he
+ attributed the failures of the campaigns, the long-drawn
+ miseries, and in a word the needless prolongation of the
+ Revolution. He saw, too, that what had been so nearly ruinous in
+ war would be absolutely so in peace, and before the treaty was
+ actually signed he had begun to call attention to the great
+ question on the right settlement of which the future of the
+ country depended.</p>
+
+ <p>To Hamilton he wrote on March 4, 1783: "It is clearly my
+ opinion, unless Congress have powers competent to all general
+ purposes, that the distresses we have encountered, the expense we
+ have incurred, and the blood we have spilt, will avail us
+ nothing." Again he wrote to Hamilton, a few weeks later: "My wish
+ to see the union of these States established upon liberal and
+ permanent principles, and inclination to contribute my mite in
+ pointing out the defects of the present constitution, are equally
+ great. All my private letters have teemed with these sentiments,
+ and whenever this topic has been the subject of conversation, I
+ have endeavored to diffuse and enforce them." His circular letter
+ to the governors of the States at the close of the war, which was
+ as eloquent as it was forcible, was devoted to urging the
+ necessity of a better central government. "With this conviction,"
+ he said, "of the importance of the present crisis, silence in me
+ would be a crime. I will therefore speak to your Excellency the
+ language of freedom and of sincerity without disguise.... There
+ are four things which I humbly conceive are essential to the
+ well-being, I may even venture to say, to the existence, of the
+ United States, as an independent power:&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>"First. An indissoluble union of the States under one federal
+ head.</p>
+
+ <p>"Second. A regard to public justice.</p>
+
+ <p>"Third. The adoption of a proper peace establishment; and,</p>
+
+ <p>"Fourth. The prevalence of that pacific and friendly
+ disposition among the people of the United States, which will
+ induce them to forget their local prejudices and policies; to
+ make those mutual concessions which are requisite to the general
+ prosperity; and in some instances to sacrifice their individual
+ advantages to the interest of the community." The same appeal
+ went forth again in his last address to the army, when he said:
+ "Although the general has so frequently given it as his opinion,
+ in the most public and explicit manner, that unless the
+ principles of the federal government were properly supported, and
+ the powers of the Union increased, the honor, dignity, and
+ justice of the nation would be lost forever; yet he cannot help
+ repeating on this occasion so interesting a sentiment, and
+ leaving it as his last injunction to every soldier, who may view
+ the subject in the same serious point of light, to add his best
+ endeavors to those of his worthy fellow-citizens towards
+ effecting those great and valuable purposes on which our very
+ existence as a nation so materially depends."</p>
+
+ <p>These two papers were the first strong public appeals for
+ union. The letter to the governors argued the question
+ elaborately, and was intended for the general public. The address
+ to the army was simply a watchword and last general order; for
+ the army needed no arguments to prove the crying need of better
+ government. Before this, Hamilton had written his famous letters
+ to Duane and Morris, and Madison was just beginning to turn his
+ thoughts toward the problem of federal government; but with these
+ exceptions Washington stood alone. In sending out these two
+ papers he began the real work that led to the Constitution. What
+ he said was read and heeded throughout the country, for at the
+ close of the war his personal influence was enormous, and with
+ the army his utterances were those of an oracle. By his appeal he
+ made each officer and soldier a missionary in the cause of the
+ Union, and by his arguments to the governors he gave ground and
+ motive for a party devoted to procuring better government. Thus
+ he started the great movement which, struggling through many
+ obstacles, culminated in the Constitution and the union of the
+ States. No other man could have done it, for no one but
+ Washington had a tithe of the influence necessary to arrest
+ public attention; and, save Hamilton, no other man then had even
+ begun to understand the situation which Washington grasped so
+ easily and firmly in all its completeness.</p>
+
+ <p>He sent out these appeals as his last words to his countrymen
+ at the close of their conflict; but he had no intention of
+ stopping there. He had written and spoken, as he said, to every
+ one on every occasion upon this topic, and he continued to do so
+ until the work was done. He had no sooner laid aside the military
+ harness than he began at once to push on the cause of union. In
+ the bottom of his heart he must have known that his work was but
+ half done, and with the same pen with which he reiterated his
+ intention to live in repose and privacy, and spend his declining
+ years beneath his own vine and fig-tree, he wrote urgent appeals
+ and wove strong arguments addressed to leaders in every State. He
+ had not been at home five days before he wrote to the younger
+ Trumbull, congratulating him on his father's vigorous message in
+ behalf of better federal government, which had not been very well
+ received by the Connecticut legislature. He spoke of "the
+ jealousies and contracted temper" of the States, but avowed his
+ belief that public sentiment was improving. "Everything," he
+ concluded, "my dear Trumbull, will come right at last, as we have
+ often prophesied. My only fear is that we shall lose a little
+ reputation first." A fortnight later he wrote to the governor of
+ Virginia: "That the prospect before us is, as you justly observe,
+ fair, none can deny; but what use we shall make of it is
+ exceedingly problematical; not but that I believe all things will
+ come right at last, but like a young heir come a little
+ prematurely to a large inheritance, we shall wanton and run riot
+ until we have brought our reputation to the brink of ruin, and
+ then like him shall have to labor with the current of opinion,
+ when compelled, perhaps, to do what prudence and common policy
+ pointed out as plain as any problem in Euclid in the first
+ instance." The soundness of the view is only equaled by the
+ accuracy of the prediction. He might five years later have
+ repeated this sentence, word for word, only altering the tenses,
+ and he would have rehearsed exactly the course of events.</p>
+
+ <p>While he wrote thus he keenly watched Congress, and marked its
+ sure and not very gradual decline. He did what he could to bring
+ about useful measures, and saw them one after the other come to
+ naught. He urged the impost scheme, and felt that its failure was
+ fatal to the financial welfare of the country, on which so much
+ depended. He always was striving to do the best with existing
+ conditions, but the hopelessness of every effort soon satisfied
+ him that it was a waste of time and energy. So he turned again in
+ the midst of his canal schemes to renew his exhortations to
+ leading men in the various States on the need of union as the
+ only true solution of existing troubles.</p>
+
+ <p>To James McHenry, of Maryland, he wrote in August, 1785: "I
+ confess to you candidly that I can foresee no evil greater than
+ disunion; than those unreasonable jealousies which are
+ continually poisoning our minds and filling them with imaginary
+ evils for the prevention of real ones." To William Grayson of
+ Virginia, then a member of Congress, he wrote at the same time:
+ "I have ever been a friend to adequate congressional powers;
+ consequently I wish to see the ninth article of the confederation
+ amended and extended. Without these powers we cannot support a
+ national character, and must appear contemptible in the eyes of
+ Europe. But to you, my dear Sir, I will candidly confess that in
+ my opinion it is of little avail to give them to Congress." He
+ was already clearly of opinion that the existing system was
+ hopeless, and the following spring he wrote still more sharply as
+ to the state of public affairs to Henry Lee, in Congress. "My
+ sentiments," he said, "with respect to the federal government are
+ well known. Publicly and privately have they been communicated
+ without reserve; but my opinion is that there is more wickedness
+ than ignorance in the conduct of the States, or, in other words,
+ in the conduct of those who have too much influence in the
+ government of them; and until the curtain is withdrawn, and the
+ private views and selfish principles upon which these men act are
+ exposed to public notice, I have little hope of amendment without
+ another convulsion."</p>
+
+ <p>He did not confine himself, however, to letters, important as
+ the work done in this way was, but used all his influence toward
+ practical measures outside of Congress, of whose action he quite
+ despaired. The plan for a commercial agreement between Maryland
+ and Virginia was concerted at Mount Vernon, and led to a call to
+ all the States to meet at Annapolis for the same object. This, of
+ course, received Washington's hearty approval and encouragement,
+ but he evidently regarded it, although important, as merely a
+ preliminary step to something wider and better. He wrote to
+ Lafayette describing the proposed gathering at Annapolis, and
+ added: "A general convention is talked of by many for the purpose
+ of revising and correcting the defects of the federal government;
+ but whilst this is the wish of some, it is the dread of others,
+ from an opinion that matters are not yet sufficiently ripe for
+ such an event." This expressed his own feeling, for although he
+ was entirely convinced that only a radical reform would do, he
+ questioned whether the time had yet arrived, and whether things
+ had become bad enough, to make such a reform either possible or
+ lasting. He was chiefly disturbed because he felt that there was
+ "more wickedness than ignorance mixed in our councils," and he
+ grew more and more anxious as public affairs declined without
+ apparently producing a reaction. The growing contempt shown by
+ foreign nations and the arrogant conduct of Great Britain
+ especially alarmed him, while the rapid sinking of the national
+ reputation stung him to the quick. "I do not conceive," he wrote
+ to Jay, in August, 1786, "we can exist long as a nation without
+ having lodged somewhere a power which will pervade the whole
+ Union in as energetic a manner as the authority of the state
+ governments extends over the several States." Thus with unerring
+ judgment he put his finger on the vital point in the whole
+ question, which was the need of a national government that should
+ deal with the individual citizens of the whole country and not
+ with the States. "To be fearful," he continued, "of investing
+ Congress, constituted as that body is, with ample authorities for
+ national purposes, appears to me the very climax of popular
+ absurdity and madness.... Requisitions are actually little better
+ than a jest and a byword throughout the land. If you tell the
+ legislatures they have violated the treaty of peace, and invaded
+ the prerogatives of the confederacy, they will laugh in your
+ face.... It is much to be feared, as you observe, that the better
+ kind of people, being disgusted with the circumstances, will have
+ their minds prepared for any revolution whatever.... I am told
+ that even respectable characters speak of a monarchical
+ government without horror. From thinking proceeds speaking;
+ thence to acting is often but a single step. But how irrevocable
+ and tremendous! What a triumph for our enemies to verify their
+ predictions!... It is not my business to embark again upon a sea
+ of troubles. Nor could it be expected that my sentiments and
+ opinions would have much weight on the minds of my countrymen.
+ They have been neglected, though given as a last legacy in the
+ most solemn manner. I had then perhaps some claims to public
+ attention. I consider myself as having none at present."</p>
+
+ <p>It is interesting to observe the ease and certainty with
+ which, in dealing with the central question, he grasped all
+ phases of the subject and judged of the effect of the existing
+ weakness with regard to every relation of the country and to the
+ politics of each State. He pointed out again and again the manner
+ in which we were exposed to foreign hostility, and analyzed the
+ designs of England, rightly detecting a settled policy on her
+ part to injure and divide where she had failed to conquer. Others
+ were blind to the meaning of the English attitude as to the
+ western posts, commerce, and international relations. Washington
+ brought it to the attention of our leading men, educating them on
+ this as on other points, and showing, too, the stupidity of Great
+ Britain in her attempt to belittle the trade of a country which,
+ as he wrote Lafayette in prophetic vein, would one day "have
+ weight in the scale of empires."</p>
+
+ <p>He followed with the same care the course of events in the
+ several States. In them all he resisted the craze for issuing
+ irredeemable paper money, writing to his various correspondents,
+ and urging energetic opposition to this specious and pernicious
+ form of public dishonesty. It was to Massachusetts, however, that
+ his attention was most strongly attracted by the social disorders
+ which culminated in the Shays rebellion. There the miserable
+ condition of public affairs was bearing bitter fruit, and
+ Washington watched the progress of the troubles with profound
+ anxiety. He wrote to Lee: "You talk, my good sir, of employing
+ influence to appease the present tumults in Massachusetts. I know
+ not where that influence is to be found, or, if attainable, that
+ it would be a proper remedy for the disorders. <i>Influence</i>
+ is not <i>government</i>. Let us have a government by which our
+ lives, liberties, and properties will be secured, or let us know
+ the worst at once." Through "all this mist of intoxication and
+ folly," however, Washington saw that the Shays insurrection would
+ probably be the means of frightening the indifferent, and of
+ driving those who seemed impervious to every appeal to reason
+ into an active support of some better form of government. He
+ rightly thought that riot and bloodshed would prove convincing
+ arguments.</p>
+
+ <p>In order to understand the utter demoralization of society,
+ politics, and public opinion at that time, the offspring of a
+ wasting civil war and of colonial habits of thought, it is
+ interesting to contrast the attitude of Washington with that of
+ another distinguished American in regard to the Shays rebellion.
+ While Washington was looking solemnly at this manifestation of
+ weakness and disorder, and was urging strong measures with
+ passionate vehemence, Jefferson was writing from Paris in the
+ flippant vein of the fashionable French theorists, and uttering
+ such ineffable nonsense as the famous sentence about "once in
+ twenty years watering the tree of liberty with the blood of
+ tyrants." There could be no better illustration of what
+ Washington was than this contrast between the man of words and
+ the man of action, between the astute leader of a party, the
+ shrewd manager of men, and the silent leader of armies, the
+ master builder of states and governments.</p>
+
+ <p>I have followed Washington through the correspondence of this
+ time with some minuteness, because it is the only way by which
+ his work in overcoming the obstacles in the path to good
+ government can be seen. He held no public office; he had no means
+ of reaching the popular ear. He was neither a professional orator
+ nor a writer of pamphlets, and the press of that day, if he had
+ controlled it, had no power to mould or direct public thought.
+ Yet, despite these obstacles, he set himself to develop public
+ opinion in favor of a better government, and he worked at this
+ difficult and impalpable task without ceasing, from the day that
+ he resigned from the army until he was called to the presidency
+ of the United States. He did it by means of private letters, a
+ feeble instrument to-day, but much more effective then. Jefferson
+ never made speeches nor published essays, but he built up a great
+ party, and carried himself into power as its leader by means of
+ letters. In the same fashion Washington started the scheme for
+ internal waterways, in order to bind the East and the West
+ together, set on foot the policy of commercial agreements between
+ the States, and argued on the "imperial theme" with leading men
+ everywhere. A study of these letters reveals a strong, logical,
+ and deliberate working towards the desired end. There was no
+ scattering fire. Whether he was writing of canals, or the
+ Mississippi, or the Western posts, or paper money, or the impost,
+ or the local disorders, he always was arguing and urging union
+ and an energetic central government. These letters went to the
+ leaders of thought and opinion, and were quoted and passed from
+ hand to hand. They brought immediately to the cause all the
+ soldiers and officers of the army, and they aroused and convinced
+ the strongest and ablest men in every State. Washington's
+ personal influence was very great, something we of this
+ generation, with a vast territory and seventy millions of people,
+ cannot readily understand. To many persons his word was law; to
+ all that was best in the community, everything he said had
+ immense weight. This influence he used with care and without
+ waste. Every blow he struck went home. It is impossible to
+ estimate just how much he effected, but it is safe to say that it
+ is to Washington, aided first by Hamilton and then by Madison,
+ that we owe the development of public opinion and the formation
+ of the party which devised and carried the Constitution. Events
+ of course worked with them, but they used events, and did not
+ suffer the golden opportunities, which without them would have
+ been lost, to slip by.</p>
+
+ <p>When Washington wrote of the Shays rebellion to Lee, the
+ movement toward a better union, which he had begun, was on the
+ brink of success. That ill-starred insurrection became, as he
+ foresaw, a powerful spur to the policy started at Mount Vernon,
+ and adopted by Virginia and Maryland. From this had come the
+ Annapolis convention, and thence the call for another convention
+ at Philadelphia. As soon as the word went abroad that a general
+ convention was to be held, the demand for Washington as a
+ delegate was heard on all sides. At first he shrank from it.
+ Despite the work which he had been doing, and which he must have
+ known would bring him once more into public service, he still
+ clung to the vision of home life which he had brought with him
+ from the army. November 18, 1786, he wrote to Madison, that from
+ a sense of obligation he should go to the convention, were it not
+ that he had declined on account of his retirement, age, and
+ rheumatism to be at a meeting of the Cincinnati at the same time
+ and place. But no one heeded him, and Virginia elected him
+ unanimously to head her delegation at Philadelphia. He wrote to
+ Governor Randolph, acknowledging the honor, but reiterating what
+ he had said to Madison, and urging the choice of some one else in
+ his place. Still Virginia held the question open, and on February
+ 3 he wrote to Knox that his private intention was not to attend.
+ The pressure continued, and, as usual when the struggle drew
+ near, the love of battle and the sense of duty began to reassert
+ themselves. March 8 he again wrote to Knox that he had not meant
+ to come, but that the question had occurred to him, "Whether my
+ non-attendance in the convention will not be considered as
+ dereliction of republicanism; nay, more, whether other motives
+ may not, however injuriously, be ascribed for my not exerting
+ myself on this occasion in support of it;" and therefore he
+ wished to be informed as to the public expectation on the matter.
+ On March 28 he wrote again to Randolph that ill-health might
+ prevent his going, and therefore it would be well to appoint some
+ one in his place. April 2 he said that if representation of the
+ States was to be partial, or powers cramped, he did not want to
+ be a sharer in the business. "If the delegates assemble," he
+ wrote, "with such powers as will enable the convention to probe
+ the defects of the constitution to the bottom and point out
+ radical cures, it would be an honorable employment; otherwise
+ not." This idea of inefficiency and failure in the convention had
+ long been present to his mind, and he had already said that, if
+ their powers were insufficient, the convention should go boldly
+ over and beyond them and make a government with the means of
+ coercion, and able to enforce obedience, without which it would
+ be, in his opinion, quite worthless. Thus he pondered on the
+ difficulties, and held back his acceptance of the post; but when
+ the hour of action drew near, the rheumatism and the misgivings
+ alike disappeared before the inevitable, and Washington arrived
+ in Philadelphia, punctual as usual, on May 13, the day before the
+ opening of the convention.</p>
+
+ <p>The other members were by no means equally prompt, and a week
+ elapsed before a bare quorum was obtained and the convention
+ enabled to organize. In this interval of waiting there appears to
+ have been some informal discussion among the members present,
+ between those who favored an entirely new Constitution and those
+ who timidly desired only half-way measures. On one of these
+ occasions Washington is reported by Gouverneur Morris, in a
+ eulogy delivered twelve years later, to have said: "It is too
+ probable that no plan we propose will be adopted. Perhaps another
+ dreadful conflict is to be sustained. If, to please the people,
+ we offer what we ourselves disapprove, how can we afterwards
+ defend our work? Let us raise a standard to which the wise and
+ honest can repair. The event is in the hand of God." The language
+ is no doubt that of Morris, speaking from memory and in a highly
+ rhetorical vein, but we may readily believe that the quotation
+ accurately embodied Washington's opinion, and that he took this
+ high ground at the outset, and strove from the beginning to
+ inculcate upon his fellow-members the absolute need of bold and
+ decisive action. The words savor of the orator who quoted them,
+ but the noble and courageous sentiment which they express is
+ thoroughly characteristic of the man to whom they were
+ attributed.<a id="footnotetag1" name="footnotetag1"></a><a href=
+ "#footnote1"><sup>1</sup></a></p>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote1" name="footnote1"></a>[<b>Footnote 1:</b>
+ <a href="#footnotetag1">(return)</a> It is necessary to say a
+ few words in regard to this quotation of Washington's words
+ made by Morris, because both Mr. Bancroft (<i>History of the
+ Constitution</i>, ii. 8) and Mr. John Fiske (<i>The Critical
+ Period of American History</i>, p. 232) quote them as if they
+ were absolutely and verbally authentic. It is perfectly certain
+ that from May 25 to September 17 Washington spoke but once;
+ that is, he spoke but once in the convention after it became
+ such by organization. This point is determined by Madison's
+ statement (Notes, in. 1600), that when Washington took the
+ floor in behalf of Gorham's amendment, "it was the only occasion
+ on which the president entered <i>at all</i> into the
+ discussions of the convention." (The italics are mine.) I have
+ examined the manuscript at the State Department, and these
+ words are written in Madison's own hand in the body of the text
+ and inclosed in brackets. Madison was the most accurate of men.
+ His notes are only abstracts of what was said, but he was never
+ absent from the convention, and there can be no question that
+ if Washington had uttered the words attributed to him by
+ Morris, a speech so important would have been given as fully as
+ possible, and Madison would not have said distinctly that the
+ Gorham amendment was the only occasion when the president
+ entered into the discussions of the convention.
+
+ <p>It is, therefore, certain that Washington said nothing in
+ the convention except on the occasion of the Gorham amendment,
+ and Mr. Bancroft rightly assigns the Morris quotation to some
+ time during the week which elapsed between the date fixed for
+ the assembling of the convention and that on which a quorum of
+ States was obtained. The words given by Morris, if uttered at
+ all, must have been spoken informally in the way of
+ conversation before there was any convention, strictly
+ speaking, and of course before Washington was chosen president.
+ Mr. Fiske, who devotes a page to these sentences from the
+ eulogy, describes Washington as rising from his president's
+ chair and addressing the convention with great solemnity. There
+ is no authority whatever to show that he rose from the chair to
+ address the other delegates, and, if he used the words quoted
+ by Morris, he was certainly not president of the convention
+ when he did so. The latter blunder, however, is Morris's own,
+ and in making it he contradicts himself. These are his words:
+ "He is their president. It is a question previous to their
+ first meeting what course shall be pursued." In other words, he
+ was their president before they had met and chosen a president.
+ This is a fair illustration of the loose and rhetorical
+ character of the passage in which Washington's admonition is
+ quoted. The entire paragraph, with its mixture of tenses
+ arising from the use of the historical present which Morris's
+ classical fancies led him to employ, is, in fact, purely
+ rhetorical, and has only the authority due to performances of
+ that character. It seems to me impossible, therefore, to fairly
+ suppose that the words quoted by Morris were anything more than
+ his own presentation of a sentiment which he, no doubt, heard
+ Washington urge frequently and forcibly. Even in this limited
+ acceptation his account is both interesting and valuable, as
+ indicating Washington's opinion and the tone he took with his
+ fellow-members; but this, I think, is the utmost weight that
+ can be attached to it. I have discussed the point thus minutely
+ because two authorities so distinguished as Mr. Bancroft and
+ Mr. Fiske have laid so much stress on the words given by
+ Morris, and have seemed to me to accord to them a greater
+ weight and a higher authenticity than the facts warrant.
+ Morris's eulogy on Washington was delivered in New York, and
+ may be found most readily in a little volume entitled
+ <i>Washingtoniana</i> (p. 110), published at Lancaster in
+ 1802.]</p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <p>When a quorum was finally obtained, Washington was unanimously
+ chosen to preside over the convention; and there he sat during
+ the sessions of four months, silent, patient, except on a single
+ occasion,<a id="footnotetag1-2" name=
+ "footnotetag1-2"></a><a href="#footnote1-2"><sup>1</sup></a>
+ taking no part in debate, but guiding the business, and using all
+ his powers with steady persistence to compass the great end. The
+ debates of that remarkable body have been preserved in outline in
+ the full and careful notes of Madison. Its history has been
+ elaborately written, and the arguments and opinions of its
+ members have been minutely examined and unsparingly criticised.
+ We are still ignorant, and shall always remain ignorant, of just
+ how much was due to Washington for the final completion of the
+ work. His general views and his line of action are clearly to be
+ seen in his letters and in the words attributed to him by Morris.
+ That he labored day and night for success we know, and that his
+ influence with his fellow-members was vast we also know, but the
+ rest we can only conjecture. There came a time when everything
+ was at a standstill, and when it looked as if no agreement could
+ be reached by the men representing so many conflicting interests.
+ Hamilton had made his great speech, and, finding the vote of his
+ State cast against him by his two colleagues on every question,
+ had gone home in a frame of mind which we may easily believe was
+ neither very contented nor very sanguine. Even Franklin, most
+ hopeful and buoyant of men, was nearly ready to despair.
+ Washington himself wrote to Hamilton, on July 10: "When I refer
+ you to the state of the counsels which prevailed at the period
+ you left this city, and add that they are now, if possible, in a
+ worse train than ever, you will find but little ground on which
+ the hope of a good establishment can be formed. In a word, I
+ almost despair of seeing a favorable issue to the proceedings of
+ our convention, and do therefore repent having had any agency in
+ the business." Matters were certainly in a bad state when
+ Washington could write in this strain, and when his passion for
+ success was so cooled that he repented of agency in the business.
+ There was much virtue, however, in that little word "almost." He
+ did not quite despair yet, and, after his fashion, he held on
+ with grim tenacity. We know what the compromises finally were,
+ and how they were brought about, but we can never do exact
+ justice to the iron will which held men together when all
+ compromises seemed impossible, and which even in the darkest hour
+ would not wholly despair. All that can be said is, that without
+ the influence and the labors of Washington the convention of
+ 1787, in all probability, would have failed of success.</p>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote1-2" name="footnote1-2"></a>[<b>Footnote
+ 1:</b><a href="#footnotetag1-2">(return)</a> Just at the close
+ of the convention, when the Constitution in its last draft was
+ in the final stage and on the eve of adoption, Mr. Gorham of
+ Massachusetts moved to amend by reducing the limit of
+ population in a congressional district from forty to thirty
+ thousand. Washington took the floor and argued briefly and
+ modestly in favor of the change. His mere request was
+ sufficient, and the amendment was unanimously adopted.]
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <p>At all events it did not fail, and after much tribulation the
+ work was done. On September 17, 1787, a day ever to be memorable,
+ Washington affixed his bold and handsome signature to the
+ Constitution of the United States. Tradition has it that as he
+ stood by the table, pen in hand, he said: "Should the States
+ reject this excellent Constitution, the probability is that
+ opportunity will never be offered to cancel another in peace; the
+ next will be drawn in blood." Whether the tradition is well or
+ ill founded, the sentence has the ring of truth. A great work had
+ been accomplished. If it were cast aside, Washington knew that
+ the sword and not the pen would make the next Constitution, and
+ he regarded that awful alternative with dread. He signed first,
+ and was followed by all the members present, with three notable
+ exceptions. Then the delegates dined together at the city tavern,
+ and took a cordial leave of each other. "After which," the
+ president of the convention wrote in his diary, "I returned to my
+ lodgings, did some business with, and received the papers from,
+ the secretary of the convention, and retired to meditate upon the
+ momentous work which had been executed." It is a simple sentence,
+ but how much it means! The world would be glad to-day to know
+ what the thoughts were which filled Washington's mind as he sat
+ alone in the quiet of that summer afternoon, with the new
+ Constitution lying before him. But he was then as ever silent. He
+ did not go alone to his room to exhibit himself on paper for the
+ admiration of posterity. He went there to meditate for his own
+ guidance on what had been done for the benefit of his country.
+ The city bells had rung a joyful chime when he arrived four
+ months before. Ought they to ring again with a new gladness, or
+ should they toll for the death of bright hopes, now the task was
+ done? Washington was intensely human. In that hour of silent
+ thought his heart must have swelled with a consciousness that he
+ had led his people through a successful Revolution, and now again
+ from the darkness of political confusion and dissolution to the
+ threshold of a new existence. But at the same time he never
+ deceived himself. The new Constitution was but an experiment and
+ an opportunity. Would the States accept it? And if they accepted
+ it, would they abide by it? Was this instrument of government,
+ wrought out so painfully, destined to go to pieces after a few
+ years of trial, or was it to prove strong enough to become the
+ charter of a nation and hold the States together indissolubly
+ against all the shocks of politics and revolution? Washington,
+ with his foresight and strong national instinct, plainly saw
+ these momentous questions, somewhat dim then, although clear to
+ all the world to-day. We can guess how solemnly he thought about
+ them as he meditated alone in his room on that September
+ afternoon. Whatever his reflections, his conclusions were simple.
+ He made up his mind that the only chance for the country lay in
+ the adoption of the new scheme, but he was sober enough in his
+ opinions as to the Constitution itself. He said of it to
+ Lafayette the day after the signing: "It is the result of four
+ months' deliberation. It is now a child of fortune, to be
+ fostered by some and buffeted by others. What will be the general
+ opinion or the reception of it is not for me to decide; nor shall
+ I say anything for or against it. If it be good, I suppose it
+ will work its way; if bad, it will recoil on the framers." We
+ catch sight here of the old theory that his public life was at an
+ end, and now, when this exceptional duty had been performed, that
+ he would retire once more to remote privacy. This fancy, as well
+ as the extremely philosophical mood about the fate of the
+ Constitution, apparent in this letter, soon disappeared. Within a
+ week he wrote to Henry, in whom he probably already suspected the
+ most formidable opponent of the new plan in Virginia: "I wish the
+ Constitution, which is offered, had been more perfect; but I
+ sincerely believe it is the best that could be obtained at this
+ time, and as a constitutional door is opened for amendments
+ hereafter, the adoption of it under the present circumstances of
+ the Union is, in my opinion, desirable." Copies of this letter
+ were sent to Harrison and Nelson, and the correspondence thus
+ started soon increased rapidly. He wrote to Hamilton and Madison
+ to counsel with them as to the prospects of the Constitution, and
+ to Knox to supply him with arguments and urge him to energetic
+ work. By January of the new year the tone of indifference and
+ doubt manifested in the letter to Lafayette had quite gone, and
+ we find him writing to Governor Randolph, in reply to that
+ gentleman's objections: "There are some things in the new form, I
+ will readily acknowledge, which never did, and I am persuaded
+ never will, obtain my cordial approbation, but I did then
+ conceive and do now most firmly believe that in the aggregate it
+ is the best Constitution that can be obtained at this epoch, and
+ that this or a dissolution of the Union awaits our choice, and is
+ the only alternative before us. Thus believing, I had not, nor
+ have I now, any hesitation in deciding on which to lean."</p>
+
+ <p>Thus the few letters to a few friends extended to many letters
+ to many friends, and traveled into every State. They all urged
+ the necessity of adopting the Constitution as the best that could
+ be obtained. What Washington's precise objections to the
+ Constitution were is not clear. In a general way it was not
+ energetic enough to come up to his ideal, but he never
+ particularized in his criticisms. He may have admitted the
+ existence of defects in order simply to disarm opposition, and
+ doubtless he, like most of the framers, was by no means
+ completely satisfied with his work. But he brushed all faults
+ aside, and drove steadily forward to the great end in view. He
+ was as far removed as possible from that highly virtuous and very
+ ineffective class of persons who will not support anything that
+ is not perfect, and who generally contrive to do more harm than
+ all the avowed enemies of sound government. Washington did not
+ stop to worry over and argue about details, but sought steadily
+ to bring to pass the main object at which he aimed. As he had
+ labored for the convention, so he now labored for the
+ Constitution, and his letters to his friends not only had great
+ weight in forming a Federal party and directing its movements,
+ but extracts from them were quoted and published, thus exerting a
+ direct and powerful influence on public opinion.</p>
+
+ <p>He made himself deeply felt in this way everywhere, but of
+ course more in his own State than anywhere else. His confidence
+ at first in regard to Virginia changed gradually to an intense
+ and well-grounded anxiety, and he not only used every means, as
+ the conflict extended, to strengthen his friends and gain votes,
+ but he received and circulated personally copies of "The
+ Federalist," in order to educate public opinion. The contest in
+ the Virginia convention was for a long time doubtful, but finally
+ the end was reached, and the decision was favorable. Without
+ Washington's influence, it is safe to say that the Constitution
+ would have been lost in Virginia, and without Virginia the great
+ experiment would probably have failed. In the same spirit he
+ worked on after the new scheme had secured enough States to
+ insure a trial. The Constitution had been ratified; it must now
+ be made to work, and Washington wrote earnestly to the leaders in
+ the various States, urging them to see to it that "Federalists,"
+ stanch friends of the Constitution, were elected to Congress.
+ There was no vagueness about his notions on this point. A party
+ had carried the Constitution and secured its ratification, and to
+ that party he wished the administration and establishment of the
+ new system to be intrusted. He did not take the view that,
+ because the fight was over, it was henceforth to be considered
+ that there had been no fight, and that all men were politically
+ alike. He was quite ready to do all in his power to conciliate
+ the opponents of union and the Constitution, but he did not
+ believe that the momentous task of converting the paper system
+ into a living organism should be confided to any hands other than
+ those of its tried and trusty friends.</p>
+
+ <p>But while he was looking so carefully after the choice of the
+ right men to fill the legislature of the new government, the
+ people of the country turned to him with the universal demand
+ that he should stand at the head of it, and fill the great office
+ of first President of the Republic. In response to the first
+ suggestion that came, he recognized the fact that he was likely
+ to be again called upon for another great public service, and
+ added simply that at his age it involved a sacrifice which
+ admitted of no compensation. He maintained this tone whenever he
+ alluded to the subject, in response to the numerous letters
+ urging him to accept. But although he declined to announce any
+ decision, he had made up his mind to the inevitable. He had put
+ his hand to the plough, and he would not turn back. His only
+ anxiety was that the people should know that he shrank from the
+ office, and would only leave his farm to take it from a sense of
+ overmastering duty. Besides his reluctance to engage in a fresh
+ struggle, and his fear that his motives might be misunderstood,
+ he had the same diffidence in his own abilities which weighed
+ upon him when he took command of the armies. His passion for
+ success, which determined him to accept the presidency, if it was
+ deemed indispensable that he should do so, made him dread failure
+ with an almost morbid keenness, although his courage was too high
+ and his will too strong ever to draw back. Responsibility weighed
+ upon his spirits, but it could not daunt him. He wrote to
+ Trumbull in December, 1788, that he saw "nothing but clouds and
+ darkness before him," but when the hour came he was ready. The
+ elections were favorable to the Federalists. The electoral
+ colleges gave Washington their unanimous vote, and on April 16,
+ having been duly notified by Congress of his election, he left
+ Mount Vernon for New York, to assume the conduct of the
+ government, and stand at the head of the new Union in its first
+ battle for life.</p>
+
+ <p>From the early day when he went out to seek Shirley and win
+ redress against the assumptions of British officers, Washington's
+ journeys to the North had been memorable in their purposes. He
+ had traveled northward to sit in the first continental congress,
+ to take command of the army, and to preside over the
+ constitutional convention. Now he went, in the fullness of his
+ fame, to enter upon a task less dangerous, perhaps, than leading
+ armies, but more beset with difficulties, and more perilous to
+ his reputation and peace of mind, than any he had yet undertaken.
+ He felt all this keenly, and noted in his diary: "About ten
+ o'clock I bade adieu to Mount Vernon, to private life, and to
+ domestic felicity; and with a mind oppressed with more anxious
+ and painful sensations than I have words to express, set out for
+ New York, with the best disposition to render service to my
+ country, in obedience to its call, but with less hope of
+ answering its expectations."</p>
+
+ <p>The first stage of his journey took him only to Alexandria, a
+ few miles from his home, where a public dinner was given to him
+ by his friends and neighbors. He was deeply moved when he rose to
+ reply to the words of affection addressed to him by the mayor as
+ spokesman of the people. "All that now remains for me," he said,
+ "is to commit myself and you to the care of that beneficent Being
+ who, on a former occasion, happily brought us together after a
+ long and distressing separation. Perhaps the same gracious
+ Providence will again indulge me. But words fail me. Unutterable
+ sensations must then be left to more expressive silence, while
+ from an aching heart I bid all my affectionate friends and kind
+ neighbors farewell."</p>
+
+ <p>So he left his home, sad at the parting, looking steadily, but
+ not joyfully, to the future, and silent as was his wont. The
+ simple dinner with his friends and neighbors at Alexandria was
+ but the beginning of the chorus of praise and Godspeed which rose
+ higher and stronger as he advanced. The road, as he traveled, was
+ lined with people, to see him and cheer him as he passed. In
+ every village the people from the farm and workshop crowded the
+ streets to watch for his carriage, and the ringing of bells and
+ firing of guns marked his coming and his going. At Baltimore a
+ cavalcade of citizens escorted him, and cannon roared a welcome.
+ At the Pennsylvania line Governor Mifflin, with soldiers and
+ citizens, gathered to greet him. At Chester he mounted a horse,
+ and in the midst of a troop of cavalry rode into Philadelphia,
+ beneath triumphal arches, for a day of public rejoicing and
+ festivity. At Trenton, instead of snow and darkness, and a sudden
+ onslaught upon surprised Hessians, there was mellow sunshine, an
+ arch of triumph, and young girls walking before him, strewing
+ flowers in his path, and singing songs of praise and gratitude.
+ When he reached Elizabethtown Point, the committees of Congress
+ met him, and he there went on board a barge manned by thirteen
+ pilots in white uniform, and was rowed to the city of New York. A
+ long procession of barges swept after him with music and song,
+ while the ships in the harbor, covered with flags, fired salutes
+ in his honor. When he reached the landing he declined to enter a
+ carriage, but walked to his house, accompanied by Governor
+ Clinton. He was dressed in the familiar buff and blue, and, as
+ the people caught sight of the stately figure and the beloved
+ colors, hats went off and the crowd bowed as he went by, bending
+ like the ripened grain when the summer wind passes over it, and
+ breaking forth into loud and repeated cheers.</p>
+
+ <p>From Mount Vernon to New York it had been one long triumphal
+ march. There was no imperial government to lend its power and
+ military pageantry. There were no armies, with trophies to dazzle
+ the eyes of the beholders; nor were there wealth and luxury to
+ give pomp and splendor to the occasion. It was the simple
+ outpouring of popular feeling, untaught and true, but full of
+ reverence and gratitude to a great man. It was the noble instinct
+ of hero-worship, always keen in humanity when the real hero comes
+ to awaken it to life. Such an experience, rightly apprehended,
+ would have impressed any man, and it affected Washington
+ profoundly. He was deeply moved and touched, but he was neither
+ excited nor elated. He took it all with soberness, almost with
+ sadness, and when he was alone wrote in his diary:&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>"The display of boats which attended and joined us on this
+ occasion, some with vocal and some with instrumental music on
+ board; the decorations of the ships, the roar of cannon and the
+ loud acclamations of the people, which rent the skies as I passed
+ along the wharves, filled my mind with sensations as painful
+ (considering the reverse of this scene, which may be the case
+ after all my labors to do good) as they were pleasing."</p>
+
+ <p>In the very moment of the highest personal glory, the only
+ thought is of the work which he has to do. There is neither
+ elation nor cynicism, neither indifference nor self-deception,
+ but only deep feeling and a firm, clear look into the future of
+ work and conflict which lay silent and unknown beyond the
+ triumphal arches and the loud acclaim of the people.</p>
+
+ <p>On April 30 he was inaugurated. He went in procession to the
+ hall, was received in the senate chamber, and thence proceeded to
+ the balcony to take the oath. He was dressed in dark brown cloth
+ of American manufacture, with a steel-hilted sword, and with his
+ hair powdered and drawn back in the fashion of the time. When he
+ appeared, a shout went up from the great crowd gathered beneath
+ the balcony. Much overcome, he bowed in silence to the people,
+ and there was an instant hush over all. Then Chancellor
+ Livingston administered the oath. Washington laid his hand upon
+ the Bible, bowed, and said solemnly when the oath was concluded,
+ "I swear, so help me God," and, bending reverently, kissed the
+ book. Livingston stepped forward, and raising his hand cried,
+ "Long live George Washington, President of the United States!"
+ Then the cheers broke forth again, the cannon roared, and the
+ bells rang out. Washington withdrew to the hall, where he read
+ his inaugural address to Congress, and the history of the United
+ States of America under the Constitution was begun.</p>
+
+ <p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+ <h2><a name="II" id="II"></a>CHAPTER II</h2>
+
+ <h2>STARTING THE GOVERNMENT</h2>
+
+ <p>Washington was deeply gratified by his reception at the hands
+ of the people from Alexandria to New York. He was profoundly
+ moved by the ceremonies of his inauguration, and when he turned
+ from the balcony to the senate chamber he showed in his manner
+ and voice how much he felt the meaning of all that had occurred.
+ His speech to the assembled Congress was solemn and impressive,
+ and with simple reverence he acknowledged the guiding hand of
+ Providence in the fortunes of the States. He made no
+ recommendations to Congress, but expressed his confidence in
+ their wisdom and patriotism, adjured them to remember that the
+ success of republican government would probably be finally
+ settled by the success of their experiment, reminded them that
+ amendments to the Constitution were to be considered, and
+ informed them that he could not receive any pecuniary
+ compensation for his services, and expected only that his
+ expenses should be paid as in the Revolution. This was all. The
+ first inaugural of the first President expressed only one
+ thought, but that thought was pressed home with force. Washington
+ wished the Congress to understand as he understood the weight and
+ meaning of the task which had been imposed upon them, for he felt
+ that if he could do this all would be well. How far he succeeded
+ it would be impossible to say, but there can be no doubt as to
+ the wisdom of his position. To have attempted to direct the first
+ movements of Congress before he had really grasped the reins of
+ the government would have given rise, very probably, to jealousy
+ and opposition at the outset. When he had developed a policy,
+ then it would be time to advise the senators and representatives
+ how to carry it out. Meanwhile it was better to arouse their
+ patriotism, awaken their sense of responsibility, and leave them
+ free to begin their work under the guidance of these
+ impressions.</p>
+
+ <p>As for himself, his feelings remained unchanged. He had
+ accepted the great post with solemn anxiety, and when the prayers
+ had all been said, and the last guns fired, when the music had
+ ceased and the cheers had died away, and the illuminations had
+ flickered and gone out, he wrote that in taking office he had
+ given up all expectation of private happiness, but that he was
+ encouraged by the popular affection, as well as by the belief
+ that his motives were appreciated, and that, thus supported, he
+ would do his best. In a few words, written some months later, he
+ tersely stated what his office meant to him, and what grave
+ difficulties surrounded his path.</p>
+
+ <p>"The establishment of our new government," he said, "seemed to
+ be the last great experiment for promoting human happiness by a
+ reasonable compact in civil society. It was to be, in the first
+ instance, in a considerable degree, a government of accommodation
+ as well as a government of laws. Much was to be done by prudence,
+ much by conciliation, much by firmness. Few who are not
+ philosophical spectators can realize the difficult and delicate
+ part which a man in my situation had to act. All see, and most
+ admire, the glare which hovers round the external happiness of
+ elevated office. To me there is nothing in it beyond the lustre
+ which may be reflected from its connection with a power of
+ promoting human felicity. In our progress towards political
+ happiness my station is new, and, if I may use the expression, I
+ walk on untrodden ground. There is scarcely an action the motive
+ of which may not be subject to a double interpretation. There is
+ scarcely any part of my conduct which may not hereafter be drawn
+ into precedent. If, after all my humble but faithful endeavors to
+ advance the felicity of my country and mankind, I may indulge a
+ hope that my labors have not been altogether without success, it
+ will be the only real compensation I can receive in the closing
+ scenes of life."</p>
+
+ <p>There is nothing very stimulating to the imagination in this
+ soberness of mind and calmness of utterance. The military
+ conquerors and the saviors of society, with epigrammatic sayings,
+ dramatic effects and rhythmic proclamations, are much more
+ exciting and dazzle the fancy much better. But it is this
+ seriousness of mind, coupled with intensity of purpose and grim
+ persistence, which has made the English-speaking race spread over
+ the world and carry successful government in its train. The
+ personal empire of Napoleon had crumbled before he died an exile
+ in St. Helena, but the work of Washington still endures. Just
+ what that work was, and how it was achieved, is all that still
+ remains to be considered.</p>
+
+ <p>The policies set on foot and carried through under the first
+ federal administration were so brilliant and so successful that
+ we are apt to forget that months elapsed before the first of them
+ was even announced. When Washington, on May 1, 1789, began his
+ duties, there was absolutely nothing of the government of the
+ United States in existence but a President and a Congress. The
+ imperfect and broken machinery of the confederation still moved
+ feebly, and performed some of the absolutely necessary functions
+ of government. But the new organization had nothing to work with
+ except these outworn remnants of a discarded system. There were
+ no departments, and no arrangements for the collection of revenue
+ or the management of the postal service. A few scattered soldiers
+ formed the army, and no navy existed. There were no funds and no
+ financial resources. There were not even traditions and forms of
+ government, and, slight as these things may seem, settled methods
+ of doing public business are essential to its prompt and proper
+ transaction. These forms had to be devised and adopted first, and
+ although they seem matters of course now, after a century of use,
+ they were the subject of much thought and of some sharp
+ controversy in 1789. The manner in which the President was to be
+ addressed caused some heated discussion even before the
+ inauguration. America had but just emerged from the colonial
+ condition, and the colonial habits were still unbroken. In
+ private letters we find Washington referred to as "His Highness,"
+ and in some newspapers as "His Highness the President-General,"
+ while the Senate committee reported in favor of addressing him as
+ "His Highness the President of the United States and Protector of
+ their Liberties." In the House, however, the democratic spirit
+ was strong, there was a fierce attack upon the proposed titles,
+ and that body ended by addressing Washington simply as the
+ "President of the United States," which, as it happened, settled
+ the question finally. Washington personally cared little for
+ titles, although, as John Adams wrote to Mrs. Warren, he thought
+ them appropriate to high office. But in this case he saw that
+ there was a real danger lurking in the empty name, and so he was
+ pleased by the decision of the House. Another matter was the
+ relation between the President and the Senate. Should he
+ communicate with them in writing or orally, being present during
+ their deliberations as if they formed an executive council? It
+ was promptly decided that nominations should be made in writing;
+ but as to treaties, it was at first thought best that the
+ President should deliver them to the Senate in person, and it was
+ arranged with minute care where he should sit, beside the
+ Vice-President, while the matter was under discussion. This
+ arrangement, however, was abandoned after a single trial, and it
+ was agreed that treaties, like nominations, should come with
+ written messages.</p>
+
+ <p>Last and most important of all was the question of the mode of
+ conduct and the etiquette to be established with regard to the
+ President himself. In this, as in the matter of titles,
+ Washington saw a real importance in what many persons might
+ esteem only empty forms, and he proceeded with his customary
+ thoroughness in dealing with the subject. What he did would be a
+ precedent for the future as well as a target for present
+ criticism, and he determined to devise a scheme which would
+ resist attack, and be worthy to stand as an example for his
+ successors. He therefore wrote to Madison: "The true medium, I
+ conceive, must lie in pursuing such a course as will allow him
+ (the President) time for all the official duties of his station.
+ This should be the primary object. The next, to avoid as much as
+ may be the charge of superciliousness, and seclusion from
+ information, by too much reserve and too great a withdrawal of
+ himself from company on the one hand, and the inconveniences, as
+ well as a diminution of respectability, from too free an
+ intercourse and too much familiarity on the other." This letter,
+ with a set of queries, was also sent to the Vice-President, to
+ Jay, and to Hamilton. They all agreed in the general views
+ outlined by Washington. Adams, fresh from Europe, was inclined to
+ surround the office, of which he justly had a lofty conception,
+ with a good deal of ceremony, because he felt that these things
+ were necessary in our relations with foreign nations. In the
+ main, however, the advice of all who were consulted was in favor
+ of keeping the nice line between too much reserve and too much
+ familiarity, and this line, after all the advising, Washington of
+ course drew for himself. He did it in this way. He decided that
+ he would return no calls, and that he would receive no general
+ visits except on specified days, and official visitors at fixed
+ hours. The third point was in regard to dinner parties. The
+ presidents of Congress hitherto had asked every one to dine, and
+ had ended by keeping a sort of public table, to the waste of both
+ time and dignity. Many persons, disgusted with this system,
+ thought that the President ought not to ask anybody to dinner.
+ But Washington, never given to extremes, decided that he would
+ invite to dinner persons of official rank and strangers of
+ distinction, but no one else, and that he would accept no
+ invitations for himself. After a time he arranged to have a
+ reception every Tuesday, from three to four in the afternoon, and
+ Mrs. Washington held a similar levee on Fridays. These
+ receptions, with a public dinner every week, were all the social
+ entertainments for which the President had either time or
+ health.</p>
+
+ <p>By these sensible and apparently unimportant arrangements,
+ Washington managed to give free access to every one who was
+ entitled to it, and yet preserved the dignity and reserve due to
+ his office. It was one of the real although unmarked services
+ which he rendered to the new government, and which contributed so
+ much to its establishment, for it would have been very easy to
+ have lowered the presidential office by a false idea of
+ republican simplicity. It would have been equally easy to have
+ made it odious by a cold seclusion on the one hand, or by pomp
+ and ostentation on the other. With his usual good judgment and
+ perfect taste, Washington steered between the opposing dangers,
+ and yet notwithstanding the wisdom of his arrangements, and in
+ spite of their simplicity, he did not escape calumny on account
+ of them. One criticism was that at his reception every one stood,
+ which was thought to savor of incipient monarchy. To this
+ Washington replied, with the directness of which he was always
+ capable, that it was not usual to sit on such occasions, and, if
+ it were, he had no room large enough for the number of chairs
+ that would be required, and that, as the whole thing was
+ perfectly unceremonious, every one could come and go as he
+ pleased. Fault was also found with the manner in which he bowed,
+ an accusation to which he answered with an irony not untinged
+ with bitterness and contempt: "That I have not been able to make
+ bows to the taste of poor Colonel B. (who, by the by, I believe
+ never saw one of them) is to be regretted, especially too, as,
+ upon those occasions, they were indiscriminately bestowed, and
+ the best I was master of. Would it not have been better to throw
+ the veil of charity over them, ascribing their stiffness to the
+ effects of age, or to the unskillfulness of my teacher, rather
+ than to pride and dignity of office, which God knows has no
+ charms for me?"</p>
+
+ <p>As party hostility developed, these attacks passed from the
+ region of private conversation to the columns of newspapers and
+ the declamation of mob orators, and an especial snarl was raised
+ over the circumstance that at some public ball the President and
+ Mrs. Washington were escorted to a sofa on a raised platform, and
+ that guests passed before them and bowed. Much monarchy and
+ aristocracy were perceived in this little matter, and Jefferson
+ carefully set it down in that collection of withered slanders
+ which he gave to an admiring posterity, after the grave had
+ safely covered both him and those whom he feared and hated in his
+ lifetime. This incident, however, was but an example of the
+ political capital which was sought for in the conduct of the
+ presidential office. The celebration of the birthday, the
+ proposition to put Washington's head upon the coins, and many
+ other similar trifles, were all twisted to the same purpose. The
+ dynasty of Cleon has been a long one, so long that even the
+ succession of the Popes seems temporary beside it, and it
+ flourished in Washington's time as rankly as it did in Athens, or
+ as it does to-day. The object of the assault varies, but the
+ motives and the purpose are as old and as lasting as human
+ nature. Envy and malice will always find a convenient shelter in
+ pretended devotion to the public weal, and will seek revenge for
+ their own lack of success by putting on the cloak of the tribune
+ of the people, and perverting the noblest of offices to the
+ basest uses.</p>
+
+ <p>But time sets all things even. The demagogues and the critics
+ who assailed Washington's demeanor and behavior are forgotten,
+ while the wise and simple customs which he established and framed
+ for the great office that he honored, still prevail by virtue of
+ their good sense. We part gladly with all remembrance of those
+ bold defenders of liberty who saw in these slight forms
+ forerunners of monarchy. We would even consent to drop into
+ oblivion the precious legacy of Jefferson. But we will never part
+ with the picture drawn by a loving hand of that stately figure,
+ clad in black velvet, with the hand on the hilt of the sword,
+ standing at one of Mrs. Washington's levees, and receiving with
+ gentle and quiet dignity, full of kindliness but untinged by
+ cheap familiarity, the crowd that came to pay their respects. It
+ was well for the republic that at the threshold of its existence
+ it had for President a man who, by the kindness of his heart, by
+ his good sense, good manners, and fine breeding, gave to the
+ office which he held and the government he founded the simple
+ dignity which was part of himself and of his own high
+ character.</p>
+
+ <p>Thus the forms and shows, important in their way, were dealt
+ with, while behind them came the sterner realities of government,
+ demanding regulation and settlement. At the outset Washington
+ knew about the affairs of the government, especially for the last
+ six years, only in a general way. He felt it to be his first
+ duty, therefore, to familiarize himself with all these matters,
+ and, although he was in the midst of the stir and bustle of a new
+ government, he nevertheless sent for all the papers of each
+ department of the confederation since the signature of the treaty
+ of peace, went through them systematically, and made notes and
+ summaries of their contents. This habit he continued throughout
+ his presidency in dealing with all official documents. The
+ natural result followed. He knew more at the start about the
+ facts in each and every department of the public business than
+ any other one man, and he continued to know more throughout his
+ administration. In this method and this capacity for taking
+ infinite pains is to be found a partial explanation at least of
+ the easy mastery of affairs which he always showed, whether on
+ the plantation, in the camp, or in the cabinet. It was in truth a
+ striking instance of that "long patience" which the great French
+ naturalist said was genius.</p>
+
+ <p>While he was thus regulating forms of business, and
+ familiarizing himself with public questions, it became necessary
+ to fix the manner of dealing with foreign powers. There were not
+ many representatives of foreign nations present at the birth of
+ the republic, but there was one who felt, and perhaps not without
+ reason, that he was entitled to peculiar privileges. The Count de
+ Moustier, minister of France, desired to have private access to
+ the President, and even to discuss matters of business with him.
+ Washington's reply to this demand was, in its way, a model. After
+ saying that the only matter which could come up would relate to
+ commerce, with which he was unfamiliar, he continued: "Every one,
+ who has any knowledge of my manner of acting in public life, will
+ be persuaded that I am not accustomed to impede the dispatch or
+ frustrate the success of business by a ceremonious attention to
+ idle forms. Any person of that description will also be satisfied
+ that I should not readily consent to lose one of the most
+ important functions of my office for the sake of preserving an
+ imaginary dignity. But perhaps, if there are rules of proceeding
+ which have originated from the wisdom of statesmen, and are
+ sanctioned by the common consent of nations, it would not be
+ prudent for a young state to dispense with them altogether, at
+ least without some substantial cause for so doing. I have myself
+ been induced to think, possibly from habits of experience, that
+ in general the best mode of conducting negotiations, the detail
+ and progress of which might be liable to accidental mistakes or
+ unintentional misrepresentations, is by writing. This mode, if I
+ was obliged by myself to negotiate with any one, I should still
+ pursue. I have, however, been taught to believe that there is in
+ most polished nations a system established with regard to the
+ foreign as well as the other great departments, which, from the
+ utility, the necessity, and the reason of the thing, provides
+ that business should be digested and prepared by the heads of
+ those departments."</p>
+
+ <p>The Count de Moustier hastened to excuse himself on the ground
+ that he expressed himself badly in English, which was
+ over-modest, for he expressed himself extremely well. He also
+ explained and defended his original propositions by trying to
+ show that they were reasonable and usual; but it was labor lost.
+ Washington's letter was final, and the French minister knew it.
+ The count was aware that he was dealing with a good soldier, but
+ in statecraft he probably felt he had to do with a novice. His
+ intention was to take advantage of the position of France, secure
+ for her peculiar privileges, and put her in the attitude of
+ patronizing inoffensively but effectively the new government
+ founded by the people she had helped to free. He found himself
+ turned aside quietly, almost deferentially, and yet so firmly and
+ decidedly that there was no appeal. No nation, he discovered, was
+ to have especial privileges. France was the good friend and ally
+ of the United States, but she was an equal, not a superior. It
+ was also fixed by this correspondence that the President,
+ representing the sovereignty of the people, was to have the
+ respect to which that sovereignty was entitled. The pomp and
+ pageant of diplomacy in the old world were neither desired nor
+ sought in America; yet the President was not to be approached in
+ person, but through the proper cabinet officer, and all
+ diplomatic communications after the fashion of civilized
+ governments were to be in writing. Thus within a month France,
+ and in consequence other nations, were quietly given to
+ understand that the new republic was to be treated like other
+ free and independent governments, and that there was to be
+ nothing colonial or subservient in her attitude to foreign
+ nations, whether those nations had been friends or foes in the
+ past.</p>
+
+ <p>It required tact, firmness, and a sure judgment to establish
+ proper relations with foreign ministers. But once done, it was
+ done for all time. This was not the case with another and far
+ more important class of people, whose relation to the new
+ administration had to be determined at the very first hour of its
+ existence. Indeed, before Washington left Mount Vernon he had
+ begun to receive letters from persons who considered themselves
+ peculiarly well fitted to serve the government in return for a
+ small but certain salary. In a letter to Mrs. Wooster, for whom
+ as the widow of an old soldier he felt the tenderest sympathy, he
+ wrote soon after his arrival in New York: "As a public man acting
+ only with reference to the public good, I must be allowed to
+ decide upon all points of my duty, without consulting my private
+ inclinations and wishes. I must be permitted, with the best
+ lights I can obtain, and upon a general view of characters and
+ circumstances, to nominate such persons alone to offices as in my
+ judgment shall be the best qualified to discharge the functions
+ of the departments to which they shall be appointed." This
+ sentiment in varying forms has been declared since 1789 by many
+ Presidents and many parties. Washington, however, lived up
+ exactly to his declarations. At the same time he did not by any
+ means attempt to act merely as an examining board.</p>
+
+ <p>Great political organizations, as we have known them since,
+ did not exist at the beginning of the government, but there were
+ nevertheless two parties, divided by the issue which had been
+ settled by the adoption of the Constitution. Washington took, and
+ purposed to take, his appointees so far as he could from those
+ who had favored the Constitution and were friends of the new
+ system. It is also clear that he made every effort to give the
+ preference to the soldiers and officers of the army, toward whom
+ his affectionate thought ever turned. Beyond this it can only be
+ said that he was almost nervously anxious to avoid any appearance
+ of personal feeling in making appointments, as was shown in the
+ letter refusing to make his nephew Bushrod a district attorney,
+ and that he resented personal pressure of any kind. He preferred
+ always to reach his conclusions so far as possible from a careful
+ study of written testimony. These principles, rigidly adhered to,
+ his own keen perception of character, and his knowledge of men,
+ resulted in a series of appointments running through eight years
+ which were really marvelously successful. The only rejection,
+ outside the special case of John Rutledge, was that of Benjamin
+ Fishbourn for naval officer of the port of Savannah, which was
+ due apparently to the personal hostility of the Georgia senators.
+ Washington, conscious of his own painstaking, was not a little
+ provoked by this setting aside of an old soldier. He sent in a
+ sharp message on the subject, pointing out the trouble he took to
+ make sure of the fitness of an appointment, and intimated that
+ the same effort would not come amiss in the Senate when they
+ rejected one of his nominees. In view of the fact that it was a
+ new government, the absence of mistakes in the appointments is
+ quite extraordinary, and the value of such success can be
+ realized by considering the disastrous consequences which would
+ have come from inefficient officers or malfeasance in office when
+ the great experiment was just put on trial, and was surrounded by
+ doubters and critics ready and eager to pick flaws and find
+ faults.</p>
+
+ <p>The general tone of the government and its reputation at
+ widely scattered points depended largely on the persons appointed
+ to the smaller executive offices. Important, however, as these
+ were, the fate of the republic under the new Constitution was
+ infinitely more involved in the men whom Washington called about
+ him in his cabinet, to decide with him as to the policies which
+ were to be begun, and on which the living vital government was to
+ be founded. Congress, troubled about many things, and struggling
+ with questions of revenue and taxation, managed in the course of
+ the summer to establish and provide for three executive
+ departments and for an attorney-general. To the selection of the
+ men to fill these high offices Washington gave, of course, the
+ most careful thought, and succeeded in forming a cabinet which,
+ in its aggregate ability, never has been equaled in this
+ country.</p>
+
+ <p>Edmund Randolph was appointed attorney-general. Losing his
+ father at an early age, and entering the army, he had been
+ watched over and protected by Washington with an almost paternal
+ care, and at the time of his appointment he was one of the most
+ conspicuous men in public life, as well as a leading lawyer at
+ the bar of Virginia. He came from one of the oldest and strongest
+ of the Virginian families, and had been governor of his State,
+ and a leader in the constitutional convention, where he had
+ introduced what was known as the Virginian plan. He had refused
+ to sign the Constitution, but had come round finally to its
+ support, largely through Washington's influence. There was then,
+ and there can be now, no question as to Randolph's really fine
+ talents, or as to his fitness for his post. His defect was a lack
+ of force of character and strength of will, which was manifested
+ by a certain timidity of action, and by an infirmity of purpose,
+ such as had appeared in his course about the Constitution. He
+ performed the duties of his office admirably, but in the decision
+ of the momentous questions which came before the cabinet he
+ showed an uncertainty of opinion which was felt by all his
+ colleagues.<a id="footnotetag1-3" name=
+ "footnotetag1-3"></a><a href="#footnote1-3"><sup>1</sup></a></p>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote1-3" name="footnote1-3"></a>[<b>Footnote 1:</b>
+ <a href="#footnotetag1-3">(return)</a> This passage was written
+ before the recent appearance of Mr. Conway's <i>Life of
+ Randolph</i>. That ample biography, in my opinion, confirms the
+ view of Randolph here given. If, in the light of this new
+ material, I have erred at all, it is, I think, on the
+ charitable side. Mr. Conway, in order to vindicate Randolph,
+ has sacrificed so far as he could nearly every conspicuous
+ public man of that period. From Washington, whom he charges
+ with senility, down, there is hardly a man who ever crossed
+ Randolph's path whom he has not assailed. Yet he presents no
+ reason, so far as I can see, to alter the present opinion of
+ Randolph.]
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <p>Henry Knox of Massachusetts was head of the War Department
+ under the confederacy, and was continued in office by Washington,
+ who appointed him secretary of war under the new arrangement. It
+ was a natural and excellent selection. Knox was a distinguished
+ soldier, he had served well through the Revolution, and
+ Washington was warmly attached to him. He was not a statesman by
+ training or habit of mind, nor was he possessed of commanding
+ talents. But he was an able man, sound in his views and diligent
+ in his office, devoted to his chief and unswerving in his loyalty
+ to the administration and all its measures. There was never any
+ doubt as to the attitude of Henry Knox, and Washington found him
+ as faithful and efficient in the cabinet as he had always been in
+ the field.</p>
+
+ <p>Second in rank, but first in importance, was the secretaryship
+ of the treasury. "Finance! Ah, my friend, all that remains of the
+ American Revolution grounds there." So Gouverneur Morris had
+ written to Jay. So might he have written again of the American
+ Union, for the fate of the experiment rested at the outset on the
+ Treasury Department. Yet there was probably less hesitation as to
+ the proper man for this place than for any other. Washington no
+ doubt would have been glad to give it to Robert Morris, whose
+ great services in the Revolution he could never forget. But this
+ could not be, and acting on his own judgment, fortified by that
+ of Morris himself, he made Alexander Hamilton secretary of the
+ treasury.</p>
+
+ <p>It is one of the familiar marks of greatness to know how to
+ choose the right men to perform the tasks which no man, either in
+ war or peace, can complete single-handed. Napoleon's marshals
+ were conspicuous proofs of his genius, and Washington had a
+ similar power of selection. The generals whom he trusted were the
+ best generals, the statesmen whom he consulted stand highest in
+ history. He was fallible, as other mortals are fallible. He, too,
+ had his Varus, and the time was coming when he could echo the
+ bitter cry of the great emperor for his lost legions. But the
+ mistakes were the exceptions. He chose with the sureness of a
+ strong and penetrating mind, and the most signal example of this
+ capacity was his secretary of the treasury. He knew Hamilton
+ well. He had known him as his staff officer, active,
+ accomplished, and efficient. He had seen him leave his side in a
+ tempest of boyish rage, and he had watched him charging with
+ splendid gallantry the Yorktown redoubts. He was familiar with
+ Hamilton's extraordinary mastery of financial and political
+ problems, and he had found him a powerful leader in the work of
+ forming the Constitution. He understood Hamilton's strength, and
+ he knew where his dangers lay. Now he called him to his cabinet,
+ and gave into his hands the department on which the immediate
+ success of the government hinged. It was a brilliant choice. The
+ mark in his lifetime for all the assaults of his political
+ opponents, the leader and the victim of the schism which rent his
+ own party, Hamilton, after his death, was made the target for
+ attack and reprobation by his political foes, who for nearly
+ sixty years, with few intermissions, controlled the government.
+ His work, however, could not be undone, and as passions have
+ subsided his fame has proved to be of that highest and rarest
+ kind which broadens and rises with the lapse of years, until in
+ the light of history it overtops that of any of our statesmen,
+ except of his own great chief and Abraham Lincoln. The work to
+ which he was called was that of organizing a national government,
+ and in the performance of this work he showed that he
+ belonged to the highest type of constructive statesmen, and
+ was one of the rare men who build, and whose building stands the
+ test of time.</p>
+
+ <p>Last to be mentioned, but first in rank, was the Department of
+ State. For this high place Washington chose Thomas Jefferson, who
+ was then our minister in Paris, and who did not return to take up
+ his official duties until the following March. Of the four
+ cabinet offices, this was the only one where Washington proceeded
+ entirely on public grounds. He took Jefferson on account of his
+ wide reputation, his unquestioned ability, his standing before
+ the country, and his experience in our foreign relations. With
+ the other three there was a strong element of personal friendship
+ and familiarity. With the secretary of state his intercourse had
+ been, so far as we can judge, almost wholly of a public
+ character, and, so far as can be inferred from an expression of
+ some years before, the selection was made by Washington in
+ deference simply to what he believed to be the public interest.
+ The only allusion to Jefferson in all the printed volumes of
+ correspondence prior to 1789 occurs in a letter to Robert
+ Livingston, of January 8, 1783. He there said: "What office is
+ Mr. Jefferson appointed to that he has, you say, lately accepted?
+ If it is that of commissioner of peace, I hope he will arrive too
+ late to have any hand in it." There is no indication that their
+ personal relations were then or afterwards other than pleasant.
+ Yet this brief sentence is a strong expression of distrust, and
+ especially so from the fact that Washington was not at all given
+ to criticising other people in his letters. What he distrusted
+ was not Jefferson's ability, for that no man could doubt, still
+ less his patriotism. But Washington read character well, and he
+ felt that Jefferson might be lacking in the qualities of boldness
+ and determination, so needful in a negotiation like that which
+ resulted in the acknowledgment of our independence.</p>
+
+ <p>The truth was that the two men were radically different, and
+ never could have been sympathetic. Washington was strong, direct,
+ masculine, and at times fierce in anger. Jefferson was adroit,
+ subtle, and feminine in his sensitiveness. Washington was
+ essentially a fighting man, tamed by a stern self-control from
+ the recklessness of his early days, but always a fighter.
+ Jefferson was a lover of peace, given to quiet, hating quarrels
+ and bloodshed, and at times timid in dealing with public
+ questions. Washington was deliberate and conservative, after the
+ fashion of his race. Jefferson was quick, impressionable, and
+ always fascinated by new notions, even if they were somewhat
+ fantastic. A thoroughly liberal and open-minded man, Washington
+ never turned a deaf ear to any new suggestion, whether it was a
+ public policy or a mechanical invention, but to all alike he gave
+ careful consideration before he adopted them. To Jefferson, on
+ the other hand, mere novelty had a peculiar charm, and he jumped
+ at any device, either to govern a state or improve a plough,
+ provided that it had the flavor of ingenuity. The two men might
+ easily have thought the same concerning the republic, but they
+ started from opposite poles, and no full communion of thought and
+ feeling was possible between them. That Washington chose fitly
+ from purely public and outside considerations can not be
+ questioned, but he made a mistake when he put next to himself a
+ man for whom he did not have the personal regard and sympathy
+ which he felt for his other advisers. The necessary result
+ finally came, after many troubles in the cabinet, in dislike and
+ distrust, if not positive alienation.</p>
+
+ <p>Looking at the cabinet, however, as it stood in the beginning,
+ we can only admire the wisdom of the selection and the high
+ abilities which were thus brought together for the administration
+ and construction of a great national government. It has always
+ been the fashion to speak of this first cabinet as made up
+ without reference to party, but the idea is a mistaken one from
+ any point of view. Washington himself gave it color, for he felt
+ very rightly that he was the choice of the whole people and not
+ of a party. He wished to rise above party, and in fact to have no
+ party, but a devotion of all to the good of the country. The time
+ came when he sorrowed for and censured party bitterness and party
+ strife, but it is to be observed that the party feeling which he
+ most deplored was that which grew up against his own policies and
+ his own administration. The fact was that Washington, who rose
+ above party more than any other statesman in our history, was
+ nevertheless, like most men of strong will and robust mind, and
+ like all great political leaders, a party man, as we shall have
+ occasion to see further on. It is true that his cabinet contained
+ the chiefs and founders of two great schools of political
+ thought, which have ever since divided the country; but when
+ these parties were once fairly developed, the cabinet became a
+ scene of conflict and went to pieces, only to be reformed on
+ party lines. When it was first made up, the two parties of our
+ subsequent history, with which we are familiar, did not exist,
+ and it was in the administration of Washington that they were
+ developed. Yet the cabinet of 1789 was, so far as there were
+ parties, a partisan body. The only political struggle that we had
+ had was over the adoption of the Constitution. The parties of the
+ first Congress were the Federalists and the anti-Federalists, the
+ friends and the enemies of the Constitution. Among those who
+ opposed the Constitution were many able and distinguished men,
+ but Washington did not invite Sam Adams, or George Mason, or
+ Patrick Henry, or George Clinton to enter his cabinet. On the
+ contrary, he took only friends and supporters of the
+ Constitution. Hamilton was its most illustrious advocate.
+ Randolph, after some vacillation, had done very much to turn the
+ wavering scale in Virginia in its favor. Knox was its devoted
+ friend; and Jefferson, although he had carped at it and
+ criticised it in his letters, was not known to have done so, and
+ was considered, and rightly considered, to be friendly to the new
+ system. In other words, the cabinet was made up exclusively of
+ the party of the Constitution, which was the victorious party of
+ the moment. This was of course wholly right, and Washington was
+ too great and wise a leader to have done anything else. The
+ cabinet was formed with regard to existing divisions, and, when
+ those divisions changed, the cabinet which gave birth to them
+ changed too.</p>
+
+ <p>Outside the cabinet, the most weighty appointments were those
+ of the Supreme Court. No one then quite appreciated, probably,
+ the vast importance which this branch of the government was
+ destined to assume, or the great part it was to play in the
+ history of the country and the development of our institutions.
+ At the same time no one could fail to see that much depended on
+ the composition of the body which was to be the ultimate
+ interpreter of the Constitution. The safety of the entire scheme
+ might easily have been imperiled by the selection of men as
+ judges who were lacking in ability or character. Washington chose
+ with his wonted sureness. At the head of the court he placed John
+ Jay, one of the most distinguished of the public men of the day,
+ who gave to the office at once the impress of his own high
+ character and spotless reputation. With him were associated
+ Wilson of Pennsylvania, Cushing of Massachusetts, Blair of
+ Virginia, Iredell of North Carolina, and Rutledge of South
+ Carolina. They were all able and well-known men, sound lawyers,
+ and also, be it noted, warm friends of the Constitution.</p>
+
+ <p>Thus the business of organizing the government in the first
+ great and essential points was completed. It was the work of the
+ President, and, anxious and arduous as it was, it is worth
+ remembering, too, that it was done, and thoroughly done, in the
+ midst of severe physical suffering. Just after the inauguration,
+ Washington was laid up with an anthrax or carbuncle in his thigh,
+ which brought him at one time very near death. For six weeks he
+ could lie only on one side, endured the most constant and acute
+ pain, and was almost incapable of motion. He referred to his
+ illness at the time in a casual and perfectly simple way, and
+ mind and will so prevailed over the bodily suffering that the
+ great task of organizing the government was never suspended nor
+ interrupted.</p>
+
+ <p>When the work was done and Congress had adjourned, Washington,
+ feeling that he had earned a little rest and recreation,
+ proceeded to carry out a purpose, which he had formed very early
+ in his presidency, of visiting the Eastern States. This was the
+ first part of a general plan which he had conceived of visiting
+ while in office all portions of the Union. The personal
+ appearance of the President, representing the whole people, would
+ serve to bring home to the public mind the existence and reality
+ of a central government, which to many if not to most persons in
+ the outlying States seemed shadowy and distant. But General
+ Washington was neither shadowy nor distant to any one. Every man,
+ woman, and child had heard of and loved the leader of the
+ Revolution. To his countrymen everywhere, his name meant
+ political freedom and victory in battle; and when he came among
+ them as the head of a new government, that government took on in
+ some measure the character of its chief. His journey was a
+ well-calculated appeal, not for himself but for his cause, to the
+ warm human interest which a man readily excites, but which only
+ gathers slowly around constitutions and forms of government. The
+ world owes a good deal to the right kind of hero-worship, and the
+ United States have been no exception.</p>
+
+ <p>The journey itself was uneventful, and was carried out with
+ Washington's usual precision. It served its purpose, too, and
+ brought out a popular enthusiasm which spoke well for the
+ prospects of the federal government, and which was the first
+ promise of the loyal support which New England gave to the
+ President, as she had already given it to the general. In the
+ succession of crowds and processions and celebrations which
+ marked the public rejoicing, one incident of this journey stands
+ out as still memorable, and possessed of real meaning. Mr. John
+ Hancock was governor of Massachusetts. There is no need to dwell
+ upon him. He was a man of slender abilities, large wealth, and
+ ready patriotism, with a great sense of his own importance, and a
+ fine taste for impressive display. Every external thing about
+ him, from his handsome house and his Copley portrait to his
+ imposing gout and his immortal signature, was showy and
+ effective. He was governor of Massachusetts, and very proud of
+ that proud old commonwealth as well as of her governor. Within
+ her bounds he was the representative of her sovereignty, and he
+ felt that deference was due to him from the President of the
+ United States when they both stood on the soil of Massachusetts.
+ He did not meet Washington on his arrival, and Washington
+ thereupon did not dine with the governor as he had agreed to do.
+ It looked a little stormy. Here was evidently a man with some new
+ views as to the sovereignty of States and the standing of the
+ union of States. It might have done for Governor Hancock to allow
+ the President of Congress to pass out of Massachusetts without
+ seeing its governor, and thereby learn a valuable lesson, but it
+ would never do to have such a thing happen in the case of George
+ Washington, no matter what office he might hold. A little after
+ noon on Sunday, October 26, therefore, the governor wrote a note
+ to the President, apologizing for not calling before, and asking
+ if he might call in half an hour, even though it was at the
+ hazard of his health. Washington answered at once, expressing his
+ pleasure at the prospect of seeing his excellency, but begging
+ him, with a touch of irony, not to do anything to endanger his
+ health. So in half an hour Hancock appeared. Picturesque, even if
+ defeated, he was borne up-stairs on men's shoulders, swathed in
+ flannels, and then and there made his call. The old house in
+ Boston where this happened has had since then a series of
+ successors, but the ground on which it stood has been duly
+ remembered and commemorated. It is a more important spot than we
+ are wont to think; for there it was settled, on that autumn
+ Sunday, that the idea that the States were able to own and to
+ bully the Union they had formed was dead, and that the President
+ of the new United States was henceforth to be regarded as the
+ official superior of every governor in the land. It was a mere
+ question of etiquette, nothing more. But how the general
+ government would have sunk in popular estimation if the President
+ had not asserted, with perfect dignity and yet entire firmness,
+ its position! Men are governed very largely by impressions, and
+ Washington knew it. Hence his settling at once and forever the
+ question of precedence between the Union and the States.
+ Everywhere and at all times, according to his doctrine, the
+ nation was to be first.<a id="footnotetag1-4" name=
+ "footnotetag1-4"></a><a href="#footnote1-4"><sup>1</sup></a></p>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote1-4" name="footnote1-4"></a>[<b>Footnote 1:</b>
+ <a href="#footnotetag1-4">(return)</a> The most lately
+ published contemporary account of this affair with Hancock can
+ be found in the <i>Magazine of American History</i>, June,
+ 1888, p. 508, entitled "Incidents in the Life of John Hancock,
+ as related by Dorothy Quincy Hancock Scott (from the Diary of
+ Gen. W.H. Sumner)."]
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <p>So the President traveled on to the North, and then back by
+ another road to New York, and that excellent bit of work in
+ familiarizing the people with their federal government was
+ accomplished. Meantime the wheels had started, the machine was in
+ motion, and the chief officers were at their places. The
+ preliminary work had been done, and the next step was to
+ determine what policies should be adopted, and to find out if the
+ new system could really perform the task for which it had been
+ created.</p>
+
+ <p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+ <h2><a name="III" id="III"></a>CHAPTER III</h2>
+
+ <h2>DOMESTIC AFFAIRS</h2>
+
+ <p>To trace in detail the events of Washington's administration
+ would be to write the history of the country during that period.
+ It is only possible here to show, without much regard to
+ chronological sequence, the part of the President in developing
+ the policy of the government at home, and his attitude toward
+ each question as it arose. We are concerned here merely with the
+ influence and effect of Washington in our history, and not with
+ the history itself. What did he do, and what light do we get on
+ the man himself from his words and deeds? These are the only
+ questions that a brief study of a career so far-reaching can
+ attempt to answer.</p>
+
+ <p>Congress came together for the first time with the government
+ actually organized on January 4, 1790. On the day when the
+ session opened, Washington drove down to the hall where the
+ Congress met, alone in his own coach drawn by four horses. He was
+ preceded by Colonel Humphreys and Major Jackson, mounted on his
+ two white horses, while immediately behind came his chariot with
+ his private secretaries, and Mr. Lewis on horseback. Then
+ followed in their own coaches the chief justice and the
+ secretaries of war and of the treasury. When the President
+ reached the hall he was met at the entrance by the doorkeeper of
+ the Congress, and was escorted to the Senate chamber. There he
+ passed between the members of each branch, drawn up on either
+ hand, and took his seat by the Vice-President. When order and
+ silence were obtained, he rose and spoke to the assembled
+ representatives of the people standing before him. Having
+ concluded his speech, he bowed and withdrew with his suite as he
+ had come. Jefferson killed this simple ceremonial, and
+ substituted for it the written message, sent by a secretary and
+ read by a clerk in the midst of talk and bustle, which is the
+ form we have to-day. Jefferson's change was made, of course, in
+ the name of liberty, and also because he was averse to public
+ speaking. From the latter point of view, it was reasonable
+ enough, but the ostensible cause was as hollow and meaningless as
+ any of the French notions to which it was close akin. It is well
+ for the head of the state to meet face to face the
+ representatives of the same people who elected him. For more than
+ a century this has been the practice in Massachusetts, to take a
+ single instance, and liberty in that commonwealth has not been
+ imperiled, nor has the State been obliged to ask Federal aid to
+ secure to her a republican form of government because of her
+ adherence to this ancient custom.</p>
+
+ <p>The forms adopted by Washington had the grave and simple
+ dignity which marked all he did, and it was senseless to abandon
+ what his faultless taste and patriotic feeling approved. Forms
+ are in their way important things: they may conceal perils to
+ liberty, or they may lend dignity and call forth respect to all
+ that liberty holds most dear. The net result of all this business
+ has been very curious. Jefferson's written message prevails; and
+ yet at the same time we inaugurate our Presidents with a pomp and
+ parade to which those of the dreaded Federalists seem poor and
+ quiet, and which would make the hero of the message-in-writing
+ fancy that the air was darkened by the shadows of monarchy and
+ despotism. The author of the Declaration of Independence was a
+ patriotic man and lover of freedom, but he who fought out the
+ Revolution in the field was quite as safe a guardian of American
+ liberty; and his clear mind was never confused by the fantasies
+ of that Parisian liberty which confused facts with names, and
+ ended in the Terror and the first Empire. The people of the
+ United States to-day surround the first office of the land with a
+ respect and dignity which they deem equal to the mighty
+ sovereignty that it represents, and in this is to be found the
+ genuine American feeling expressed by Washington in the plain and
+ simple ceremonial which he adopted for his meetings with the
+ Congress.</p>
+
+ <p>In this first speech, thus delivered, Washington indicated the
+ subjects to which he wished Congress to direct their attention,
+ and which in their development formed the policies of his
+ administration. His first recommendation was to provide for the
+ common defense by a proper military establishment. His last and
+ most elaborate was in behalf of education, for which he invoked
+ the aid of Congress and urged the foundation of a national
+ university, a scheme he had much at heart, and to which he
+ constantly returned. The history of these two recommendations is
+ soon told. Provision was made for the army, inadequate enough, as
+ Washington thought, but still without dispute, and such
+ additional provision was afterwards made from time to time as the
+ passing exigency of the moment demanded. For education nothing
+ was done, and the national university has never advanced beyond
+ the recommendation of the first President.</p>
+
+ <p>He also advised the adoption of a uniform standard of coinage,
+ weights, and measures. In two years a mint was duly established
+ after an able report from Hamilton, and out of his efforts and
+ those of Jefferson came our decimal system. There was debate over
+ the devices on the coins in which the ever-vigilant Jeffersonians
+ scented monarchical dangers, but with this exception the country
+ got its uniform coinage peacefully enough. The weights and
+ measures did not fare so well. They obtained a long report from
+ Jefferson, and a still longer and more learned disquisition from
+ John Quincy Adams thirty years later. But that was all. We still
+ use the rule of thumb systems inherited from our English
+ ancestors, and Washington's uniform standard, except for the two
+ reports, has gone no further than the national university.</p>
+
+ <p>Another recommendation to the effect that invention ought to
+ be encouraged and protected bore fruit in this same year in
+ patent and copyright laws, which became the foundation of our
+ present system. The same good fortune befell the recommendation
+ for a uniform rule for naturalization, and the law of 1790 was
+ quietly enacted, no one then imagining that its alteration less
+ than ten years later was destined to form part of a policy which,
+ after a fierce struggle, settled the fate of parties and decided
+ the control of the government. The post-office was also commended
+ to the care of Congress, and for that, as for the army, provision
+ was duly made, insufficient at the outset, but growing steadily
+ from this small beginning, as it was called upon to meet the
+ spread and increase of population.</p>
+
+ <p>Provision was also made gradually, and with much occasional
+ conflict, for a diplomatic service such as the President advised.
+ But this was merely the machinery to carry out our foreign policy
+ on which, in a few years, our political history largely turned,
+ and which will demand a chapter by itself.</p>
+
+ <p>A paragraph devoted to Indian affairs informed Congress that
+ measures were on foot to establish pacific relations with our
+ savage neighbors, but that it would be well to be prepared to use
+ force. This brief sentence was the beginning of an important
+ policy, which, in its consequences and effects, played a large
+ part in the history of the next eight years.</p>
+
+ <p>These various matters thus disposed of, there remained only
+ the request to the House to provide for the revenue and the
+ public credit. From this came Hamilton's financial policy which
+ created parties, and with it was interwoven in the body of the
+ speech the general recommendation to make all proper effort for
+ the advancement of manufactures, commerce, and agriculture.</p>
+
+ <p>The speech as a whole, short though it was, drew the outline
+ of a vigorous system, which aimed at the establishment of a
+ strong government with enlarged powers. It cut at a blow all ties
+ between the new government and the feeble strivings of the dead
+ confederation. It displayed a broad conception of the duties of
+ the government under the Constitution, and in every paragraph it
+ breathed the spirit of a robust nationality, calculated to touch
+ the people directly in every State of the Union.</p>
+
+ <p>Before taking up the financial question, which became the
+ great issue in our domestic affairs, it will be well to trace
+ briefly the story of our relations with the Indians. The policy
+ of the new administration in this respect was peculiarly
+ Washington's own, and, although it affected more or less the
+ general course of events at that period, it did not directly
+ become the subject of party differences. The "Indian problem" is
+ still with us, but it is now a very mild problem indeed. Within a
+ few years, it is true, we have had Indian wars, conducted by the
+ forces of the United States, and ever-recurring outbreaks between
+ savages and frontiersmen. But it has been a very distant
+ business. To the great mass of the American people it has been
+ little more than interesting news, to be leisurely scanned in the
+ newspaper without any sense of immediate and personal concern.
+ Moreover, the popular conception of the Indian has for a long
+ time been wildly inaccurate. We have known him in various
+ capacities, as the innocent victim of corrupt agents and traders,
+ and as the brutal robber and murderer with the vices and force of
+ the Western frontiersman, but without any of the latter's
+ redeeming virtues. Last and most important of all, we have known
+ him as the rare hero and the conventional villain of romance,
+ ranging from the admirable stories of Cooper to the last
+ production of the "penny dreadful." The result has been to create
+ in the public mind a being who probably never existed anywhere
+ except in the popular imagination, and who certainly is not the
+ North American Indian.</p>
+
+ <p>We are always loath to admit that our conceptions are formed
+ by fiction, but in the case of people remote from our daily
+ observation it plays in nine instances out of ten a leading part,
+ and it has certainly done so here. In this way we have been
+ provided with two types simple and well defined, which represent
+ the abnormally good on the one hand and the inconceivably bad on
+ the other. The Indian hero is a person of phenomenal nobility of
+ character, and of an ability which would do credit to the
+ training of a highly refined civilization. He is the product of
+ the orator, the novelist, or the philanthropist, and has but
+ slight and distant relation to facts. The usual type, however,
+ and the one which has entered most largely into the popular mind,
+ is the Indian villain. He is portrayed invariably as cunning,
+ treacherous, cruel, and cowardly, without any relieving quality.
+ In this there is of course much truth. As a matter of fact,
+ Indians are cunning, treacherous, and cruel, but they are also
+ bold fighters. The leading idea of the Indian that has come down
+ from Cooper's time, and which depicts him as a "cowardly
+ redskin," unable to stand for a moment against a white man in
+ fair fight, is a complete delusion designed to flatter the
+ superior race. It has been in a large measure dissipated by
+ Parkman's masterly histories, but the ideas born of popular
+ fiction die hard. They are due in part to the theory that cruelty
+ implies cowardice, just as we say that a bully must be a coward,
+ another mistaken bit of proverbial wisdom.</p>
+
+ <p>As a matter of fact, the records show that the North American
+ Indian is one of the most remarkable savage warriors of whom we
+ have any knowledge; and the number of white men killed for each
+ Indian slain in war exhibits an astonishing disproportion of
+ loss. Captain James Smith, for many years a captive, and who
+ figured in most of the campaigns of the last century, estimated
+ that fifty of our people were killed to one of theirs. This of
+ course includes women and children; and yet even in the battle of
+ the Big Kanawha, the Virginia riflemen, although they defeated
+ the Indians with an inferior force, lost two to one, and a
+ similar disproportion seems to have continued to the present
+ day.</p>
+
+ <p>The Indian, moreover, not only fought well and to the death,
+ if surrounded, but he had a discipline and plan of battle which
+ were most effective for the wilderness. It seems probable that,
+ if the experiment had been properly tried, the Indians might have
+ been turned into better soldiers than the famous Sikhs; and the
+ French, who used the red men skillfully, if without much
+ discipline, found them formidable and effective allies. They cut
+ off more than one English and American army, and the fact that
+ they resorted to ambush and surprise does not detract from their
+ exploits. It was a legitimate mode of warfare, and was used by
+ them with terrible effect. They have fought more than one pitched
+ battle against superior numbers when the victory hung long in the
+ balance, and they have carried on guerrilla wars for years
+ against overwhelming forces with extraordinary persistence and
+ success. There is no savage, except the Zulu or Maori, who has
+ begun to exhibit the natural fighting quality of the American
+ Indian; and although the Zulu appears to have displayed greater
+ dash, the Indian, by his mastery of the tactics of surprise, has
+ shown a far better head. In a word, the Indian has always been a
+ formidable savage, treacherous, cruel, and cunning to an extreme
+ degree, no doubt, but a desperate and dogged fighter, with a
+ natural instinct for war. It must be remembered, too, that he was
+ far more formidable in 1790 than he is to-day, with the
+ ever-rising tide of civilized population flowing upon him and
+ hemming him in. When the Constitution came into being, the
+ Indians were pretty well out of the Atlantic States, but beyond
+ the Alleghanies all was theirs, and they had the unbroken
+ wilderness as their ally and their refuge. There they lay like a
+ dark line on the near frontier, threatening war and pillage and
+ severe check to the westward advance of our people. They were a
+ serious matter to a new government, limited in resources and
+ representing only three millions of people.</p>
+
+ <p>Fortunately the President was of all men best fitted to deal
+ with this grave question, for he knew the Indians thoroughly. His
+ earliest public service had been to negotiate with them, and from
+ that time on he had been familiar with them in peace and in
+ diplomacy, while he had fought with them in war over and over
+ again. He was not in the least confused in his notions about
+ them, but saw them, as he did most facts, exactly as they were.
+ He had none of the false sentimentality about the noble and
+ injured red man, which in later days has been at times highly
+ mischievous, nor on the other hand did he take the purely brutal
+ view of the fighting scout or backwoodsman. He knew the Indian as
+ he was, and understood him as
+ a dangerous, treacherous, fighting savage. Better than any one
+ else he appreciated the difficulties of Indian warfare when an
+ army had to be launched into the wilderness and cut off from a
+ base of supplies. He was well aware, too, that the western tribes
+ were a constant temptation to England and Spain on either border,
+ and might be used against us with terrible effect. In taking up
+ the question for solution, he believed first, as was his nature,
+ in justice, and he resolved to push every pacific measure, and
+ strive unremittingly by fair dealing and binding treaties to keep
+ a peace which was of great moment to the young republic. But he
+ also felt that pacific measures were an uncertain reliance, and
+ that sharp, decisive blows were often the only means of
+ maintaining peace and quiet on the frontier, and of warding off
+ English and Spanish intrigue. This was the policy he indicated in
+ the brief sentences of his first speech, and it only remains to
+ see how he carried it out.</p>
+
+ <p>The outlook in regard to the Indians, when Washington assumed
+ the presidency, was threatening enough. The Continental Congress
+ had shown in this respect most honorable intention and some
+ vigor, but their honest purposes had been in large measure
+ thwarted by the action of the various States, which they were
+ unable to control. In New York peace reigned, despite some
+ grumbling; for the Six Nations had made a general treaty, and
+ also two special treaties, not long before, which were on the
+ whole just and satisfactory. At the same time a general treaty
+ had been made with the western Indians, which modified some of
+ the injustices of the treaties of 1785, and which were also fair
+ and reasonable. In this treaty, however, the tribes of the Wabash
+ were not included, and they therefore were engaged in war with
+ the Kentucky people. Those hardy backwoodsmen were quick enough
+ to retaliate, and they generally proceeded on the simple
+ backwoods principle that tribal distinctions were futile, and
+ that every Indian was an enemy. This view, it must be admitted,
+ saved a good deal of thought, but it led the Kentuckians in their
+ raids to kill many Indians who did not belong to the Wabash
+ tribes, but to those protected by treaty. The result of this
+ impartiality was, that, besides the chronic Wabash troubles,
+ there was every probability that a general war with all the
+ western and northwestern tribes might break out at any
+ moment.</p>
+
+ <p>South of the Ohio, matters were even worse. The Choctaws, it
+ is true, owing to their distance from our frontier settlements,
+ were on excellent terms with our government. But the Cherokees
+ had just been beaten and driven back by Sevier and his followers
+ from the short-lived state of Franklin, and had taken refuge with
+ the Creeks. These last were a formidable people. Not only were
+ they good fighters, but they were also well armed, thanks to
+ their alliance with the Spaniards, from whom they obtained not
+ only countenance, but guns, ammunition, and supplies. They were
+ led also by a chief of remarkable ability, a Scotch half-breed,
+ educated at Charlestown, and named Alexander McGillivray. With a
+ tribe so constituted and commanded, it was not difficult to bring
+ on trouble, as soon proved to be the case. Georgia had claimed
+ and seized certain lands under treaties which she alleged had
+ been made, whereupon the Creeks denied the validity of these
+ treaties and went to war, in which they were highly successful.
+ The Georgians had already asked assistance from their neighbors,
+ and they now demanded it from the new general government.
+ Thereupon, under an act of Congress, Washington appointed as
+ commissioners to arrange the difficulties General Lincoln,
+ Colonel Humphrey, and David Griffin of Virginia, all remote from
+ the scene of conflict, and all judicious selections. The Creeks
+ readily met the new commissioners, but when they found that no
+ lands were to be given up, they declined to treat further, and
+ said they would await a new negotiation.</p>
+
+ <p>Washington attributed this failure, and no doubt correctly, to
+ the intrigues and influence of Spain. On the day the report of
+ the commissioners went to Congress, he wrote to Governor Pinckney
+ of South Carolina: "For my own part I am entirely persuaded that
+ the present general government will endeavor to lay the
+ foundations for its proceedings in national justice, faith, and
+ honor. But should the government, after having attempted in vain
+ every reasonable pacific measure, be obliged to have recourse to
+ arms for the defense of its citizens, I am also of opinion that
+ sound policy and good economy will point to a prompt and decisive
+ effort, rather than to defensive and lingering operations."
+ "Lingering" had been the curse of our Indian policy, and it was
+ this above all things that Washington was determined to be rid
+ of. Whether peace or war, there was to be quick and decisive
+ action. He therefore, in this spirit, at once sent southward
+ another commissioner, Colonel Willett, who very shrewdly
+ succeeded in getting McGillivray and his chiefs to agree to
+ accompany him to New York. Thither they accordingly came in due
+ time, the Scotch half-breed and twenty-eight of his chiefs. They
+ were entertained and well treated at the seat of government, and
+ there, with Knox acting for the United States, they made a treaty
+ which involved concessions on both sides. The Creeks gave up all
+ claims to lands north and east of the Oconee, and the United
+ States, under a recent general act regulating trade and
+ intercourse with the Indians, gave up all lands south and west of
+ the same river, and agreed to make the tribes an annual present.
+ Then Washington gave them wampum and tobacco, and shook hands
+ with them, and the chiefs went home. There was grumbling on both
+ sides, especially among the Georgians, but nevertheless the
+ treaty held for a time at least, and there was peace.</p>
+
+ <p>Washington's policy of justice had succeeded, and the Indians
+ got an idea of the power and fair dealing of the new government,
+ which was of real value. More valuable still was the lesson to
+ the people of the United States that this central government
+ meant to deal justly with the Indians, and would try to prevent
+ any single State from frustrating by bad faith the policy
+ designed to benefit the whole country. Trouble soon began again
+ in this direction, and in later days States inflated with
+ state-right doctrines carried this resistance in Indian affairs
+ to a much greater extent, and flouted the acts of the federal
+ government. This, however, does not detract from the wisdom of
+ the President, who inaugurated the policy of acting justly toward
+ the Indians, and of overruling the selfish injustice of the State
+ immediately affected. If the policy of justice and firmness
+ adopted by Washington had never been abandoned, it would have
+ been better for the honor and the interest both of the nation and
+ the separate States.</p>
+
+ <p>The same pacific policy which had succeeded in the south was
+ tried in the west and failed. The English, with their usual
+ thoughtfulness, incited the Indians to claim the Ohio as their
+ boundary, which meant war and murderous assaults on all our
+ people traveling on the river. Retaliation, of course, followed,
+ and in April, 1790, Colonel Harmer with a body of Kentucky
+ militia invaded the Indian country, burned a deserted village,
+ and returned without having accomplished anything substantial.
+ The desultory warfare of murder and pillage went on for a time,
+ and then Washington felt that the moment had come for the other
+ branch of his policy. At all events there should be no lingering,
+ and there should be action. Peaceful measures having failed,
+ there should be war and a settlement in some fashion.</p>
+
+ <p>Accordingly, in the fall of 1790, soon after his successful
+ Creek negotiation, he ordered out some three hundred regulars and
+ eleven hundred militia from Pennsylvania and Kentucky, and sent
+ them under Harmer into the Miami country. The expedition burned a
+ village on the Scioto; and then Colonel Hardin, detached with
+ some hundred and fifty men in pursuit of the Indians, was caught
+ in an ambush and his regulars cut off, the militia running away
+ apparently quite successfully. Thereupon Harmer retreated; but,
+ changing his mind in a day or two, advanced again, and again sent
+ out Hardin with a larger force than before. Then the advance was
+ again surprised, and the regulars nearly all killed, while the
+ militia, who stood their ground better this time, lost about a
+ hundred men. The end was the repulse of the whites after a pretty
+ savage fight. Then Harmer withdrew altogether, declaring, with a
+ strange absence of humor, if of no more important quality, that
+ he had won a victory. After reaching home, this mismanaged
+ expedition caused much crimination and heart-burning, followed by
+ courts-martial on Hardin and Harmer, who were both acquitted, and
+ by the resignation of the latter.</p>
+
+ <p>This defeat of course simply made worse the state of affairs
+ in general, and the Six Nations, who had hitherto been quiet,
+ became uneasy and were kept so by the ever-kind incitement of the
+ English. Various mediations with these powerful tribes failed;
+ but Colonel Pickering, appointed a special commissioner, managed
+ at last to appease their discontents. To the southward also the
+ Cherokees began to move and threaten, but were pacified by the
+ exertions of Governor Blount of the Southwest Territory. Meantime
+ an act had been passed to increase the army, and Arthur St. Clair
+ was appointed major-general. Washington, who had been greatly
+ disturbed by the failure of Harmer, was both angered and
+ disheartened by the conduct of the States and of the frontier
+ settlers. "Land-jobbing, the intermeddling of the States, and the
+ disorderly conduct of the borderers, who were indifferent as to
+ the killing of an Indian," were in his opinion the great
+ obstacles in the way of success. Yet these very men who shot
+ Indians at sight and plundered them of their lands, as well as
+ the States immediately concerned, were the first to cry out for
+ aid from the general government when a war, brought about usually
+ by their own violation of the treaties of the United States, was
+ upon them. On the other hand, the Indians themselves were warlike
+ and quarrelsome, and they were spurred on by England and Spain in
+ a way difficult to understand at the present day.</p>
+
+ <p>In all this perplexity, however, one thing was now clear to
+ Washington. There could not longer be any doubt that the western
+ troubles must be put down vigorously and by the armed hand. Even
+ while he was negotiating in the north and south, therefore, he
+ threw himself heart and soul into the preparation of St. Clair's
+ expedition, pushing forward all necessary arrangements, and
+ planning the campaign with a care and foresight made possible by
+ his military ability and by his experience as an Indian fighter.
+ While the main army was thus getting ready, two lesser
+ expeditions, one under Scott and one under Wilkinson, were sent
+ into the Indian country; but beyond burning some deserted
+ villages and killing a few stray savages both were fruitless.</p>
+
+ <p>At last all was ready. St. Clair had an interview with
+ Washington, in which the whole plan of campaign was gone over,
+ and especial warning given against ambuscades. He then took his
+ departure at once for the west, and late in September left
+ Cincinnati with some two thousand men. The plan of campaign was
+ to build a line of forts, and accordingly one named Fort Hamilton
+ was erected twenty-four miles north on the Miami, and then Fort
+ Jefferson was built forty-four miles north of that point. Thence
+ St. Clair pushed slowly on for twenty-nine miles until he reached
+ the head-waters of the Wabash. He had been joined on the march by
+ some Kentucky militia, who were disorderly and undisciplined.
+ Sixty of them promptly deserted, and it became necessary to send
+ a regiment after them to prevent their plundering the baggage
+ trains. At the same time some Chickasaw auxiliaries, with the
+ true rat instinct, deserted and went home. Nevertheless St. Clair
+ kept on, and finally reached what proved to be his last camp,
+ with about fourteen hundred men. The militia were on one side of
+ the stream, the regulars on the other. At sunrise the next day
+ the Indians surprised the militia, drove them back on the other
+ camp, and shattered the first line of the regulars. The second
+ line stood their ground, and a desperate fight ensued; but it was
+ all in vain. The Indians charged up to the guns, and, though they
+ were repulsed by the bayonet, St. Clair, who was ill in his tent,
+ was at last forced to order a retreat. The retreat soon became a
+ rout, and the broken army, leaving their artillery and throwing
+ away their arms, fled back to Fort Jefferson, where they left
+ their wounded, and hurried on to their starting-point at Fort
+ Washington. It was Braddock over again. General Butler, the
+ second in command, was killed on the field, while the total loss
+ reached nine hundred men and fifty-nine officers, and of these
+ six hundred were killed. The Indians do not appear to have
+ numbered much more than a thousand. No excuse for such a disaster
+ and such murderous slaughter is possible, for nothing but the
+ grossest carelessness could have permitted a surprise of that
+ nature upon an established camp. The troops, too, were not only
+ surprised, but apparently utterly unprepared to fight, and the
+ battle was merely a wild struggle for life.</p>
+
+ <p>Washington was above all things a soldier, and his heart was
+ always with his armies whenever he had one in the field. In this
+ case particularly he hoped much, for he looked to this powerful
+ expedition to settle the Indian troubles for a time, and give
+ room for that great western movement which always was in his
+ thoughts. He therefore awaited reports from St. Clair with keen
+ anxiety, but in this case the ill tidings did not attain their
+ proverbial speed. The battle was fought on November 4, and it was
+ not until the close of a December day that the officer carrying
+ dispatches from the frontier reached Philadelphia. He rode at
+ once to the President's house, and Washington was called out from
+ dinner, where he had company. He remained away some time, and on
+ returning to the table said nothing as to what he had heard,
+ talked with every one at Mrs. Washington's reception afterwards,
+ and gave no sign. Through all the weary evening he was as calm
+ and courteous as ever. When the last guest had gone he walked up
+ and down the room for a few minutes and then suddenly broke out:
+ "It's all over&mdash;St. Clair's defeated&mdash;routed; the
+ officers nearly all killed, the men by wholesale; the rout
+ complete&mdash;too shocking to think of&mdash;and a surprise into
+ the bargain." He paused and strode up and down the room; stopped
+ again and burst forth in a torrent of indignant wrath: "Here on
+ this very spot I took leave of him; I wished him success and
+ honor; 'You have your instructions,' I said, 'from the
+ secretary of war; I had a strict eye to them, and will add but
+ one word&mdash;Beware of a surprise! I repeat it&mdash;<i>beware
+ of a surprise</i>! You know how the Indians fight us.' He went
+ off with that as my last solemn warning thrown into his ears. And
+ yet, to suffer that army to be cut to pieces, hacked, butchered,
+ tomahawked, by a surprise, the very thing I guarded him against!
+ O God, O God, he's worse than a murderer! How can he answer it to
+ his country! The blood of the slain is upon him, the curse of
+ widows and orphans, the curse of Heaven!"</p>
+
+ <p>His secretary was appalled and silent, while Washington again
+ strode fiercely up and down the room. Then he sat down, collected
+ himself, and said, "This must not go beyond this room." Then a
+ long silence. Then, "General St. Clair shall have justice. I
+ looked hastily through the dispatches, saw the whole disaster,
+ but not all the particulars; I will receive him without
+ displeasure; I will hear him without prejudice; he shall have
+ full justice." The description of this scene by an eye-witness
+ has been in print for many years, and yet we find people who say
+ that Washington was cold of heart and lacking in human sympathy.
+ What could be more intensely human than this? What a warm heart
+ is here, and what a lightning glimpse of a passionate nature
+ bursting through silence into burning speech! Then comes the iron
+ will which has mastered all the problems of his life. "He shall
+ have full justice;" and St. Clair had justice. He had been an
+ unfortunate choice, but as a Revolutionary soldier and governor
+ of the Northwest Territory his selection had been natural. He had
+ never been a successful general, for it was not in him to be so.
+ Something he lacked, energy, decision, foresight, it matters not
+ what. But at least he was brave. Broken by sickness, he had
+ displayed the utmost personal courage on that stricken field; and
+ for this Washington would always forgive much. He received the
+ unfortunate general kindly. He could not order a court martial,
+ for there were no officers of sufficient rank to form one; but he
+ gave St. Clair every opportunity for vindication, and a committee
+ of Congress investigated the campaign and exculpated the leader.
+ His personal bravery saved him and his reputation, but nothing
+ can alter the fact that the surprise was unpardonable and the
+ disaster awful.</p>
+
+ <p>Immediate results of the St. Clair defeat were not so bad as
+ might have been expected. Panic, of course, ran rampant along the
+ frontier, reaching even to Pittsburg; but the Indians failed to
+ follow up their advantage, and did not come. Still the alarm was
+ there, and Pennsylvania and Virginia ordered troops to be raised,
+ while Congress also took action. Another increase of the army was
+ ordered, with consequent increase of appropriation, so that this
+ Indian victory entered at this point into the great current of
+ the financial policy, and thus played its part in the events on
+ which parties were dividing, and history was being made.</p>
+
+ <p>No matter what happened, however, there was to be neither
+ lingering nor delay in this business. The President set to work
+ at once to organize a fresh army, and fight out a settlement of
+ the troubles. His first thought for a new commander was of Henry
+ Lee of Virginia, but considerations of rank deterred him. He then
+ selected and appointed Wayne, who recently had got into politics
+ and been deprived, on a contested election, of his seat in the
+ House. No little grumbling ensued over this appointment,
+ especially in Virginia, but it was unheeded by the President, and
+ its causes now are not very clear. The event proved the wisdom of
+ the choice, as so often happened with Washington, and it is easy
+ to see the reason for it. Wayne was one of the shining figures of
+ our Revolution, appealing strongly to the imagination of
+ posterity. He was not a great general in the highest sense, but
+ he was a brilliant corps-commander, capable of daring feats of
+ arms like the storming of Stony Point. He was capable also of
+ dashing with heedless courage into desperate places, and
+ incurring thereby defeat and consequent censure, but escaping
+ entire ruin through the same quickness of action which had
+ involved him in trouble. He was well fitted for the bold and
+ rapid movement required in Indian warfare, and with him
+ Washington put well-chosen subordinates, selected evidently for
+ their fighting capacity, for he clearly was determined that this
+ should be at all events a fighting campaign.</p>
+
+ <p>Wayne, after his appointment, betook himself to Pittsburg, and
+ proceeded with characteristic energy to raise and organize his
+ army, a work of no little difficulty because he wished to have
+ picked men. Washington did all that could be done to help him,
+ and at the same time pushed negotiations with admirable patience,
+ but with very varying success. Kirkland brought chiefs of the Six
+ Nations to Congress with good results, and the Cherokees were
+ pacified by additional presents. On the other hand, the Creeks
+ were restless, stirred up always by Spain, and two brave
+ officers, sent to try for peace with the western tribes, were
+ murdered in cold blood. Nevertheless, treaties were patched up
+ with some of them, and a great council was held in the fall of
+ 1792, the Six Nations acting as mediators, which resulted in a
+ badly kept armistice, but in nothing of lasting value. The next
+ year Congress passed a general act regulating trade and
+ intercourse with the Indians, and Washington appointed yet
+ another commission to visit the northwestern tribes, more to
+ satisfy public opinion than with any hope of peace. Indeed, these
+ commissioners never succeeded in even meeting the Indians, who
+ rejected in advance all proposals which would not concede the
+ Ohio as the boundary. English influence, it was said, was at the
+ bottom of this demand, and there seems to be little doubt that
+ such was the case, for England and France were now at war, and
+ England thereupon had redoubled her efforts to injure the United
+ States by every sort of petty outrage both on sea and land. This
+ masterly policy had perhaps reasons for its existence which pass
+ beyond the average understanding, but, so far as any one can now
+ discover, it seems to have had no possible motive except to feed
+ an ancient grudge and drive the country into the arms of France.
+ Carried on for a long time in secret, this Indian intrigue came
+ to the surface in a speech made by Lord Dorchester to the western
+ tribes, in which he prophesied a speedy rupture with the United
+ States and urged his hearers to continue war. It is worth
+ remembering that for five years, covertly or openly, England did
+ her best to keep an Indian war with all that it implied alive
+ upon our borders,&mdash;the borders of a friendly nation with
+ whom she was at peace.</p>
+
+ <p>But while Washington persistently negotiated, he as
+ persistently prepared to fight, not trusting overmuch either the
+ savages or the English. Wayne, with similar views, moved his army
+ forward in the autumn of 1793 to a point six miles beyond Fort
+ Jefferson, and then went into winter quarters. Early in the
+ spring of 1794 he was in motion again and advanced to St. Clair's
+ battlefield, where he built Fort Recovery, and where he was
+ attacked by the Indians, whom he repulsed after two days'
+ fighting. He then marched in an unexpected direction and struck
+ the central villages at the junction of the Au Glaize and Maumee.
+ The surprised savages fled, and Wayne burned their village, laid
+ waste their extensive fields, and built Fort Defiance. To the
+ Indians, who had retreated thirty miles down the Maumee to the
+ shelter of a British post, he sent word that he was ready to
+ treat. The reply came back asking for a delay of ten days; but
+ Wayne at once advanced, and found the Indians prepared for battle
+ near the English fort. The ground was unfavorable, especially for
+ cavalry, but Wayne made good arrangements and attacked. The
+ Indians gave way before the bayonet, and were completely routed,
+ the American loss being only one hundred and seven men. The army
+ was not averse to storming the English fort; but Wayne, with
+ unusual caution, contented himself with a sharp correspondence
+ with the commandant, and then withdrew after a most successful
+ campaign. The next year, strengthened by his victory and by the
+ surrender of the British posts under the Jay treaty, Wayne made a
+ treaty with the western tribes by which vast tracts of disputed
+ territory were ceded to the United States, and peace was
+ established in that long troubled region.</p>
+
+ <p>On the southern frontier there were no such fortunate results.
+ While Washington was negotiating and fighting in the north and
+ west, all his patient efforts were frustrated in the south by the
+ conduct of Georgia. The borderers kept assailing the Indians,
+ peaceful tribes being generally chosen for the purpose; and the
+ State itself broke through and disregarded all treaties and all
+ arrangements made by the United States. The result was constant
+ disquiet and chronic war, with the usual accompaniments of fire,
+ murder, and pillage.</p>
+
+ <p>On the whole, however, when Washington left the presidency,
+ his Indian policy had been a marked success. In place of
+ uncertainty and weakness, a definite general system had been
+ adopted. The northern and western tribes had been beaten and
+ pacified, and the southern incursions and disorders had been much
+ checked. The British posts, the most dangerous centres of Indian
+ intrigue, had been abandoned, and the great regions of the west
+ and northwest had been opened to the tide of settlement. These
+ results were due to a well-defined plan, and above all to the
+ persistent vigor which pushed steadily forward to its object
+ without swinging, as had been done before, between feverish and
+ often misdirected activity on the one side and complete and
+ feeble inaction on the other. They were achieved, too, amid many
+ difficulties, for there was anything but a unanimous support of
+ the government in its Indian affairs. The opposition grumbled at
+ the expense, and said that money needlessly raised by taxation
+ was squandered in Indian wars, while the great body of the
+ people, living safely along the eastern coast, thought but little
+ about the frontier. Some persons took the sentimental view and
+ considered the government barbarous to make causeless war. Others
+ believed that altogether too much of the public time and money
+ were wasted in looking after outlying settlements. The borderers
+ themselves, on the other hand, thought that the general
+ government was in league with the savages, and broke through
+ treaties, and destroyed so far as they could the national policy.
+ St. Clair was hissed and jeered as he traveled home, but a
+ wakeful opposition turned from the unsuccessful general to a vain
+ attempt to prove that ambushed savages and sleeping sentries were
+ due to a weak war department and a corrupt and inefficient
+ treasury. The mass of moderate people, no doubt, desired
+ tranquillity on the frontier, and sustained the President's
+ labors for that end, but for the most part they were silent. The
+ voices that Washington heard most loudly joined in a discordant
+ chorus of disapproval around his Indian policy. No one understood
+ that here was an important part of a scheme to build up a nation,
+ to make all the movements of the United States broad and
+ national, and to open the vast west to the people who were to
+ make it theirs. Washington heard all the criticism and saw all
+ the opposition, and still pressed forward to his goal, not
+ attaining all he wished, but fighting in a very clear and manful
+ spirit, and not laboring in vain.</p>
+
+ <p>The Indian question in its management touched, as has been
+ seen, at various points our financial policy and our foreign
+ relations, on which the history of the country really turned in
+ those years. The latter had not risen to their later importance
+ when the government began, but the former was knocking
+ importunately at the door of Congress when it first assembled.
+ The condition of affairs is soon told. The Revolution narrowly
+ escaped shipwreck on the financial reefs, and the shaky
+ government of the confederation had there gone to pieces. The
+ country, as a political organism, was bankrupt. It owed sums of
+ money, which were vast in amount for those days, both at home and
+ abroad, and it could not pay these debts, nor was there any
+ provision for them. All interest was in arrears, there were no
+ means provided for meeting it, and the national credit everywhere
+ was dishonored and gone. The continental currency had
+ disappeared, and the circulating medium was represented by a
+ confused jumble of foreign coins and worthless scrip. Many of the
+ States were up to their eyes in schemes of inflation, paper
+ money, and repudiation. There was no money in the treasury to pay
+ the ordinary charges of government; there was no revenue and no
+ policy for raising one, or for funding the debt. This picture is
+ darkly drawn, but it is not exaggerated. That high spirit of
+ public honor, which seventy-five years later rose above the
+ ravages of war and the temptings of dishonesty to pay the debt
+ and the interest, dollar for dollar in gold, seemed in 1789 to be
+ wellnigh extinct. But it was not dead. It was confused and
+ overclouded in the minds of the people, but it was still there,
+ and it was strong, clear, and determined in Washington and those
+ who followed him.</p>
+
+ <p>Congress grappled with the financial difficulties in the most
+ courageous and honest way, but it struggled with them rather
+ helplessly despite its good disposition. It could lay taxes in
+ one way or another so as to get money, but this was plainly
+ insufficient. It could not formulate a coherent policy, which was
+ the one essential thing, nor could it settle the thousand and one
+ perplexing questions which hedged the subject on every side. The
+ members turned, therefore, with a sigh of relief to the new
+ Secretary of the Treasury, asked him the questions which were
+ troubling them, and having directed him to make various reports,
+ adjourned.</p>
+
+ <p>The result is well known. The great statesman to whom the task
+ was confided assumed it with the boldness and ease of conscious
+ power, and when Congress reassembled it listened to the first
+ report on the public credit. In that great state paper all the
+ confusions disappeared, and in terse sentences an entire scheme
+ for funding the debt, disposing of the worthless currency, and
+ raising the necessary revenue came out clear and distinct, so
+ that all men could comprehend it. The provision for the foreign
+ debt passed without resistance. That for the domestic debt
+ excited much debate, and also passed. Last came the assumption of
+ the state debts, and over that there sprang up a fierce struggle.
+ It was carried by a narrow majority, and then defeated by the
+ votes of the North Carolina members, who had just taken their
+ seats. Washington strongly favored this hotly contested measure.
+ He defended it in a letter to David Stuart, and again to
+ Jefferson, at a later time, when that statesman was trying to
+ undermine Hamilton by wailing about a "corrupt squadron" in
+ Congress.</p>
+
+ <p>To Washington, assumption seemed as obviously just as it does
+ to posterity. All the debts had been incurred in a common cause,
+ he said, why should they not be cared for by the common
+ government? He had no patience with the sectional argument that
+ assumption was unfair, because some States got more out of it
+ than others. Some States had suffered more than others, but all
+ shared in the freedom that had been won.<a id="footnotetag1-5"
+ name="footnotetag1-5"></a><a href="#footnote1-5"><sup>1</sup></a>
+ He saw in it, moreover, as Hamilton had seen, something far more
+ important than a mere provision for the debts and for the payment
+ of money to this community or to that. Assumption was essentially
+ a union measure. The other debts were incurred by the central
+ government directly, but the state debts were incurred by the
+ States for a common cause. If the United States assumed them, it
+ showed to the people and to the world that there were no state
+ lines when the interests of the whole country were involved. It
+ was therefore a national measure, a breeder of national
+ sentiment, a new bond to fasten the States to each other and to
+ the Union. This was enough to assure Washington's hearty
+ approval; but the measure was saved and carried finally by the
+ famous arrangement between Hamilton and Jefferson, which took the
+ capital to the Potomac and made the war debts of the States a
+ part of the national debt. Washington was more than satisfied
+ with this solution, for both sides of the agreement pleased him,
+ and there was nothing in the compromise which meant sacrifice on
+ his part. He rejoiced in the successful adoption of the great
+ financial policy of his administration, and he was much pleased
+ to have the capital, in which he was intensely interested, placed
+ near to his own Mount Vernon, in the very region he would have
+ selected if he had had the power of fixing it.</p>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote1-5" name="footnote1-5"></a>[<b>Footnote 1:</b>
+ <a href="#footnotetag1-5">(return)</a> Sparks, <i>Writings of
+ Washington</i>, x. 98.]
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <p>The next great step in the development of the financial policy
+ was the establishment of the national bank, and on this there
+ arose another bitter contest in Congress and in the newspapers. A
+ sharp opposition had developed by this time, and the supporters
+ of the Secretary of the Treasury became on their side
+ correspondingly ardent. In this debate much stress was laid on
+ the constitutional point that Congress had no power to charter a
+ bank. Nevertheless, the bill passed and went to the President,
+ with the constitutional doubts following it and pressed home in
+ this last resort. As has been seen from his letters written just
+ after the Philadelphia convention, Washington was not a blind
+ worshiper of the Constitution which he had helped so largely to
+ make; but he believed it would work, and every day confirmed his
+ belief. He felt, moreover, that one great element of its lasting
+ success lay in creating a genuine reverence for it among the
+ people, and it was therefore of the utmost importance that this
+ reverence should begin among those to whom the management of the
+ government had been intrusted. For this reason he exercised a
+ jealous care in everything touching the organic law of the Union,
+ and he was peculiarly sensitive to constitutional objections to
+ any given measure. In the case of the national bank, the
+ objections were strongly as well as vigorously urged, and
+ Washington paused, before signing, to the utmost limit of the
+ time allowed. He turned to Jefferson and Randolph, both opposed
+ to the bill, and asked them for their objections to its
+ constitutionality. They gave him in response two able reports.
+ These he sent to Hamilton, who returned them with that most
+ masterly argument, in which he not only defended the bank
+ charter, but vindicated, in a manner never afterwards surpassed,
+ the new doctrine of the implied powers of the Constitution. With
+ both sides thus before him, Washington considered the question,
+ and signed the bill.</p>
+
+ <p>Rives, in his "Life of Madison," intimates that Washington had
+ doubts even after signing, but of this there is no evidence of
+ any weight. He was not a man who indulged in doubts after he had
+ made up his mind and rendered a decision, and it was not in his
+ nature to fret over what had been done and was past, whether in
+ war or peace. The story that he was worried about his action in
+ this instance arose from his delay in signing, and from the
+ disappointment of those who had hoped much from his hesitation.
+ This pause, however, was both natural and characteristic.
+ Washington had approved Morris's bank policy in the Revolution,
+ and remembered the service it rendered. He was familiar with
+ Hamilton's views on the subject, and knew that they were the
+ result of long study and careful thought. He must also have known
+ that any financial policy devised by his Secretary of the
+ Treasury would contain as an integral part a national bank. There
+ can be no doubt that both the plan for the bank and the report
+ which embodied it were submitted to him before they went in to
+ Congress, but the violence of the objections raised there on
+ constitutional grounds awakened his attention in a new direction.
+ He saw at once the gravity of a question, which involved not
+ merely the incorporation of a bank, but which opened up a new
+ field of constitutional powers and constitutional construction.
+ When such far-reaching results were involved he paused and
+ reflected, and, as was always the case with him under such
+ circumstances, listened to and examined all the arguments on both
+ sides. This done he decided, and with his national feeling he
+ could not have decided otherwise than he did. The doctrine of the
+ implied powers of the Constitution was the greatest weapon
+ possible for those whose leading thought was to develop the union
+ of States into a great and imperial nation; and we may well
+ believe that it was this feeling, and not merely faith in the
+ bank as a financial engine, which led Washington to sign the
+ bill. When he did so he assented to the charter of a national
+ bank, but he also assented to the doctrine of the implied powers
+ and gave to that far-reaching construction of the Constitution
+ the great weight of his name and character. It was, perhaps, the
+ most important single act of his presidency.</p>
+
+ <p>It is impossible here, even were it necessary, to follow
+ Washington's action in regard to all the details which went to
+ make up and to sustain Hamilton's policy, to which, as a whole,
+ Washington gave his hearty approval and support. The revenue
+ system, the public lands, the arrangement of loans, the mint, all
+ alike met with his active concurrence. He was too great a man not
+ to value rightly Hamilton's work, and the way in which that work
+ brought order, credit, honor, and prosperity out of a chaos of
+ debt and bankruptcy appealed peculiarly to his own love for
+ method, organization, and sound business principles. He met every
+ criticism on Hamilton's policy without concession, and defended
+ it when it was attacked. To Hamilton's genius that policy must be
+ credited, but it gained its success and strength largely from the
+ firm support of Washington.</p>
+
+ <p>There are two matters, however, connected with the Treasury
+ Department, which cannot be passed over in this general way. One
+ was a policy reasoned out and published by Hamilton, but never
+ during his lifetime put into the form of law in the broad and
+ systematic manner which he desired. The other was a consequence
+ of his financial policy as adopted, but which reached far beyond
+ the bounds of financial arrangements. The first was the policy
+ set forth in Hamilton's Report on Manufactures. The second was
+ the enforcement of the excise and its results.</p>
+
+ <p>The defense of our commerce against foreign discriminations
+ was a proximate cause of the movement which resulted in the
+ Constitution of the United States, and closely allied to it was
+ the anxious wish to develop our internal resources and our
+ domestic industry. This idea was not at all new. Sporadic
+ attempts to start and carry on various industries had been made
+ during the colonial period. They had all failed, either because
+ the watchful mother-country took pains to stifle them, or because
+ lack of capital and experience, in addition to foreign
+ competition, killed them almost at their birth. The idea of
+ developing American industries was generally diffused for the
+ first time when the colonists strove to bring England to terms by
+ non-intercourse acts. The Americans then thought that they could
+ carry their points by making war upon the British pocket, and
+ excluding English merchants from their markets. The next step, of
+ course, was to supply their own markets themselves; and the
+ non-intercourse agreements, which were economically prohibitory
+ tariff acts, gave a fitful impulse to various simple industries.
+ In the clash of arms this idea naturally dropped out of the
+ popular mind, but it began to revive soon after the return of
+ peace. The government of the confederation was too feeble to
+ adopt any policy in this or any other matter, but in the first
+ Congress the desire to develop American industries found
+ expression. The first tariff was laid primarily to raise the
+ revenue so sorely needed at that moment. But the effort to do
+ this gave rise to a debate in which the policy of protection,
+ strongly advocated by the Pennsylvanian members, was freely
+ discussed. Nobody, however, at that time, had any comprehensive
+ plan or general system, so that the efforts for protection were
+ incoherent, and resulted only in certain special protective
+ features in the tariff bill, and not in a broad and well-rounded
+ measure. Still the protective idea was there; it was recognized
+ in the preamble of the act, and the constitutionality of the
+ policy was affirmed by the framers and contemporaries of the
+ Constitution.</p>
+
+ <p>Hamilton, of course, watched all these movements intently. His
+ guiding thought in all things was the creation of a great nation.
+ For this he strove for national unity and national sentiment, and
+ he saw of course that one essential condition of national
+ greatness was industrial independence, in addition to the
+ political independence already won. One of the greatest thinkers
+ of the time on all matters of public finance and political
+ economy, he perceived at once that the irregular attempts of
+ Congress to encourage home industries could have at best but
+ partial results. He saw that a system broad, just, and
+ continental in its scope must take the place of the isolated
+ industries which now and again obtained an uncertain protection
+ under the haphazard measures of Congress. With these views and
+ purposes he wrote and sent to Congress his Report on
+ Manufactures. In that great state paper he made an argument in
+ behalf of protection, as applied to the United States and to the
+ development of home industries, which has never been overthrown.
+ The system which he proposed was imperial in its range and
+ national in its design, like everything that proceeded from
+ Hamilton's mind. He argued, of course, with reference to existing
+ economic conditions, and in behalf only of what he then
+ sought,&mdash;industrial independence and the establishment and
+ diversification of industries. The social side of the question,
+ which to-day overshadows all others, was not visible a hundred
+ years ago. The Report, however, bore no immediate fruit, and
+ Hamilton had been in his grave for years before the country
+ turned from this practice of accidental protection, and tried to
+ replace it by a broad, coherent system as set forth by the great
+ Secretary.</p>
+
+ <p>But although it had no result at the moment, the Report on
+ Manufactures, which laid the foundation of the American
+ protective system, and which has so powerfully influenced
+ American political thought, was one of the very greatest events
+ of Washington's administration. To trace its effects and history
+ through the succeeding century would be wholly out of place here.
+ All that concerns us is Washington's relation to this
+ far-reaching policy of his Secretary. If we had not a word or a
+ line on the subject from his pen, we should still know that the
+ policy of Hamilton was his policy too, for Washington was the
+ head of his own administration, and was responsible and meant to
+ be responsible for all its acts and policies. With his keen
+ foresight he saw the full import of the Report on Manufactures,
+ and we may be sure that when it went forth it was with his full
+ and cordial approval, and after that minute consideration which
+ he gave to all public questions. But we are not left to
+ inference. We have Washington's views and feelings on this matter
+ set forth again and again, and they show that the principle of
+ the Report on Manufactures was as near and dear to him, and as
+ full of meaning, as it was to Hamilton.</p>
+
+ <p>Washington was brought up and had lived all his life under a
+ system which came as near as possible to the ideal of the modern
+ free-trader. The people of Virginia were devoted almost entirely
+ to a single interest, tobacco-growing, that being the occupation
+ in which they could most profitably engage. No legislative
+ artifices had been employed to enable them to diversify their
+ industries or to establish manufactures. They bought in the
+ cheapest market every luxury and most of the necessities of life.
+ British merchants supplied all their wants, carried their
+ tobacco, and advanced them money. Cheap labor, a single staple
+ with wide fluctuations of value, a credit system, entire
+ dependence on foreigners, and absolute free trade according to
+ the Manchester theories, should have produced an earthly
+ paradise. As a matter of fact, the Virginia planters had little
+ ready money and were deeply in debt. Bankruptcy, as has been
+ already said, seems to have come to them about once in a
+ generation. The land, rapidly exhausted by tobacco, was
+ prodigally wasted, and the general prosperity declined.
+ Washington, with his strong sense and perfect business methods,
+ personally escaped most of these evils, but he saw the mischief
+ of the system all the more clearly. It was bad enough in his
+ time, but he did not live to see Virginia with her wasted and
+ exhausted lands stand still, while her sister States to the north
+ passed her with giant strides in the race for wealth and
+ population. He did not live to see her become, as a result of her
+ colonial system, a mere breeder of slaves for the plantations of
+ the Gulf States. But he saw enough, and the lesson taught him by
+ the results of industrial dependence was well learned.</p>
+
+ <p>When the war came and he was carrying the terrible burden of
+ the Revolution, he learned the same lesson in a new and more
+ bitter way. Nothing went so near to wreck the American cause as
+ lack of all the supplies by which war was carried on, for the
+ United States produced little or nothing of what was then needed.
+ The resources of the northern colonies were soon exhausted, and
+ the South had none. Powder, cannon, muskets, clothing, medical
+ stores, all were lacking, and the fate of the nation hung
+ trembling in the balance on account of the dependence in which
+ the colonies had been kept by the skillful policy of England.
+ These were teachings that a lesser man than Washington
+ would have taken to heart and pondered deeply. In the midst of
+ the struggle he wrote to James Warren (March 31, 1779): "Let
+ vigorous measures be adopted, ... to punish speculators,
+ forestallers, and extortioners, and, above all, to sink the money
+ by heavy taxes, to promote public and private economy, and <i>to
+ encourage manufactures</i>.<a id="footnotetag1-6" name=
+ "footnotetag1-6"></a><a href="#footnote1-6"><sup>1</sup></a>
+ Measures of this sort, gone heartily into by the several States,
+ would strike at once at the root of all our evils, and give the
+ <i>coup de gr&acirc;ce</i> to the British hope of subjugating
+ this continent either by their arms or their acts."</p>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote1-6" name="footnote1-6"></a>[<b>Footnote 1:</b>
+ <a href="#footnotetag1-6">(return)</a> The italics are mine.]
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <p>To Lafayette he wrote in 1789: "Though I would not force the
+ introduction of manufactures by extravagant encouragements and to
+ the prejudice of agriculture, yet I conceive much might be done
+ in that way by women, children, and others, without taking one
+ really necessary hand from tilling the earth. Certain it is,
+ great savings are already made in many articles of apparel,
+ furniture, and consumption. Equally certain it is, that no
+ diminution in agriculture has taken place at this time, when
+ greater and more substantial improvements in manufactures are
+ making than were ever before known in America."</p>
+
+ <p>In the same year he wrote to Governor Randolph, favoring
+ bounties, the strongest form of protection; and this
+ encouragement he wished to have given to that industry which a
+ hundred years later has been held up as one of the least
+ deserving of all that have received the assistance of
+ legislation. He said in this letter: "From the original letter,
+ which I forward herewith, your Excellency will comprehend the
+ nature of a proposal for introducing and establishing the woolen
+ manufacture in the State of Virginia. In the present stage of
+ population and agriculture, I do not pretend to determine how far
+ that plan may be practicable and advisable; or, in case it should
+ be deemed so, whether any or what public encouragement ought to
+ be given to facilitate its execution. <i>I have, however, no
+ doubt as to the good policy of increasing the number of sheep in
+ every state</i>.<a id="footnotetag1-7" name=
+ "footnotetag1-7"></a><a href="#footnote1-7"><sup>1</sup></a> By a
+ little legislative encouragement the farmers of Connecticut have,
+ in two years past, added one hundred thousand to their former
+ stock. If a greater quantity of wool could be produced, and if
+ the hands which are often in a manner idle could be employed in
+ manufacturing it, a spirit of industry might be promoted, a great
+ diminution might be made in the annual expenses of individual
+ families, and the public would eventually be exceedingly
+ benefited." The only hesitation is as to the time of applying the
+ policy. There is no doubt as to the wisdom of the policy itself,
+ of giving protection and encouragement in every proper
+ legislative form to domestic industry.</p>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote1-7" name="footnote1-7"></a>[<b>Footnote 1:</b>
+ <a href="#footnotetag1-7">(return)</a> The italics are mine.]
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <p>In his first speech to Congress he recommended measures for
+ the advancement of manufactures, having already affixed his
+ signature to the bill which declared their encouragement to be
+ one of its objects. At the same time he wrote, in reply to an
+ address: "The promotion of domestic manufactures will, in my
+ conception, be among the first consequences which may naturally
+ be expected to flow from an energetic government." In 1791 he
+ consulted Hamilton as to the advisability of urging Congress to
+ offer bounties for the culture of cotton and hemp, his only
+ doubts being as to the power of the general government in this
+ respect, and as to the temper of the time in regard to such an
+ expenditure of public money. The following year Hamilton's Report
+ on Manufactures was given to the country, finally establishing
+ the position of the administration as to our economic policy.</p>
+
+ <p>The general drift of legislation, although it was not
+ systematized, followed the direction pointed out by the
+ administration. But this did not satisfy Washington. In his
+ speech to Congress, December 7, 1796, he said: "Congress has
+ repeatedly, and not without success, directed their attention to
+ the encouragement of manufactures. <i>The object is of too much
+ consequence not to insure a continuance of their efforts in every
+ way which shall appear eligible.</i>"<a id="footnotetag1-8" name=
+ "footnotetag1-8"></a><a href="#footnote1-8"><sup>1</sup></a> He
+ then goes on to argue at some length that, although manufacturing
+ on the public account is usually inexpedient, it should be
+ established and carried on to supply all that was needed for the
+ public force in time of war. This was his last address to
+ Congress, and his last word on this matter was to approve the
+ course of Congress in following the recommendation of his first
+ speech. All his utterances and all his opinions on the subject
+ were uniform. Washington had never been a student of public
+ finance or political economy like Hamilton, and he lived before
+ the days of the Manchester school and its new gospel of procuring
+ heaven on earth by special methods of transacting the country's
+ business. But Washington was a great man, a state-builder who
+ fought wars and founded governments. He knew that nations were
+ raised up and made great and efficient, and that civilization was
+ advanced, not by <i>laissez aller</i> and <i>laissez faire</i>,
+ but by much patient human striving. He had fought and conquered,
+ and again he had fought and been defeated, and through all he had
+ come to victory, and to certain conclusive results both in peace
+ and war. He had not done this by sitting still and letting each
+ man go his way, but by strong brain and strong will, and by much
+ organization and compulsion. He had set his hand to the building
+ of a nation. He had studied his country and understood it, and
+ with calm, far-seeing eyes he had looked forward into the future
+ of his people. Neither the study nor the outlook were vain, and
+ both told him that political independence was only part of the
+ work, and that national sentiment, independent thinking, and
+ industrial independence also must be reached. The first two, time
+ alone could bring. The last, wise laws could help to produce; and
+ so he favored protection by legislation to American industry and
+ manufactures, threw all his potent influence into the scale, and
+ gave his support to the protective policy set forth by his
+ Secretary.</p>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote1-8" name="footnote1-8"></a>[<b>Footnote 1:</b>
+ <a href="#footnotetag1-8">(return)</a> The italics are mine.]
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <p>Two matters connected with the treasury, I have said, deserved
+ fuller consideration than a general review could give. The one
+ just described, the policy of the Report on Manufactures, came,
+ as has been seen, to no clear and immediate result. The other
+ reached a very sharp and definite conclusion, not without great
+ effect on the new government of the United States, both at the
+ moment and in the future. When Hamilton "struck the rock of the
+ national resources," the stream of revenue which he sought at the
+ outset was that flowing from duties on imports, for this, in his
+ theory, was not only the first source, but the best. He would
+ fain have had it the only one; but the situation drove him
+ forward. The assumption of the state debts, a part of the legacy
+ of the Revolution, and the continuing and at first increasing
+ expenses of unavoidable Indian wars, made additional revenue
+ absolutely essential. He turned therefore to the excise on
+ domestic spirits to furnish what was needed.</p>
+
+ <p>Washington approved assumption. It was a measure of honesty,
+ it would raise the public credit, and above all, it was
+ thoroughly national in its operation and results. The
+ appropriations for Indian wars he of course approved, for their
+ energetic prosecution was part of the vigorous policy toward our
+ wild neighbors upon which he was so determined. It followed, of
+ course, that he did not shrink from imposing the taxes thus made
+ necessary; and to raise the money from domestic spirits seemed to
+ him, under the existing exigency, to be what it
+ was,&mdash;thoroughly proper and reasonable both in form and
+ subject.</p>
+
+ <p>It would seem, however, that neither Washington nor Hamilton
+ realized the unpopularity of this mode of getting revenue. The
+ frontier settlers along the line of the Alleghanies in
+ Pennsylvania, Virginia, and North Carolina, who distilled
+ whiskey, were not very familiar, perhaps, with Johnson's
+ dictionary, but they would have cordially accepted his definition
+ of an excise. To them it was indeed a "hateful tax," and nothing
+ else. In fact, the word was one disliked throughout the States,
+ for it brought up evil memories, and excited much jealous
+ hostility and prejudice. The first excise law, therefore, when it
+ went into force, was the signal for a general outburst of
+ opposition; and in the Alleghany region, as might have been
+ expected, the resistance was immediate and most bitter. State
+ legislatures passed resolutions, public meetings were held and
+ more resolutions were passed, while in the wilder parts of the
+ country threats of violence were freely uttered. All these
+ murmurings and menaces came on the passage of the first bill in
+ 1791. The administration, however, had no desire to precipitate
+ an uncalled-for strife, and so the law was softened and amended
+ in the following year, the tax being lowered and the most
+ obnoxious features removed. The result was general acquiescence
+ throughout most of the States, and renewed opposition in the
+ western counties of Pennsylvania and North Carolina. In the
+ former a meeting was held denouncing the law, pledging the people
+ to "boycott" the officers, and hinting at forcible resistance. If
+ the people engaged in this business had stopped to consider the
+ men with whom they had to deal, they would have been saved a
+ great deal of suffering and humiliation. The President and his
+ Secretary of the Treasury were not men who could be frightened by
+ opposition or violent speeches. But angry frontiersmen, stirred
+ up by demagogues, are not given to much reflection, and they
+ meant to have their own way.</p>
+
+ <p>Washington was quite clear in his policy from the beginning.
+ He was ready to make every proper concession, but when this was
+ done he meant on his side to have his own way, which was the way
+ of law and order and good government. He wrote to Hamilton in
+ August, 1792: "If, after these regulations are in operation,
+ opposition to the due exercise of the collection is still
+ experienced, and peaceable procedure is no longer effectual, the
+ public interests and my duty will make it necessary to enforce
+ the laws respecting this matter; and however disagreeable this
+ would be to me, it must nevertheless take place."</p>
+
+ <p>Meantime the disorders went on, and the officers were insulted
+ and thwarted in the execution of their duty. Washington's next
+ letter (September 7) has a touch of anger. He hated disorder and
+ riot anywhere, but he was disgusted when they came from the very
+ people for whose defense the Indian war was pushed and the excise
+ made necessary. He approved of Hamilton's sending out an officer
+ to examine into the survey, and said: "If, notwithstanding,
+ opposition is still given to the due execution of the law, I have
+ no hesitation in declaring, if the evidence of it is clear and
+ unequivocal, that I shall, however reluctantly I exercise them,
+ exert all the legal powers with which the executive is invested
+ to check so daring and unwarrantable a spirit. It is my duty to
+ see the laws executed. To permit them to be trampled upon with
+ impunity would be repugnant to it; nor can the government longer
+ remain a passive spectator of the contempt with which they are
+ treated. Forbearance, under a hope that the inhabitants of that
+ survey would recover from the delirium and folly into which they
+ were plunged, seems to have had no other effect than to increase
+ the disorder."</p>
+
+ <p>A few weeks later he issued a proclamation, declaring formally
+ and publicly what he had already said in private. He warned the
+ people engaged in resistance to the law that the law would be
+ enforced, and exhorted them to desist. The proclamation was
+ effective in the south, and the opposition died out in North
+ Carolina. Not so in Pennsylvania. There the Scotch-Irish
+ borderers who lived in the western counties were bent on having
+ their way. A brave, self-willed, hotheaded, turbulent people,
+ they were going to have their fight out. They had ridden
+ rough-shod over the Quaker and German government in Pennsylvania
+ before this, and they no doubt thought they could do the same
+ with this new government of the United States. They merely made a
+ mistake about the man at the head of the government; nothing more
+ than that. Such mistakes have been made before. The Paris mob,
+ for example, made a similar blunder on the 13th
+ Vend&eacute;miaire, when Bonaparte settled matters by the famous
+ whiff of grape-shot. There is some excuse for the error of our
+ Scotch-Irish borderers in their past experience, more excuse
+ still in the drift of other events that touched all men just then
+ with the madness of France, and gave birth to certain democratic
+ societies which applauded any resistance to law, even if the
+ cause was no nobler than a whiskey still.</p>
+
+ <p>Perhaps, too, the Pennsylvanians were encouraged by the
+ moderation and deliberate movement of the government. A lull came
+ after the proclamation of 1792. Then every effort was made to
+ settle the troubles by civil processes and by personal
+ negotiation, but all proved vain. The disturbances went on
+ increasing for two years, until law was at an end in the
+ insurgent counties. The mails were stopped and robbed, there were
+ violence, bloodshed, rioting, attacks on the officers of the
+ United States, and meetings threatening still worse things.</p>
+
+ <p>Meanwhile Washington had waited and watched, and bided his
+ time. He felt now that the moment had come when, if ever, public
+ opinion must be with him, and that the hour had arrived when he
+ must put his fortune to the touch, and "try if it were current
+ gold indeed." On August 7 he issued a second proclamation,
+ setting forth the outrages committed, and announcing his power to
+ call out the militia, and his intention to do so if unconditional
+ submission did not follow at once. As he wrote to a friend three
+ days later: "Actual rebellion exists against the laws of the
+ United States." On the crucial point, however, he felt safe. He
+ was confident that all the public opinion worth having was now on
+ his side, and that the people were ready to stand by the
+ government. The quick and unconditional submission did not come,
+ and on September 25 he issued a third proclamation, reciting the
+ facts and calling out the militia of New Jersey, Pennsylvania,
+ Maryland, and Virginia.</p>
+
+ <p>Washington had judged rightly. The States responded, and the
+ troops came to the number of fifteen thousand, for he was in the
+ habit of doing things thoroughly, and meant to have an
+ overwhelming force. To Governor Lee of Virginia the command of
+ the combined forces was intrusted. "I am perfectly in sentiment
+ with you, that the business we are drawn out upon should be
+ effectually
+ executed, and that the daring and factious spirit which
+ threatens to overturn the laws and to subvert the Constitution
+ ought to be subdued." Thus he wrote to Morgan, while the
+ commissioners from the insurgents were politely received, and
+ told that the march of the troops could not be countermanded.
+ Washington would fain have gone himself, in command of the army,
+ but he felt that he could not leave the seat of government for so
+ long a time with propriety. He went as far as Bedford with the
+ troops, and then parted from them. When he took leave, he wrote a
+ letter to Lee, to be read to the army, in which he said: "No
+ citizen of the United States can ever be engaged in a service
+ more important to their country. It is nothing less than to
+ consolidate and to preserve the blessings of that revolution
+ which at much expense of blood and treasure constituted us a free
+ and independent nation." Thus admonished, the army marched,
+ Hamilton going with them in characteristic fashion to the end.
+ They did their work thoroughly. The insurrection disappeared, and
+ resistance dropped suddenly out of sight. The Scotch-Irish of the
+ border, with all their love of fighting, found too late that they
+ were dealing with a power very different from that of their own
+ State. The ringleaders of the insurrection were arrested and
+ tried by civil process, the disorders ceased, law reigned once
+ more, and the "hateful tax" was duly paid and collected.</p>
+
+ <p>The "Whiskey Rebellion" has never received due weight in the
+ history of the United States. Its story has been told in the
+ utmost detail, but its details are unimportant. As a fact,
+ however, it is full of meaning, and this meaning has been too
+ much overlooked. That this should be so, is not to be wondered
+ at, for everything has conspired to make it seem, after a century
+ has gone by, both mean and trivial. Its very name suggests
+ ridicule and contempt, and it collapsed so utterly that people
+ laughed at it and despised it. Its leaders, with the exception of
+ Gallatin, were cheap and talkative persons of little worth, and
+ the cause itself was neither noble, romantic, nor inspiriting.
+ Nevertheless, it was a dangerous and formidable business, for it
+ was the first direct challenge to the new government. It was the
+ first clear utterance of the stern question asked of every people
+ striving to live as a nation, Have you a right to live? Have you
+ a government able to fight and to endure? Have you men ready to
+ take up the challenge? These questions were put by rough frontier
+ settlers, and put in the name and for the sake of distilling
+ whiskey unvexed by law. But they were there, they had to be
+ answered, and on the reply the existence of the government was at
+ stake. If it failed, all was over. If the States did not respond
+ to this first demand, that they should put down disorder and
+ dissension within the borders of one of their number, the
+ experiment had failed. It came, as it almost always does come, to
+ one man to make the answer. That man took up the challenge. He
+ did not move too soon. He waited with unerring judgment, as
+ Lincoln waited with the Proclamation of Emancipation, until he
+ had gathered public opinion behind him by his firmness and
+ moderation. Then he struck, and struck so hard that the whole
+ fabric of insurrection and riot fell helplessly to pieces, and
+ wiseacres looked on and laughed, and thought it had been but a
+ slight matter after all. The action of the government vindicated
+ the right of the United States to live, because they had proved
+ themselves able to keep order. It showed to the American people
+ that their government was a reality of force and power. If it had
+ gone wrong, the history of the United States would not have
+ differed widely from that of the confederation. No mistake was
+ made, and people regarded the whole thing as an insignificant
+ incident, and historians treat it as an episode. There could be
+ no greater tribute to the strong and silent man who did the work
+ and bore the stress of waiting for nearly five years. He did his
+ duty so well and so completely that it seems nothing now, and yet
+ the crushing of that insurrection in the western counties of
+ Pennsylvania was one of the turning-points in a nation's
+ life.</p>
+
+ <p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+ <h2><a name="IV" id="IV"></a>CHAPTER IV</h2>
+
+ <h2>FOREIGN RELATIONS</h2>
+
+ <p>Our present relations with foreign nations fill as a rule but
+ a slight place in American politics, and excite generally only a
+ languid interest, not nearly so much as their importance
+ deserves. We have separated ourselves so completely from the
+ affairs of other people that it is difficult to realize how
+ commanding and disproportionate a place they occupied when the
+ government was founded. We were then a new nation, and our
+ attitude toward the rest of the world was wholly undefined. There
+ was, therefore, among the American people much anxiety to
+ discover what that attitude would be, for the unknown is always
+ full of interest. Moreover, Europe was still our neighbor, for
+ England, France, and Spain were all upon our borders, and had
+ large territorial interests in the northern half of the New
+ World. Within fifteen years we had been colonies, and all our
+ politics, except those which were purely local and provincial,
+ had been the politics of Europe; for during the eighteenth
+ century we had been drawn into and had played a part in every
+ European complication, and every European war in which England
+ had the slightest share. Thus the American people came to
+ consider themselves a part of the European system, and looked to
+ Europe for their politics, which was a habit of thought both
+ natural and congenial to colonists. We ceased to be colonists
+ when the Treaty of Paris was signed; but treaties, although they
+ settle boundaries and divide nations, do not change customs and
+ habits of thought by a few strokes of the pen. The free and
+ independent people of the United States, as there has already
+ been occasion to point out, when they set out to govern
+ themselves under their new Constitution, were still dominated by
+ colonial ideas and prejudices. They felt, no doubt, that the new
+ system would put them in a more respectable attitude toward the
+ other nations of the earth. But this was probably the only
+ definite popular notion on the subject. What our actual relations
+ with other nations should be, was something wholly vague, and
+ very varying ideas were entertained about it by communities and
+ by individuals, according to their various prejudices, opinions,
+ and interests.</p>
+
+ <p>The one idea, however, that the American people did not have
+ on this subject was, that they should hold themselves entirely
+ aloof from the politics of the Old World, and have with other
+ nations outside the Americas no relations except those born of
+ commerce. It had not occurred to them that they should march
+ steadily forward on a course which would drive out European
+ governments, and sever the connections of those governments with
+ the North American continent. After a century's familiarity, this
+ policy looks so simple and obvious that it is difficult to
+ believe that our forefathers could even have considered any other
+ seriously; but in 1789 it was so strange that no one dreamed of
+ it, except perhaps a few thinkers speculating on the future of
+ the infant nation. It was something so novel that when it was
+ propounded it struck the people like a sudden shock of
+ electricity. It was so broad, so national, so thoroughly
+ American, that men still struggling in the fetters of colonial
+ thought could not comprehend it. But there was one man to whom it
+ was neither strange nor speculative. To Washington it was not a
+ vague idea, but a well-defined system, which he had been long
+ maturing in his mind.</p>
+
+ <p>Before he had been chosen President, he wrote to Sir Edward
+ Newenham: "I hope the United States of America will be able to
+ keep disengaged from the labyrinth of European politics and wars;
+ and that before long they will, by the adoption of a good
+ national government, have become respectable in the eyes of the
+ world, so that none of the maritime powers, especially none of
+ those who hold possessions in the New World or the West Indies,
+ shall presume to treat them with insult or contempt. It should be
+ the policy of the United States to administer to their wants
+ without being engaged in their quarrels. And it is not in the
+ power of the proudest and most polite people on earth to prevent
+ us from becoming a great, a respectable, and a commercial nation
+ if we shall continue united and faithful to ourselves." This
+ plain statement shows his fixed belief that in an absolute
+ breaking with the political affairs of other peoples lay the most
+ important part of the work which was to make us a nation in
+ spirit and in truth. He carried this belief with him when he took
+ up the Presidency, and it was the chief burden of the last words
+ of counsel which he gave to his countrymen when he retired to
+ private life. To have begun and carried on to a firm
+ establishment this policy of a separation from Europe would have
+ required time, skill, and patience even under the calmest and
+ most favorable conditions. But it was the fate of the new
+ government to be born just on the eve of the French Revolution.
+ The United States were at once caught up and tossed by the waves
+ of that terrific storm, and it was in the midst of that awful
+ hurly-burly, when the misdeeds of centuries of wrong-doing were
+ brought to an account, that Washington opened and developed his
+ foreign policy. It was a great task, and the manner of its
+ performance deserves much and serious consideration.</p>
+
+ <p>His first act in foreign affairs, on entering the Presidency,
+ was to make the minister of France understand that the government
+ of the United States was to be treated with due formality and
+ respect. His second was to examine the whole mass of foreign
+ correspondence collected in the State Department of the
+ confederation, and he did this, as has been said, pencil in hand,
+ making notes and abstracts as he went. It was well worth doing,
+ for he learned much, and from this laborious study and thorough
+ knowledge certain facts became apparent, for the most part of a
+ hard and unpleasant nature. First, he saw that England, taking
+ advantage of our failure to fulfill completely our obligations
+ under the treaty, had openly violated hers, and continued to hold
+ the fortified posts along the northwestern and western borders.
+ Here was a dangerous thorn which pricked sharply, for the posts
+ in British hands offered constant temptations to Indian risings,
+ and threatened war both with the savages and with Great Britain.
+ Further west still, Spain held the Mississippi, closed
+ navigation, and intrigued to separate our western settlers from
+ the Union. No immediate danger lay here, but still peril and need
+ of close watching, for the Mississippi was never to slip out of
+ our power. The mighty river and the great region through which it
+ flows were important features in that empire which Washington
+ foresaw. His plan was that we should get them by binding the
+ settlers beyond the Alleghanies to the old States with roads,
+ canals, and trade, and then trust to those hardy pioneers to keep
+ the river and its valley for themselves and their country. All
+ that was needed for this were time, and vigilant firmness with
+ Spain.</p>
+
+ <p>Beyond the sea were the West India Islands, the home of a
+ commerce long carried on by the colonies and of much profit to
+ them, especially to those of New England. This trade was now
+ hampered by England, and was soon to be still further blocked,
+ and thereby become the cause of much bickering and ill-will.</p>
+
+ <p>Across the ocean we maintained with the Barbary States the
+ relations usual between brigands and victims, and we tried to
+ make treaties with them, and really paid tribute to them, as was
+ the fashion in dealing with those pirates at that period. With
+ Holland, Sweden, and Prussia we had commercial treaties, and the
+ Dutch sent a minister to the United States. With France alone
+ were our relations close. She had been our ally, and we had
+ formed with her a treaty of alliance and a treaty of commerce, as
+ well as a consular convention, which we were at this time engaged
+ in revising. To most of the nations of the world, however, we
+ were simply an unknown quantity, an unconsidered trifle. The only
+ people who really knew anything about us were the English, with
+ whom we had fought, and from whom we had separated; the French,
+ who had helped us to win our independence; and the Dutch, from
+ whom we had borrowed money. Even these nations, with so many
+ reasons for intelligent and profitable interest in the new
+ republic, failed, not unnaturally, to see the possibilities shut
+ up in the wild American continent.</p>
+
+ <p>To the young nation just starting thus unnoticed and unheeded,
+ Washington believed that honorable peace was essential, if a firm
+ establishment of the new government, and of a respectable and
+ respected position in the eyes of the world, was ever to be
+ attained; and it was toward England, therefore, as the source of
+ most probable trouble, that Washington turned to begin his
+ foreign policy. The return of John Adams had left us without a
+ minister at London, and England had sent no representative to the
+ United States. The President, therefore, authorized Gouverneur
+ Morris, who was going abroad on private business, to sound the
+ English government informally as to an exchange of ministers, the
+ complete execution of the treaty of peace, and the negotiation of
+ a commercial treaty. The mission was one of inquiry, and was born
+ of good and generous feelings as well as of broad and wise views
+ of public policy. "It is in my opinion very important," he wrote
+ to Morris, "that we avoid errors in our system of policy
+ respecting Great Britain; and this can only be done by forming a
+ right judgment of their disposition and views."</p>
+
+ <p>What was the response to these fair and sensible suggestions?
+ On the first point the assent was ready enough; but on the other
+ two, which looked to the carrying out of the treaty and the
+ making of a treaty of commerce, there was no satisfaction.
+ Morris, who was as high-spirited as he was able, was irritated by
+ the indifference and hardly concealed insolence shown to him and
+ his business. It was the fit beginning of the conduct by
+ which
+ England for nearly a century has succeeded in alienating the
+ good-will of the people of the United States. Such a policy was
+ neither generous nor intelligent, and politically it was a gross
+ blunder. Washington, however, was too great a man to be disturbed
+ by the bad temper and narrow ideas of English ministers. After
+ his fashion he persevered in what he knew to be right and for his
+ country's interest, and in due time a diplomatic representation
+ was established, while later still, in the midst of difficulties
+ of which he little dreamed at the outset, he carried through a
+ treaty that removed the existing grievances. In a word, he kept
+ the peace, and it lasted long enough to give the United States
+ the breathing space they so much needed at the beginning of their
+ history.</p>
+
+ <p>The greatest perils in our foreign relations came, as it
+ happened, from another quarter, where peace seemed most secure,
+ and where no man looked for trouble. The government of the United
+ States and the French revolution began almost together, and it is
+ one of the strangest facts of history that the nation which
+ helped so powerfully to give freedom to America brought the
+ results of that freedom into the gravest peril by its own
+ struggle for liberty. When the great movement in France began, it
+ was hailed in this country with general applause, and with a
+ sympathy as hearty as it was genuine, for every one felt that
+ France was now to gain all the blessings of free government with
+ which America was familiar. Our glorious example, it was clear,
+ was destined to change the world, and monarchies and despotisms
+ were to disappear. There was to be a new political birth for all
+ the nations, and the reign of peace and good-will was to come at
+ once upon the earth at the hands of liberated peoples freely
+ governing themselves. It was a natural delusion, and a kindly
+ one. History, in the modern sense, was still unwritten, and men
+ did not then understand that the force and character of a
+ revolution are determined by the duration and intensity of the
+ tyranny and misgovernment which have preceded and caused it. The
+ vast benefit destined to flow from the French revolution was to
+ come many years after all those who saw it begin were in their
+ graves, but at the moment it was expected to arrive immediately,
+ and in a form widely different from that which, in the slow
+ process of time, it ultimately assumed. Moreover, Americans did
+ not realize that the well-ordered liberty of the English-speaking
+ race was something unknown and inconceivable to the French.</p>
+
+ <p>There were a few Americans who were never deceived for a
+ moment, even by their hopes. Hamilton, who "divined Europe," as
+ Talleyrand said, and Gouverneur Morris, studying the situation on
+ the spot with keen and practical observation, soon apprehended
+ the truth, while others more or less quickly followed in their
+ wake. But Washington, whom no one ever credited with divination,
+ and who never crossed the Atlantic, saw the realities of the
+ thing sooner, and looked more deeply into the future than anybody
+ else. No man lived more loyal than he, or more true to the duties
+ of gratitude; but he looked upon the world of facts with vision
+ never dimmed nor dazzled, and watched in silence, while others
+ slept and dreamed. Let us follow his letters for a moment. In
+ October, 1789, in the first flush of hope and sympathy, he wrote
+ to Morris: "The revolution which has been effected in France is
+ of so wonderful a nature that the mind can hardly realize the
+ fact. If it ends as our last accounts to the first of August
+ predict, that nation will be the most powerful and happy in
+ Europe; but I fear though it has gone triumphantly through the
+ first paroxysm, it is not the last it has to encounter before
+ matters are finally settled. In a word, the revolution is of too
+ great magnitude to be effected in so short a space, and with the
+ loss of so little blood.... To forbear running from one extreme
+ to another is no easy matter; and should this be the case, rocks
+ and shelves, not visible at present, may wreck the vessel, and
+ give a higher-toned despotism than the one which existed
+ before."</p>
+
+ <p>Seven years afterwards, reviewing his opinions in respect to
+ France, he wrote to Pickering: "My conduct in public and private
+ life, as it relates to the important struggle in which the latter
+ is engaged, has been uniform from the commencement of it, and may
+ be summed up in a few words: that I have always wished well to
+ the French revolution; that I have always given it as my decided
+ opinion that no nation had a right to intermeddle in the internal
+ concerns of another; that every one had a right to form and adopt
+ whatever government they liked best to live under themselves; and
+ that if this country could, consistently with its engagements,
+ maintain a strict neutrality and thereby preserve peace, it was
+ bound to do so by motives of policy, interest, and every other
+ consideration that ought to actuate a people situated as we are,
+ already deeply in debt, and in a convalescent state from the
+ struggle we have been engaged in ourselves."</p>
+
+ <p>Thus prepared, Washington waited and saw his cautious
+ predictions verified, and the revolution rush headlong from one
+ extreme to another. He also saw the flames spread beyond the
+ borders of France, changing and dividing public opinion
+ everywhere; and he knew it was only a question of time how soon
+ the new nation, at whose head he stood, would be affected.
+ Histories and biographies which treat of that period, as a rule
+ convey the idea that the foreign policy of our first
+ administration dealt with the complications that arose as they
+ came upon us. Nothing could be further from the truth, for the
+ general policy was matured at the outset, as has been seen in the
+ letter to Newenham, and the occasions for its application were
+ sure to come sooner or later, in one form or another. Washington
+ was not surprised by the presence of the perils that he feared,
+ and danger only made him more set on carrying out the policy upon
+ which he had long since determined. In July, 1791, he wrote to
+ Morris: "I trust we shall never so far lose sight of our own
+ interest and happiness as to become unnecessarily a party to
+ these political disputes. Our local situation enables us to
+ maintain that state with respect to them which otherwise could
+ not, perhaps, be preserved by human wisdom." He followed this up
+ with a strong and concise argument as to the advantage and
+ necessity of this policy, showing a complete grasp of the
+ subject, which came from long and patient thought.</p>
+
+ <p>All his firmness and knowledge were needed, for the position
+ was most trying. With every ship that brought news of the
+ extraordinary doings in Europe, the applause which greeted the
+ early uprisings of Paris grew less general. The wise, the
+ prudent, the conservative, cooled gradually at first, and then
+ more quickly in their admiration of the French; but in the
+ beginning, this deepening and increasing hostility to the
+ revolution kept silence. It was popular to be the friend of
+ France, and highly unpopular to be anything else. But when
+ excesses multiplied and blood flowed, when religion tottered and
+ the foundations of society were shaken, this silence was broken.
+ Discussion took the place of harmonious congratulation, and it
+ soon became apparent that there was to be a sharp and bitter
+ division of public opinion, growing out of the affairs of France.
+ It was necessary for the government to maintain a friendly yet
+ cautious attitude toward our former ally, and not endanger the
+ stability of the Union and the dignity of the country by giving
+ to the French sympathizers any good ground for accusing them of
+ ingratitude, or of lukewarmness toward the cause of human rights.
+ That a time would soon come when decisive action must be taken,
+ Washington saw plainly enough; and when that moment arrived, the
+ risk of fierce party divisions on a question of foreign politics
+ could not be avoided. Meantime domestic bitterness on these
+ matters was to be repressed and delayed, and yet in so doing no
+ step was to be taken which would involve the country in any
+ inconsistency, or compel a change of position when the crisis was
+ actually reached. The policy of separating the United States from
+ all foreign politics is usually dated from what is called the
+ neutrality proclamation; but the theory, as has been pointed out,
+ was clear and well defined in Washington's mind when he entered
+ upon the presidency. The outlines were marked out and pursued in
+ practice long before the outbreak of war between France and
+ England put his system to the touch. In everything he said or
+ wrote, whether in public or private, his tone toward France was
+ so friendly that her most zealous supporter could not take
+ offense, and at the same time it was so absolutely guarded that
+ the country was committed to nothing which could hamper it in the
+ future. The course of the administration as a whole, and its
+ substantive acts as well, were in harmony with the tone of
+ expression used by the President; for Washington, it may be
+ repeated, was the head of his own administration, a fact which
+ the biographers of the very able men who surrounded him are too
+ prone to overlook. In this case he was not only the leader, but
+ the work was peculiarly his own, and a few extracts from his
+ letters will show the completeness of his policy and the firmness
+ with which he followed it whenever occasion came.</p>
+
+ <p>To Lafayette he wrote in July, 1791, a letter full of
+ sympathy, but with an undertone of warning none the less
+ significant because it was veiled. Coming to a point where there
+ was an intimation of trouble between the two countries, he said:
+ "The decrees of the National Assembly respecting our tobacco and
+ oil do not appear to be very pleasing to the people of this
+ country; but I do not presume that any hasty measures will be
+ adopted in consequence thereof; for we have never entertained a
+ doubt of the friendly disposition of the French nation toward us,
+ and are therefore persuaded that, if they have done anything
+ which seems to bear hard upon us at a time when the Assembly must
+ have been occupied in very important matters, and which, perhaps,
+ would not allow time for a due consideration of the subject, they
+ will in the moment of calm deliberation alter it and do what is
+ right."</p>
+
+ <div class="figleft" style="width:40%;">
+ <a href="images/illus0461.jpg"><img width="100%" src=
+ "images/illus0461.jpg" alt="LAFAYETTE" /></a>LAFAYETTE
+ </div>
+
+ <p>The unfriendly act was noted, so that Lafayette would
+ understand that no tame submission was intended, and yet no
+ resentment was expressed. The same tone can be noticed in a
+ widely different direction. Washington foresaw that the troubles
+ in France, sooner or later, would involve her in war with
+ England. The United States, as the former allies of the French,
+ were certain to attract the attention of the mother country, and
+ so he watched on that side also with equal caution. England, if
+ possible, was to be made to understand that the American policy
+ was not dictated by anything but the interests and the dignity of
+ the United States, and their resolve to hold aloof from European
+ complications. In June, 1792, he wrote to Morris: "One thing,
+ however, I must not pass over in silence, lest you should infer
+ from it that Mr. D. had authority for reporting that the United
+ States had asked the mediation of Great Britain to bring about a
+ peace between them and the Indians. You may be fully assured,
+ sir, that such mediation never was asked, that the asking of it
+ never was in contemplation, and I think I might go further and
+ say that it not only never will be asked, but would be rejected
+ if offered. The United States will never have occasion, I hope,
+ to ask for the interposition of that power, or any other, to
+ establish peace within their own territory."</p>
+
+ <p>Here is again the same note, always so true and clear, that
+ the United States are not colonies but an independent nation. So
+ far as it was in the power of the President, this was something
+ which should be heard by all men, even at the risk of much
+ reiteration. It was a fact not understood at home and not
+ recognized abroad, but Washington proposed to insist upon it so
+ far as in him lay, until it was both understood and admitted.</p>
+
+ <p>Meantime the flames were ever spreading from Paris, consuming
+ and threatening to consume the heaped up rubbish of centuries,
+ and also burning up many other more valuable things, as is the
+ way with great fires when they get beyond control. Many persons
+ were interested in the things of worth now threatened with
+ destruction, and many others in the rubbish and the tyrannous
+ abuses. It was clear that war of a wide and far-reaching kind
+ could not be long put off. In March, 1793, Washington wrote: "All
+ our late accounts from Europe hold up the expectation of a
+ general war in that quarter. For the sake of humanity, I hope
+ such an event will not take place. But if it should, I trust that
+ we shall have too just a sense of our own interest to originate
+ any cause that may involve us in it."</p>
+
+ <p>Even while he wrote, the general war that he anticipated, the
+ war between France and England, had come. The news reached him at
+ Mount Vernon, and in the letter to Jefferson announcing his
+ immediate departure for Philadelphia he said: "War having
+ actually commenced between France and Great Britain, it behooves
+ the government of this country to use every means in its power to
+ prevent the citizens thereof from embroiling us with either of
+ those powers, by endeavoring to maintain a strict neutrality. I
+ therefore require that you will give the subject mature
+ consideration, that such measures as shall be deemed most likely
+ to effect this desirable purpose may be adopted without delay."
+ These instructions were written on April 12, and on the 18th
+ Washington was in Philadelphia, and had sent out a series of
+ questions to be considered by his cabinet and answered on the
+ following day. After much discussion, it was unanimously agreed
+ to issue a proclamation of neutrality, to receive the new French
+ minister, and not to convene Congress in extra session. The
+ remaining questions were put over for further consideration.</p>
+
+ <p>Hamilton framed the questions, say the historians; Randolph
+ drafted the proclamation, says his biographer, in a very
+ instructive and fresh discussion of the relations between the
+ Secretary of State and the Attorney-General. It is interesting to
+ know what share the President's advisers took when he consulted
+ them on this momentous question, but the leading idea was his
+ own. When the moment came, the policy long meditated and matured
+ was put in force. The world was told that a new power had come
+ into being, which meant to hold aloof from Europe, and which took
+ no interest in the balance of power or the fate of dynasties, but
+ looked only to the welfare of its own people and to the conquest
+ and mastery of a continent as its allotted tasks. The policy
+ declared by the proclamation was purely American in its
+ conception, and severed the colonial tradition at a stroke. In
+ the din then prevailing among civilized men, it was but little
+ heeded, and even at home it was almost totally misunderstood; yet
+ nevertheless it did its work. For twenty-five years afterward the
+ American people slowly advanced toward the ground then taken,
+ until the ideas of the neutrality proclamation received their
+ final acceptance and extension at the hands of the younger Adams,
+ in the promulgation of the Monroe doctrine. The shaping of this
+ policy which was then launched was a great work of far-sighted
+ and native statesmanship, and it was pre&euml;minently the work
+ of the President himself.</p>
+
+ <p>Moreover, it did not stop here. A circular to the officers of
+ the customs provided for securing notice of infractions of the
+ law, and the task of enforcing the principles laid down in the
+ proclamation began. As it happened, the theory of neutrality was
+ destined at once to receive rude tests of its soundness in
+ practice. The new French minister was landing on our shores, and
+ beginning his brief career in this country, while the
+ proclamation was going from town to town and telling the people,
+ in sharp and unaccustomed tones, that they were Americans and not
+ colonists, and must govern themselves accordingly.</p>
+
+ <p>Everything, in fact, seemed to conspire to make the path of
+ the new policy rough and thorny. In the excitement of the time a
+ large portion of the population regarded it as a party measure
+ aimed against our beloved allies, while, to make the situation
+ worse, France on one side and England on the other proceeded, as
+ if deliberately, to do everything in their power to render
+ neutrality impossible, and to drive us into war with some
+ one.</p>
+
+ <p>The new minister, Genet, could not have been better chosen, if
+ the special errand for which he had been employed had been to
+ make trouble. Light-headed and vain, with but little ability and
+ a vast store of unintelligent zeal, the whirl of the French
+ revolution flung him on our shores, where he had a glorious
+ chance for mischief. This opportunity he at once seized. As soon
+ as he landed he proceeded to arm privateers at Charleston. Thence
+ he took his way north, and the enthusiastic popular acclaim which
+ everywhere greeted his arrival almost crazed him, and drew forth
+ a series of high-flown and most injudicious speeches. By the time
+ he reached Philadelphia, and before he had presented his
+ credentials, he had induced enough violations of neutrality, and
+ sown the seeds of enough trouble, to embarrass our government for
+ months to come.</p>
+
+ <p>Washington had written to Governor Lee on May 6: "I foresaw in
+ the moment information of that event (the war) came to me, the
+ necessity for announcing the disposition of this country towards
+ the belligerent powers, and the propriety of restraining, as far
+ as a proclamation would do it, our citizens from taking part in
+ that contest.... The affairs of France would seem to me to be in
+ the highest paroxysm of disorder; not so much from the presence
+ of foreign enemies, for in the cause of liberty this ought to be
+ fuel to the fire of a patriot soldier and to increase his ardor,
+ but because those in whose hands the government is intrusted are
+ ready to tear each other to pieces, and will more than probably
+ prove the worst foes the country has."</p>
+
+ <p>He easily foresaw the moment of trial, when he would be forced
+ to the declaration of his policy, which was so momentous for the
+ United States, and he also understood the condition of affairs at
+ Paris, and the probable tendencies and proximate results of the
+ Revolution. It was evident that the great social convulsion had
+ brought forth men of genius and force, and had maddened them with
+ the lust of blood and power. But it was less easy to foresee,
+ what was equally natural, that the revolution would also throw to
+ the surface men who had neither genius nor force, but who were as
+ wild and dangerous as their betters. No one, surely, could have
+ been prepared to meet in the person of the minister of a great
+ nation such a feather-headed mischief-maker as Genet.</p>
+
+ <p>In everything relating to France Washington had observed the
+ utmost caution, and his friendliness had been all the more marked
+ because he had felt obliged to be guarded. He had exercised this
+ care even in personal matters, and had refrained, so far as
+ possible, from seeing the <i>&eacute;migr&eacute;s</i> who had
+ begun to come to this country. Such men as the Vicomte de
+ Noailles had been referred to the State Department, and in many
+ cases the maintenance of this attitude had tried his feelings
+ severely, for the exiles were not infrequently men who had fought
+ or sympathized with us in our day of conflict. Now came the new
+ minister of the republic, a being apparently devoid of training
+ or manners. Before he had been received, or had appeared at the
+ seat of government, before he had even taken possession of his
+ predecessor's papers, he had behaved in a way which would not
+ have been inappropriate to a Roman governor of a conquered
+ province. He had ordered the French consuls to act as admiralty
+ courts, he had armed cruisers, enlisted and commissioned American
+ citizens, and had seen the vessels of a power with which the
+ United States were at peace captured in American waters, and
+ condemned in the States by French consular courts. Three weeks
+ before Genet's audience Jefferson had a memorial from the British
+ minister, justly complaining of the injuries done his country
+ under cover of our flag; and while the government was considering
+ this pleasant incident, Genet was faring gayly northward,
+ f&ecirc;ted and caressed, cheered and applauded, the subject of
+ ovations and receptions everywhere. At Philadelphia he was
+ received by a great concourse of citizens, called together by the
+ guns of the very privateer that had violated our neutrality, and
+ led by provincial persons, who thought it fine to name themselves
+ "citizen" Smith and "citizen" Brown, because that particular
+ folly was the fashion in France. A day was passed in receiving
+ addresses, and then Genet was presented to the President.</p>
+
+ <p>A stranger contrast could not easily have been found even in
+ that strange time, and two men more utterly unlike probably never
+ faced each other as representatives of two great nations. In the
+ difference between them the philosopher may find, perhaps, some
+ explanation of the difference in the character and results of the
+ revolutions which came so near together in the two countries.
+ Nothing, moreover, could well be conceived more distasteful to
+ Washington than the Frenchman's conduct except the Frenchman
+ himself. There was about the man and his performances everything
+ most calculated to bring one of those gusts of passionate
+ contempt which now and again had made things unpleasant for some
+ one who had failed in sense, decency, and duty. This was
+ impossible to a President, but nevertheless his self-restraint
+ from the beginning to the end of his intercourse with Genet was
+ very remarkable in a man of his temperament. At their first
+ interview his demeanor may have been a little colder than usual,
+ and the dignified reserve somewhat more marked, but there was no
+ trace of any feeling. His manner, nevertheless, chilled Genet and
+ came upon him like a cold bath after the warm atmosphere of
+ popular plaudits and turgid addresses. He went away grumbling,
+ and complained that he had seen medallions of the Capets on the
+ walls of the President's room.</p>
+
+ <p>But although Washington was calm and polite, he was also
+ watchful and prepared, as he had good reason to be, for Genet
+ immediately began, in addition to his wild public utterances, to
+ pour in notes upon the State Department. He demanded money; he
+ announced in florid style the opening of the French ports; he
+ wrote that he was ready to make a new treaty; and finally he
+ filed an answer to the complaints of the British minister. His
+ arguments were wretched, but they seemed to weigh with Jefferson,
+ although not with the President; and meantime the dragon's teeth
+ which he had plentifully sown began to come up and bear an
+ abundant harvest. More prizes were made by his cruisers, and
+ after many remonstrances one was ordered away, and two Americans
+ whom Genet had enlisted were indicted. Genet declared that this
+ was an act which his pen almost refused to state; but still it
+ was done, and the administration pushed on and ordered the
+ seizure of privateers fitting in American ports. Governor Clinton
+ made a good beginning with one at New York, and in hot haste
+ Genet wrote another note more furious and impertinent than any he
+ had yet sent. He was answered civilly, and the work of stopping
+ the sale of prizes went on.</p>
+
+ <p>Meantime the opposition were not idle. The French sympathizers
+ bestirred themselves, and attacks began to be made even on the
+ President himself. The popular noise and clamor were all against
+ the administration, but the support of it was really growing
+ stronger, although the President and his secretaries could not
+ see it. Jefferson, on whom the conduct of foreign affairs rested,
+ was uneasy and wavering. He wrote able letters, as he was
+ directed, but held, it is to be feared, quite different language
+ in his conversations with Genet. Randolph argued and hesitated,
+ while Hamilton, backed by Knox, was filled with wrath and wished
+ more decisive measures. Still, as we look at it now across a
+ century, we can observe that the policy went calmly forward,
+ consistent and unchecked. The French minister was held back,
+ privateers were stopped, the English minister's complaints were
+ answered, every effort was made for exact justice, and neutrality
+ was preserved. It was hard and trying work, especially to a man
+ of strong temper and fighting propensities. Still it was done,
+ and toward the end of June Washington went for a little rest to
+ Mount Vernon.</p>
+
+ <p>Then came a sudden explosion. One July morning the rumor ran
+ through Philadelphia that the Little Sarah, a prize of the French
+ man-of-war, was fitting out as a privateer. The reaction in favor
+ of the administration was beginning, and men, indignant at the
+ proceeding, carried the news to Governor Mifflin, and also to the
+ Secretary of State. Great disturbance of mind thereupon ensued to
+ these two gentlemen, who were both much interested in France and
+ the rights of man. The brig would not sail before the arrival of
+ the President, said the Secretary of State. Still the arming went
+ on apace, and then came movements on the part of the governor.
+ Dallas, Secretary of State for Pennsylvania, went at midnight to
+ expostulate with Genet, who burst into a passion, and declared
+ that the vessel should sail. This defiance roused the governor,
+ and a company of militia marched to the vessel and took
+ possession. Greatly excited, Jefferson went next morning to
+ Genet, who very honestly declined to promise to detain the
+ vessel, but said that she would not be ready to sail until
+ Wednesday. This announcement, which was distinctly not a promise,
+ the Secretary of State chose to accept as such, and as he was
+ very far from being a fool, he did so either from timidity, or
+ from a very unworthy political preference for another nation's
+ interests to the dignity of his own country. At all events, he
+ had the troops withdrawn, and the Little Sarah, now rejoicing in
+ the name of the Petit Democrat, dropped down to Chester. Hamilton
+ and Knox, being neither afraid nor un-American, were for putting
+ a battery on Mud Island and sinking the privateer if she
+ attempted to go by. Great saving of trouble and bloodshed would
+ have been accomplished by the setting up of this battery and the
+ sinking of this vessel, for it would have informed the world that
+ though the United States were weak and young, they were ready
+ nevertheless to fight as a nation, a fact which we subsequently
+ were obliged to prove by a three years' war.</p>
+
+ <p>Jefferson, however, opposed decisive measures, and while the
+ cabinet wrangled, Washington, hurrying back from Mount Vernon,
+ reached Philadelphia. He was full of just anger at what had been
+ done and left undone. Jefferson, feeling uneasy, had gone to the
+ country, where he was fond of making a retreat at unpleasant
+ moments, and Washington at once wrote him a letter, which could
+ not have been very agreeable to the discoverer of diplomatic
+ promises in a refusal to give any. "What," said the President,
+ "is to be done in the case of the Little Sarah, now at Chester?
+ Is the minister of the French Republic to set the acts of this
+ government at defiance <i>with impunity</i>? and then threaten
+ the executive with an appeal to the people? What must the world
+ think of such conduct, and of the government of the United States
+ in submitting to it?" Then came a demand for an immediate
+ opinion.</p>
+
+ <p>To the tender feelings of the Secretary of State, who had not
+ been considering the affair from an American standpoint, this
+ must have seemed a violent and almost a coarse way of treating
+ the "great republic," and he replied that the French minister had
+ assured him that the vessel would not sail until the President
+ reached a decision. Having got the vessel to Chester, however, by
+ telling the truth, Genet now changed his tack. He lied about
+ detaining her, and she went to sea. This performance filled the
+ cup of Washington's disgust almost to overflowing, for he had
+ what Jefferson seems to have totally lost at this
+ juncture&mdash;a keen national feeling, and it was touched to the
+ quick. The truth was, that in all this business Jefferson was
+ thinking too much of France and of the cause of human liberty in
+ Paris, while Washington thought of the United States alone. The
+ result was the escape of the vessel, owing to Washington's
+ absence, and the consequent humiliation to the government. To
+ refrain from ordering Genet out of the country at once required a
+ strong effort of self-control; but he wished to keep the peace as
+ long as possible, and he proposed to get rid of him speedily but
+ decorously. He resolved also that no more such outrages should be
+ committed through his absence, and the consequent differences
+ among his advisers. He continued, of course, to consult his
+ cabinet, but he took the immediate control, more definitely even
+ than before, into his own hands. On July 25 he wrote to
+ Jefferson, whose vigor at this critical time he evidently
+ doubted: "As the letter of the minister of the Republic of
+ France, dated the 22d of June, lies yet unanswered, and as the
+ official conduct of that gentleman, relative to the affairs of
+ this government, will have to undergo a very serious
+ consideration, ... in order to decide upon measures proper to be
+ taken thereupon, it is my desire that all the letters to and from
+ that minister may be ready to be laid before me, the heads of
+ departments, and the attorney-general, whom I shall advise with
+ on the occasion." He also saw to it that better precautions
+ should be taken by the officers of the customs to prevent similar
+ attempts to break neutrality, and set the administration and the
+ laws of the country at defiance.</p>
+
+ <p>The cabinet consultations soon bore good fruit, and Genet's
+ recall was determined on during the first days of August. There
+ was some discussion over the manner of requesting the recall, but
+ the terms were made gentle by Jefferson, to the disgust of the
+ Secretary of the Treasury and the Secretary of War, who desired
+ direct methods and stronger language. As finally toned up and
+ agreed upon by the President and cabinet, the document was
+ sufficiently vigorous to annoy Genet, and led to bitter
+ reproaches addressed to his friend in the State Department. Then
+ there was question about publishing the correspondence, and again
+ Jefferson intervened in behalf of mildness. The substantive fact,
+ however, was settled, and the letter asking Genet's recall, as
+ desired by Washington, went in due time, and in the following
+ February came a successor. Genet, however, did not go back to his
+ native land, for he preferred to remain here and save his head,
+ valueless as that article would seem to have been. He spent the
+ rest of his days in America, married, harmless, and quite
+ obscure. His noise and fireworks were soon over, and one wonders
+ now how he could ever have made as much flare and explosion as he
+ did.</p>
+
+ <p>But even while his recall was being decided, before he knew of
+ it himself, and long before his successor came, Genet's folly
+ produced more trouble than ever, and his insolence rose to a
+ higher pitch. The arming of privateers had been checked, but the
+ consuls continued to arrogate powers which no self-respecting
+ nation could permit, and for some gross offense Washington
+ revoked the <i>exequatur</i> of Duplaine, consul at Boston. An
+ insolent note from Genet thereupon declared that the President
+ had overstepped his authority, and that he should appeal to the
+ sovereign State of Massachusetts. Next there was riot and the
+ attempted murder of a man from St. Domingo who was accused by the
+ refugees. Then it began to get abroad that Genet had threatened
+ to appeal from the President to the people, and frantic denials
+ ensued from all the opposition press; whereupon a card appeared
+ from John Jay and Rufus King, which stated that they were
+ authority for the story and believed it. Apologies now took the
+ place of denial, and were backed by ferocious attacks on the
+ signers of the card. Unluckily, intelligent people seemed to put
+ faith in Jay and King rather than in the opposition newspapers,
+ and the tide, which had turned some time before, now ran faster
+ every moment against the French. To make it flow with
+ overwhelming force and rapidity was reserved for Genet himself,
+ who was furious at the Jay card, and wrote to the President,
+ demanding a denial of the statement which it contained. A cool
+ note informed him that the President did not consider it proper
+ or material to make denials, and pointed out to him that he must
+ address his communications to the State Department. This
+ correspondence was published, and the mass of the people were at
+ last aroused, and turned from Genet in disgust. The leaders tried
+ vainly to separate the minister from his country, and Genet
+ himself frothed and foamed, demanded that Randolph should sue Jay
+ and King for libel, and declared that America was no longer free.
+ This sad statement had little effect. Washington had triumphed
+ completely, and without haste but with perfect firmness had
+ brought the people round to his side as that of the national
+ dignity and honor.</p>
+
+ <p>The victory had been won at no little cost to Washington
+ himself in the way of self-control. He had been irritated and
+ angered at every step, so much so that he even referred in a
+ letter to Richard Henry Lee to the trial of temper to which he
+ had been put, a bit of personal allusion in which he rarely
+ indulged. "The specimens you have seen," he wrote, "of Mr.
+ Genet's sentiments and conduct in the gazettes form a small part
+ only of the aggregate. But you can judge from them to what test
+ the temper of the executive has been put in its various
+ transactions with this gentleman. It is probable that the whole
+ will be exhibited to public view in the course of the next
+ session of Congress. Delicacy towards his nation has restrained
+ the doing of it hitherto. The best that can be said of this agent
+ is, that he is entirely unfit for the mission on which he is
+ employed; unless (which I hope is not the case), contrary to the
+ express and unequivocal declaration of his country made through
+ himself, it is meant to involve ours in all the horrors of a
+ European war."</p>
+
+ <p>But there was another side to the neutrality question even
+ more full of difficulties and unpopularity, which began to open
+ just as the worst of the contests with Genet was being brought to
+ a successful close. Genet had not confined his efforts to the
+ seaboard, nor been content with civic banquets, privateers,
+ rioting, and insolent notes to the government. He had fitted out
+ ships, and he intended also to levy armies. With this end in view
+ he had sent his agents through the south and west to raise men in
+ order to invade the Floridas on the one hand and seize New
+ Orleans on the other. To conceive of such a performance by a
+ foreign minister on the soil of the United States, requires an
+ effort of the imagination to-day almost equal to that which would
+ be necessary for an acceptance of the reality of the Arabian
+ nights. It brings home with startling clearness not merely the
+ crazy insolence of Genet, but a painful sense of the manner in
+ which we were regarded by the nations of Europe. Still worse is
+ the fact that they had good reason for their view. The imbecility
+ of the confederation had bred contempt, and it was now seen that
+ we were still so wholly provincial that a large part of the
+ people was not only ready to condone but even to defend the
+ conduct of the minister who engaged in such work. Worst of all,
+ the people among whom the French agents went received their
+ propositions with much pleasure. In South Carolina, where it was
+ said five thousand men had been enlisted, there was sufficient
+ self-respect to stop the precious scheme. The assembly arrested
+ certain persons and ordered an inquiry, which came to nothing;
+ but the effect of their action was sufficient. In Kentucky, on
+ the other hand, the authorities would not interfere. The people
+ there were always quite ready for a march against New Orleans,
+ and that it did not proceed was due to Genet's inability to get
+ money; for the governor declined to meddle, and the democratic
+ society of Lexington demanded war. Matters looked so serious that
+ the cavalry was sent to Kentucky, and the rest of the army
+ wintered in Ohio. It was actually necessary to teach the American
+ people by the presence of the troops of the United States that
+ they must not enroll themselves in the army of a foreign
+ minister.</p>
+
+ <p>Nothing can show more strikingly than this the almost
+ inconceivable difficulties with which the President was
+ contending. To develop a policy of wise and dignified neutrality,
+ and to impress it upon the world, was a great enough task in
+ itself. But Washington was obliged to impress it also upon his
+ own people, and to teach them that they must have a policy of
+ their own toward other nations. He had to carry this through in
+ the teeth of an opposition so utterly colonial that it could not
+ grasp the idea of having any policy but that which, from sympathy
+ or hate, they took from foreigners. Beyond the mountains, he had
+ to bring this home to men to whom American nationality was such a
+ dead letter that they were willing to defy their own government,
+ throw off their allegiance, and enlist for an offensive war under
+ the banners of a crazy French Girondist. It is neither easy nor
+ pleasant to carry out a new foreign policy in time of general
+ war, with one's own people united in its support; but when the
+ foreign divisions are repeated at home, the task is enhanced in
+ difficulty a thousand-fold. Nevertheless, there was the work to
+ do, and the President faced it. He dealt with Genet, he prevailed
+ in public opinion on the seaboard, and in some fashion he
+ maintained order west of the mountains.</p>
+
+ <p>Washington also saw, as we can see now very plainly, that,
+ wrong and unpatriotic as the Kentucky attitude was, there was
+ still an excuse for it. Those bold pioneers, to whom the country
+ owes so much, had very substantial grievances. They knew nothing
+ of the laws of nations, and did not yet realize that they had a
+ country and a nationality; but they had the instincts of all
+ great conquering races. They looked upon the Mississippi and felt
+ that it was of right theirs, and that it must belong to the vast
+ empire which they were winning from the wilderness. They saw the
+ mighty river held and controlled by Spaniards, and they were
+ harassed and interfered with by Spanish officials, whom they both
+ hated and despised. To men of their mould and training there was
+ but one solution conceivable. They must fight the Spaniard, and
+ drive him from the land forever. Their purposes were quite right,
+ but their methods were faulty. Washington, born to a life of
+ adventure and backwoods conquest, had a good deal of real
+ sympathy with these men, for he knew them to be in the main
+ right, and his ultimate purposes were the same as theirs. But he
+ had a nation in his charge to whom peace was precious. To have
+ the backwoodsmen of Kentucky go down the river and harry the
+ Spaniards out of the country, as their descendants afterwards
+ harried the Mexicans out of Texas, would have been a refreshing
+ sight, but it would have interfered sadly with the nation which
+ was rising on the Atlantic seaboard, and of which Kentucky was a
+ part. War was to be avoided, and above all a war into which we
+ should have been dragged as the vassal of France; so Washington
+ intended to wait, and he managed to make the Kentuckians wait
+ too, a process by no means agreeable to that enterprising
+ people.</p>
+
+ <p>His own policy about the Mississippi, which has already been
+ described, never wavered. He meant to have the great river, for
+ his ideas of the empire of the future were quite as extended as
+ those of the pioneers, and much more definite, but his way of
+ getting it was to build up the Atlantic States and bind them,
+ with their established resources, to the settlers over the
+ mountains. This done, time would do the rest; and the sequel
+ showed that he was right. A little more than a year after he came
+ to the presidency he wrote to Lafayette: "Gradually recovering
+ from the distresses in which the war left us, patiently advancing
+ in our task of civil government, unentangled in the crooked
+ politics of Europe, <i>wanting scarcely anything but the free
+ navigation of the Mississippi, which we must have, and as
+ certainly shall have, if we remain a nation</i>,"<a id=
+ "footnotetag1-9" name="footnotetag1-9"></a><a href=
+ "#footnote1-9"><sup>1</sup></a> etc.</p>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote1-9" name="footnote1-9"></a>[<b>Footnote 1:</b>
+ <a href="#footnotetag1-9">(return)</a> The italics are mine.]
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <p>Time and peace, sufficient for the up-building of the nation,
+ that is the theme everywhere. Yet he knew that a sacrifice of
+ everything for peace was the surest road both to war and ruin.
+ Peace must be kept; yet war was still the last resort, and he was
+ ready to go to war with the Spaniards, as with the Indians, if
+ all else failed. But he did not mean to have all else fail, nor
+ did he mean to submit to Spanish insolence and exactions. The
+ grievances of the pioneers of the West were to be removed, if
+ possible, by treaty, and if that way was impossible, then by
+ fighting.</p>
+
+ <p>Carmichael, who had been minister at Madrid under the
+ confederation, had been continued there by the new government.
+ But while the intrigues of Spain to detach Kentucky, and the
+ interference and exactions of Spanish officials, went on, our
+ negotiation for the settlement of our rights to the navigation of
+ the Mississippi halted. Tired of this inaction, Washington, late
+ in 1791, united William Short, our minister to Holland, in a
+ commission with Carmichael, to open a fresh and special
+ negotiation as to the Mississippi, and at the same time a
+ confidential agent was sent to Florida to seek some arrangements
+ with the governor as to fugitive slaves, a matter of burning
+ interest to the planters on the border. The joint commission bore
+ no fruit, and the troubles in the West increased. Fostered by
+ Genet, they came near bringing on war and detaching the western
+ settlements from the Union, so that it was clearly necessary to
+ take more vigorous measures.</p>
+
+ <p>Accordingly, in 1794, after Genet had been dismissed,
+ Washington sent Thomas Pinckney, who for some years had been
+ minister in London, on a special treaty-making mission to Madrid.
+ The first results were vexatious and unpromising enough, and
+ Pinckney wrote at the outset that he had had two interviews with
+ the Duke de Alcudia, but to no purpose. It was the old game of
+ delay, he said, with inquiries as to why we had not replied to
+ propositions, which in fact never had been made. Even what
+ Pinckney wrote, unsatisfactory as it was, could not be wholly
+ made out, for some passages were in a cipher to which the State
+ Department had no key. Washington wrote to Pickering, then acting
+ as Secretary of State: "A kind of fatality seems to have pursued
+ this negotiation, and, in short, all our concerns with Spain,
+ from the appointment of Mr. Carmichael, under the new government,
+ as minister to that country, to the present day.... Enough,
+ however, appears already to show the temper and policy of the
+ Spanish court, and its undignified conduct as it respects
+ themselves, and insulting as it relates to us; and I fear it will
+ prove that the late treaty of peace with France portends nothing
+ favorable to these United States." Washington's patience had been
+ sorely tried by the delays and shifty evasions of Spain, but he
+ was now on the brink of success, just as he concluded that
+ negotiation was hopeless.</p>
+
+ <p>He had made a good choice in Thomas Pinckney, better even than
+ he knew. Triumphing over all obstacles, with persistence,
+ boldness, and good management, Pinckney made a treaty and brought
+ it home with him. Still more remarkable was the fact that it was
+ an extremely good treaty, and conceded all we asked. By it the
+ Florida boundary was settled, and the free navigation of the
+ Mississippi was obtained. We also gained the right to a place of
+ deposit at New Orleans, a pledge to leave the Indians alone, a
+ commercial agreement modeled on that with France, and a board of
+ arbitration to settle American claims. All this Pinckney
+ obtained, not as the representative of a great and powerful
+ state, but as the envoy of a new nation, distant, unknown,
+ disliked, and embroiled in various complications with other
+ powers. Our history can show very few diplomatic achievements to
+ be compared with this, for it was brilliant in execution, and
+ complete and valuable in result. Yet it has passed into history
+ almost unnoticed, and both the treaty and its maker have been
+ singularly and most unjustly neglected. Even the accurate and
+ painstaking Hildreth omits the date and circumstances of
+ Pinckney's appointment, while the last elaborate history of the
+ United States scarcely alludes to the matter, and finds no place
+ in its index for the name of its author. It was in fact one of
+ the best pieces of work done during Washington's administration,
+ and perfected its policy on a most difficult and essential point.
+ It is high time that justice were done to the gallant soldier and
+ accomplished diplomatist who conducted the negotiation and
+ rendered such a solid service to his country. Thomas Pinckney,
+ who really did something, who did work worth doing and without
+ many words, has been forgotten, while many of his contemporaries,
+ who simply made a noise, are freshly remembered in the pages of
+ history.</p>
+
+ <p>There was, however, another nation out on our western and
+ northern border more difficult to deal with than Spain; and in
+ this quarter there was less evasion and delay, but more arrogance
+ and bad temper. It was to England that Washington turned first
+ when he took up the presidency, and it was in her control of the
+ western posts and her influence among the Indian tribes that he
+ saw the greatest dangers to the continental movement of our
+ people. Morris, as we have seen, sounded the British government
+ with but little success. Still they promised to send a minister,
+ and in due time Mr. George Hammond arrived in that capacity, and
+ opened a long and somewhat fruitless correspondence with the
+ Secretary of State on the various matters of difference existing
+ between the two countries. This interchange of letters went on
+ peaceably and somewhat monotonously for many months, and then
+ suddenly became very vivid and animated. This was the effect of
+ the arrival of Genet; and at this point begins the long series of
+ mistakes made by Great Britain in her dealings with the United
+ States.</p>
+
+ <p>The principle of the declaration of neutrality could be easily
+ upheld on broad political grounds, but technically its defense
+ was by no means so simple. By the treaty of commerce with France
+ we were bound to admit her privateers and prizes to our ports;
+ and here, as any one could see, and as the sequel amply proved,
+ was a fertile source of dangerous complications. Then by the
+ treaty of alliance we guaranteed to France her West Indian
+ possessions, binding ourselves to aid her in their defense; and a
+ proclamation of neutrality when France was actually at war with a
+ great naval power was an immediate and obvious limitation upon
+ this guarantee. Hamilton argued that while France had an
+ undoubted right to change her government, the treaty applied to a
+ totally different state of affairs, and was therefore in
+ suspense. He also argued that we were not bound in case of
+ offensive war, and that this war was offensive. Jefferson and
+ Randolph held that the treaties were as binding and as much in
+ force now as they had ever been; but they both assented to the
+ proclamation of neutrality. There can be little question that on
+ the general legal principle Jefferson and Randolph were right.
+ Hamilton's argument was ingenious and very fine-spun. But when he
+ made the point about the character of the war as relieving us
+ from the guarantee, he was unanswerable; and this of itself was a
+ sufficient ground. He went beyond it in order to make his
+ reasoning fit existing conditions consistently and throughout,
+ and then it was that his position became untenable. In reality
+ the French revolution was showing itself so wholly abnormal and
+ was so rapid in its changes, that as a matter of practical
+ statesmanship it was worse than idle even to suppose that
+ previous treaties, made with an established government, were in
+ force with this ever-shifting thing which the revolution had
+ brought forth. Still the general doctrine as to the binding force
+ of treaties remained unaltered, and this conflict between fact
+ and principle was what constituted the great difficulty in the
+ way of Washington and Hamilton. The latter met it with one clever
+ and adroit argument which it was difficult to sustain, and
+ avoided it with a second, which was narrower, but at the same
+ time sound and all-sufficient, as to the character of the war.
+ Jefferson and Randolph stood by the general principle, but
+ abandoned it in practice under pressure of imperious facts, as
+ men generally do, while France herself soon removed all technical
+ difficulties by abrogating by her measures the treaty of
+ commerce, an act which relieved us of any further obligations and
+ justified Hamilton's position. But in the beginning this was not
+ known, and yet action was none the less necessary.</p>
+
+ <p>The result was right, and Washington had his way, which it
+ must be confessed he had fully determined on before his cabinet
+ supplied him with technical arguments.</p>
+
+ <p>All these points must have been plain enough to Hammond and
+ the English ministry. They could not see the full scope of the
+ neutrality policy in its national meaning, and they very
+ naturally failed to perceive that it marked the rise of a new
+ power wholly disconnected from Europe, to which their own views
+ were confined. But they were quite able to understand the
+ immediate aspect of the case. They saw Washington adopt and carry
+ out a policy of dignified impartiality; they were well able to
+ value rightly the technical objections which stood in his path,
+ and they could see also that this policy was at the outset very
+ unpopular in America. The remembrance of old injuries and of the
+ war for independence was still fresh, and the hatred of England
+ was well nigh universal in the United States. On the other hand,
+ a lively sense of gratitude to France, and a sympathy with the
+ objects of the revolution, made affection for that country
+ uniform and general. The easy and popular course was for our
+ government to range itself more or less directly with the French,
+ and the refusal to do so was bold and in the highest degree
+ creditable to the administration. It was, moreover, an important
+ advantage to England that the United States should not ally
+ themselves with her enemy, for next to herself, the Americans
+ were the great seafaring people of the world, and were in a
+ position to ravage her commerce, and, aided by France, to break
+ up her West Indian possessions. If the United States had followed
+ the natural prejudices of the time and had espoused the cause of
+ France, it would have been wise and right for England to attack
+ them and break them down if possible. But when, from a sense of
+ national dignity and of fair dealing, the United States stood
+ apart from the conflict and placed their former foe on the same
+ footing as their friend and ancient ally, a very small allowance
+ of good sense would have led the British ministry to encourage
+ them in so doing. By favorable treatment, and by a friendly and
+ conciliatory policy, they should have helped Washington in his
+ struggle against popular prejudices, and endeavored by so doing
+ to keep the United States neutral, and lead them, if possible, to
+ their side; but with a fatuity almost incomprehensible they
+ pursued an almost exactly opposite course. By similar conduct
+ England had brought on the war for independence, which ended in
+ the division of her empire. In precisely the same way she now
+ proceeded to make it as arduous as possible for Washington to
+ maintain neutrality, and thereby played directly into the hands
+ of the party that supported France. The true policy demanded no
+ sacrifices on the part of Great Britain. Civility and
+ consideration in her dealings, and a careful abstention from
+ wanton aggression and insult, were all-sufficient. But England
+ disliked us, as was quite natural; she did not wish us to thrive
+ and prosper, and she knew that we were weak and not in a position
+ to enter upon an offensive war.</p>
+
+ <p>As soon as it became known that Genet's privateers, manned by
+ seamen enlisted in our ports, were preying on British commerce,
+ and that the French man-of-war L'Ambuscade had taken an English
+ vessel, The Grange, within the capes of the Delaware, Hammond
+ filed a memorial in regard to these incidents. In so doing he was
+ of course quite right, and the government responded immediately,
+ and proceeded in good faith to make every effort to repair these
+ breaches of neutrality, and to redress the wrongs suffered by
+ Great Britain. Hammond, however, instead of doing all in his
+ power, not merely to gain his own ends, but to make it easy for
+ our government to satisfy him, assumed at once a disagreeable
+ tone with a strong flavor of bullying, which was not calculated
+ to conciliate the statesmen with whom he was dealing. It was a
+ small matter enough, but unfortunately it was an indication of
+ what was to come.</p>
+
+ <p>On November 6, 1793, a British order in council was passed,
+ but not immediately published, directing the seizure of all
+ vessels carrying the produce of the French islands, or loaded
+ with provisions for the use of the French colonies. The object of
+ the order was to destroy all neutral trade, and it was aimed
+ particularly at the commerce of the United States. The moment
+ selected for its adoption was when the troubles with Genet had
+ culminated, when we were on the point of getting rid of that very
+ objectionable person, and when we had proved that we meant to
+ maintain an honest and a real neutrality. It was as well
+ calculated as any move could have been to drive us back into the
+ arms of France, yet the manner of executing the order was far
+ worse than the order itself. Our merchantmen and traders had been
+ quick to take advantage of the opening of the French ports, and
+ they had gone in swarms to the French islands. Now, without a
+ word of warning, their vessels were seized by the cruisers of a
+ nation with which we were supposed to be at peace. Every petty
+ governor of an English island sat as a judge in admiralty. Many
+ of them were corrupt, all were unfit for the duty, and our
+ vessels were condemned and pillaged. The crews were made
+ prisoners, and in many cases thrown into loathsome and unhealthy
+ places of confinement, while the ships were left to rot in the
+ harbors. The tale of the outrages and miseries thus inflicted on
+ citizens of the United States without any warning, and by a
+ nation considered to be at peace with us, fills an American with
+ shame and anger even to-day. If our people remonstrated, they
+ were told that England meant to have no neutrals, and that six of
+ their frigates could blockade our coast. A course of kind
+ treatment would have made us the friends of Great Britain, but
+ the experiment was not even tried. The truth was that we were
+ weak, and this was not only a misfortune but apparently an
+ unpardonable sin. England could not conquer us, but she could
+ harry our coasts, and let loose her Indians on our borders; and
+ we had no navy with which to retaliate. She meant that there
+ should be no neutrals, and so adopted a policy which would make
+ us the active ally of France. It was no answer to say, what was
+ perfectly true, that French privateers preyed upon our commerce
+ with that fine indifference to rights and treaties which
+ characterized the governments of the Revolution. If both sides
+ maltreated us, the natural course was to unite with the power to
+ which we at least owed a debt of gratitude.</p>
+
+ <p>About the same time a speech was reported from Quebec, in
+ which Lord Dorchester told the Indians that they should soon take
+ the war-path for England against the United States. Lord
+ Grenville denied in Parliament, and subsequently to Jay, that the
+ ministry had ever taken any step to incite the Indians against
+ the United States, and the authenticity of Lord Dorchester's
+ utterances has been questioned in later days; but it was not
+ disavowed at the time, even by Hammond in a sharp correspondence
+ which he held on that and other topics with Randolph. The speech,
+ as is now known and proved, was probably made, whether it was
+ authorized or not, and it was universally accepted at the moment
+ as both true and authoritative.</p>
+
+ <p>This menace of desolating savage war in the West, in addition
+ to the unquestioned outrages to our seamen, the loss of our
+ ships, and the destruction of our commerce, with consequent ruin
+ to all our seaboard towns, led to a general outburst of
+ indignation from men of all parties, and Congress began to
+ prepare for war. Many of the methods suggested were feeble and
+ inadequate, but there could be no doubt of either the spirit or
+ intentions which dictated them. News that an order of January 8,
+ 1794, modified that of November 6, and confined the seizure to
+ vessels carrying French property, and reports that some of our
+ vessels were being restored, moderated the movements of Congress,
+ but it was nevertheless evident that a resolution cutting off
+ commercial intercourse with Great Britain would soon pass. In the
+ existing state of things such a step in all probability meant
+ war, and Washington was thus brought face to face with the most
+ serious problem of his administration. It did not take him
+ unawares, nor find him unprepared, for he had anticipated the
+ situation, and his mind was made up. He had no intention of
+ letting the country drift into war without a great effort to
+ prevent it, and the time for that effort had now come. As in the
+ case of Spain, he was resolved to send a special envoy to make a
+ treaty. His first choice for this important mission was Hamilton,
+ which, like most of his selections, would have been the best
+ choice that could have been made. Hamilton, however, was so
+ conspicuous as the great leader of the party which supported both
+ the foreign and domestic policy of the administration, and he was
+ so hated by the opposition, that a loud outcry was at once raised
+ against his appointment. At that particular juncture it was very
+ important that the envoy should depart with as much general
+ good-will and public confidence as possible, so Hamilton
+ sacrificed himself to this necessity, and withdrew his name
+ voluntarily. His withdrawal was a mistake, but it was a wholly
+ natural one under the circumstances. Washington then made the
+ next best choice, and appointed John Jay, who was a man of most
+ spotless character, honorable, high-minded, and skilled in public
+ affairs. He was chief justice of the United States, and that fact
+ gave additional weight to the mission. The only point in which he
+ fell behind Hamilton was in aggressiveness of character, and this
+ negotiation demanded, not merely firmness and tact, which Jay had
+ in abundance, but a boldness verging on audacity. The immediate
+ purpose, however, was answered, and Jay set forth on his journey
+ with much good feeling toward himself, and with a very solemn
+ sense among the people of the gravity of his undertaking.
+ Washington himself saw Jay depart with many misgivings, and the
+ act of sending such a mission at all was very trying to him, for
+ the conduct of England galled him to the quick. He had long
+ suspected Great Britain, as well as Spain, of inciting the
+ Indians secretly to assail our settlements, and knowing as he did
+ the character of savage warfare, and feeling deeply the bloodshed
+ and expense of our Indian wars, he cherished a profound dislike
+ for those who could be capable of promoting such misery to the
+ injury of a friendly and-civilized nation. As England became more
+ and more hostile, he made up his mind that she was bent on
+ attacking us, and in March, 1794, he wrote to Governor Clinton
+ that he had no doubts as to the authenticity of Lord Dorchester's
+ speech, and that he believed England intended war. He therefore
+ urged the governor to inquire carefully into the state of feeling
+ in Canada, and as to the military strength of the country,
+ especially on the border. He put no trust in the disclaimers of
+ the ministry when he saw the long familiar signs of hostile
+ intrigue among the Indians, and he was quite determined that, if
+ war should come, all the suffering should not be on one side.</p>
+
+ <p>This belief in the coming of war, however, only strengthened
+ him in his well-matured plans to leave nothing undone to prevent
+ it. It was in this spirit that he despatched the special mission,
+ although his first letter to Jay shows that he had no very strong
+ hopes of peace, and that his uppermost thoughts were of the
+ wrongs which had been perpetrated, and of the perils which hung
+ over the border. He did not wish the commissioner to mince
+ matters at all. "There does not remain a doubt," he wrote, "in
+ the mind of any well-informed person in this country, not shut
+ against conviction, that all the difficulties we encounter with
+ the Indians, their hostilities, the murder of helpless women and
+ innocent children along our frontiers, result from the conduct of
+ the agents of Great Britain in this country.... Can it be
+ expected, I ask, so long as these things are known in the United
+ States, or at least firmly believed, and suffered with impunity
+ by Great Britain, that there ever will or can be any cordiality
+ between the two countries? I answer, No. And I will undertake,
+ without the gift of prophecy, to predict that it will be
+ impossible to keep this country in a state of amity with Great
+ Britain long, if the posts are not surrendered. A knowledge of
+ these being my sentiments would have little weight, I am
+ persuaded, with the British administration, and perhaps not with
+ the nation, in effecting the measure; but both may rest satisfied
+ that, if they want to be in peace with this country, and to enjoy
+ the benefits of its trade, to give up the posts is the only road
+ to it. Withholding them, and the consequences we feel at present
+ continuing, war will be inevitable."</p>
+
+ <p>Jay meantime had been well received in England. Lord Grenville
+ expressed the most friendly feelings, and every desire that the
+ negotiation might succeed. Jay was also received at court, where
+ he was said to have kissed the queen's hand, a crime, so the
+ opposition declared, for which his lips ought to have been
+ blistered to the bone, a difficult and by no means common form of
+ punishment. Receptions, dinner parties, and a ready welcome
+ everywhere, did not, however, make a treaty. When it came to
+ business, the English did not differ materially from their
+ neighbors whom Canning satirized.</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>"The fault of the Dutch</p>
+
+ <p>Is giving too little and asking too much."</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>So the Americans now found it with Lord Grenville. There were
+ many subjects of dispute, some dangerous, and all requiring
+ settlement for the benefit of both countries. Boundaries, negro
+ claims, and British debts were easily disposed of by reference to
+ boards of arbitration. Two others, awkward and threatening, but
+ not immediately pressing, were the impressment of British seamen,
+ real or pretended, from American ships, and the exclusion of
+ American vessels from the trade of the British West Indies. The
+ latter circumstance was no doubt disagreeable to us, and deprived
+ us of profit; but it is difficult to see what right we had to
+ complain of it, for the ports of the British West Indies belonged
+ to Great Britain, and if she chose to close them to us, or
+ anybody else, she was quite within her rights. At all events,
+ Lord Grenville declined to let us in, except in a very limited
+ way and under most onerous conditions. The right of search and
+ the right of impressment were simply the rights of the powerful
+ over the weak. England wanted to get seamen where she could for
+ her navy; and so long as she could violate our flag and carry off
+ as recruits any able-bodied seaman who spoke English, she meant
+ to do it. It was worse than idle to negotiate about it. When we
+ should be ready and willing to fight we could settle that
+ question, but not before. In due time we were ready to fight.
+ England defeated us in various battles, ravaged our coasts, and
+ burned our capital; while we whipped her frigates and lake
+ flotillas, and repulsed her Peninsula veterans with heavy
+ slaughter at New Orleans. Impressment was not mentioned in the
+ treaty which concluded that war, but it ended at that time. The
+ English are a brave and combative people, but rather than get
+ into wars with nations that will fight, and fight hard, they will
+ desist from wanton and illegal aggressions, in which they do not
+ differ greatly from the rest of mankind; and so the practical
+ abandonment of impressment came with the war of 1812. The fact
+ was officially stated by Webster, not many years later, when he
+ announced that the flag covered and protected all those who lived
+ or traded under it.</p>
+
+ <p>But in 1794 impressment was a negotiable question, because we
+ were not ready to go to war about it then and there. So Jay,
+ wisely enough, allowed this especial from of bullying to drift
+ aside, along with the exclusion from the West India trade, and
+ addressed himself to the two points which it was essential to
+ have settled at that particular moment. These questions were: the
+ retention of the western posts, and neutral rights at sea. In
+ return for the agreement on our part to pay the British debts, as
+ determined by arbitration, England agreed to surrender the posts
+ on June 1, 1796. There was to be mutual reciprocity in inland
+ trade on the North American continent; but coastwise, while we
+ opened all our harbors and rivers to the British, they shut us
+ out from theirs in the colonies and the territory of the Hudson's
+ Bay Company. In the eighteen articles, limited in duration to two
+ years after the conclusion of the existing war, a treaty of
+ commerce was practically formed and neutral rights dealt with. We
+ were to be admitted to British ports in Europe and the East
+ Indies on terms of equality with British vessels, but we were
+ refused admission to the East Indian coasting trade, and to that
+ between East India and Europe. We gained the right to trade to
+ the West Indies, but only on condition that we should give up the
+ transportation from America to Europe of any of the principal
+ products of the colonies. These were enumerated, and besides
+ sugar, molasses, coffee, and cocoa, included cotton, which had
+ just become an export from the southern States, and which already
+ promised to assume the importance that it afterwards reached. The
+ vexed questions of privateers, prizes, and contraband of war were
+ also settled and determined.</p>
+
+ <p>The treaty as a whole was not a very brilliant one for the
+ United States, but its treatment was far worse than its deserts,
+ and it was received with such a universal outburst of indignation
+ that even to this day it has never freed itself from the bad name
+ it then acquired. Nobody, not even its supporters, liked it, and
+ yet it may be doubted whether anything materially better was
+ possible at the time. The admirers of Hamilton, from that day to
+ this, have believed that if he had been sent, his boldness,
+ ability, and force would have wrung better terms from England.
+ This is not at all improbable; but that they would have been
+ materially improved, even by Hamilton, does not seem very likely.
+ The treaty, in reality, was by no means bad; on the contrary, it
+ had many good points. It disposed satisfactorily and fairly of
+ all the minor questions which were vexatious and threatening to
+ the peaceful relation of the two countries. It settled the
+ British debts, gave us the western posts, which was a matter of
+ the utmost importance, and arranged the disputed and thorny
+ question of neutral rights, for the time being at least. It left
+ impressment totally unsettled, simply because we were still too
+ weak to be ready to fight England profitably on that theme. It
+ opened to us the West Indian ports, which was the matter most
+ nearly affecting our interests and our pockets, but it did so
+ under limitations and concessions which were excessive and even
+ humiliating. We were obliged to pay a price far too high for this
+ coveted privilege, and it was on this point that the controversy
+ finally hinged.</p>
+
+ <p>The treaty reached Philadelphia on March 7. Nothing was said
+ of its arrival, which does not seem to have been known to any one
+ but the President and Randolph, who had meantime succeeded
+ Jefferson as Secretary of State. Three months later, on June 8,
+ the Senate was called together in special session, and the treaty
+ was laid before them. Washington did not like it and never
+ changed his feeling in that respect, but he had made up his mind
+ upon full reflection to accept it; and the Senate, after most
+ careful consideration, voted by exactly the necessary two thirds
+ to ratify it, provided that the objectionable West Indian article
+ could be modified. On no terms could we consent to forego the
+ exportation of cotton, and it is difficult to see how the Senate
+ could have taken any other ground upon this point. Their action,
+ however, opened some delicate questions. Washington wrote to
+ Randolph: "First, is or is not that resolution intended to be the
+ final act of the Senate; or do they expect that the new article
+ which is proposed shall be submitted to them before the treaty
+ takes effect? Secondly, does or does not the Constitution permit
+ the President to ratify the treaty, without submitting the new
+ article, after it shall be agreed to by the British King, to the
+ Senate for their further advice and consent?"</p>
+
+ <p>These questions were carefully considered, and Washington had
+ made up his mind to ratify conditionally on the modification of
+ the West Indian article, when news arrived which caused him to
+ suspend action. England, having made the treaty, and before any
+ news could have been received of our attitude in regard to it,
+ took steps to render its ratification both difficult and
+ offensive, if not impossible. The mode adopted was to renew the
+ "provision order," as it was called, which directed the seizure
+ of all vessels carrying food products to France, and thus give to
+ the Jay treaty the interpretation it was designed to avoid, that
+ provisions could be declared contraband at the pleasure of one of
+ the belligerents. It was a stupid thing to do, for if England
+ desired to have peace with us, as her making the treaty
+ indicated, she should not have renewed the most irritating of all
+ her past performances before we had had opportunity even to sign
+ and ratify. Washington, on hearing of this move, withheld his
+ signature, bade Randolph prepare a strong memorial against the
+ provision order, and then betook himself to Mount Vernon on some
+ urgent private business.</p>
+
+ <p>Before he started, however, the storm of popular rage had
+ begun to break. Bache had the substance of the treaty in the
+ "Aurora" on June 29, and Mr. Stevens Thomson Mason, senator from
+ Virginia, was so pained by some slight inaccuracies in this
+ version that he wrote Mr. Bache a note, and sent him a copy of
+ the treaty despite the injunction of secrecy by which he as a
+ senator was bound. Mr. Mason gained great present glory by this
+ frank breach of promise, and curiously enough this single
+ discreditable act is the only thing that keeps his name and
+ memory alive in history. All that he achieved at the moment was
+ to hurry the inevitable disclosure of the contents of a treaty
+ which no one desired to conceal, except in deference to official
+ form. Mason's note and copy of the treaty, made up into a
+ pamphlet, were issued from Bache's press on July 2, and hundreds
+ of copies were soon being carried by eager riders north and south
+ throughout the Union.</p>
+
+ <p>Everywhere, as the treaty traveled, the popular wrath was
+ kindled. The first explosion came in Boston, Federalist Boston,
+ devoted beyond any other town in the country to Washington and
+ his administration. There was a town meeting in Faneuil Hall,
+ violent speeches were made, and a committee was appointed to draw
+ up a memorial to the President against ratification. This
+ remonstrance was despatched at once by special messenger, who
+ seemed to carry the torch of Malise instead of a set of dry
+ resolutions. Everywhere the anger and indignation flamed forth.
+ The ground had been carefully prepared, for, ever since Jay
+ sailed, the partisans of the French had been denouncing him and
+ his mission, predicting failure, and, in one case at least,
+ burning him in effigy before it was known whether he had done
+ anything at all. As soon as the news spread that the treaty had
+ actually arrived, the attacks were multiplied in number and grew
+ ever more bitter as the Senate consulted. The popular mind was so
+ worked up that in Boston a British vessel had been burned on
+ suspicion that she was a privateer, while in New York there had
+ been street fights and rioting because of an insult to a French
+ flag. In such a state of feeling, artificially stimulated and
+ ingeniously misled, the most brilliant diplomatic triumph would
+ have had but slight chance of approval. Jay's moderate
+ achievement was better than his enemies expected, but it was
+ sufficient for their purpose, and the popular fury blazed up and
+ ran through the country, like a whirlwind of fire over the
+ parched prairie. Everywhere the example of Boston was followed,
+ meetings were held, committees appointed, and memorials against
+ the treaty sent to the President. In New York Hamilton was stoned
+ when he attempted to speak in favor of ratification; and less
+ illustrious persons, who ventured to differ from the crowd, were
+ ducked and otherwise maltreated. Jay was hanged and burned in
+ effigy in every way that imagination could devise, and copies of
+ his treaty suffered the same fate at the hands of the hangman.
+ Feeling ran highest in the larger towns where there was a mob,
+ but even some of the smaller places and those most Federal in
+ their politics were carried away. The excitement seems also to
+ have been confined for the most part to the seaboard, but after
+ all that was where the bulk of the population lived. The crowd,
+ moreover, was not led by obscure agitators or by violent and
+ irresponsible partisans. The Livingstons in New York, Rodney in
+ Delaware, Gadsden and the Rutledges in South Carolina, were some
+ of the men who guided the meetings and denounced the treaty. On
+ the other hand, the friends and supporters of the administration
+ appeared stunned, and for weeks no opposition to the popular
+ movement except that attempted by Hamilton was apparent. Even the
+ administration was divided, for Randolph was as hostile to the
+ treaty as it was possible for a man of his temperament to be.</p>
+
+ <p>The crisis was indeed a serious one. There have been worse in
+ our history, but this was one of the gravest; and never did a
+ President stand, so far as any one could see, so utterly alone.
+ With his own party silenced and even divided, with the opposition
+ rampant, and with popular excitement at fever heat, Washington
+ was left to take his course alone and unsupported. It was the
+ severest trial of his political life, but he met it, as he met
+ the reverses of 1776, calmly and without flinching. He was always
+ glad to have advice and suggestions. No man ever sought them or
+ benefited from them more than he; yet no man ever lived so little
+ dependent on others and so perfectly capable of standing alone as
+ Washington. After the Senate had acted, he made up his mind to
+ conditional ratification. He withheld his signature on hearing of
+ the provision order, and was ready to sign as soon as that order
+ was withdrawn. Whether he would make its withdrawal another
+ condition of his signature he had not determined when he left
+ Philadelphia for Mount Vernon, and on his arrival he wrote to
+ Randolph: "The conditional ratification (if the late order, which
+ we have heard of, respecting provision vessels is not in
+ operation) may, on all fit occasions, be spoken of as my
+ determination. Unless, from anything you have heard or met with
+ since I left you, it should be thought more advisable to
+ communicate further with me on the subject, my opinion respecting
+ the treaty is the same now that it was, namely, not favorable to
+ it; but that it is better to ratify it in the manner the Senate
+ have advised, and with the reservation already mentioned, than to
+ suffer matters to remain as they are, unsettled." He had already
+ received the Boston resolutions, and had sent them to his cabinet
+ for their consideration. He did not for a moment underrate their
+ importance, and he saw that they were the harbingers of others of
+ like character, although he could not yet estimate the full
+ violence of the storm of popular disapprobation. On July 28 he
+ sent his answer to the selectmen of Boston, and it is such an
+ important paper that it must be given in full. It was as
+ follows:&mdash;</p>
+
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>UNITED STATES, <i>28th of July</i>, 1795.</p>
+
+ <p>GENTLEMEN: In every act of my administration I have sought
+ the happiness of my fellow-citizens. My system for the
+ attainment of this object has uniformly been to overlook all
+ personal, local, and partial considerations; to contemplate the
+ United States as one great whole; to confide that sudden
+ impressions, and erroneous, would yield to candid reflections;
+ and to consult only the substantial and permanent interests of
+ our country.</p>
+
+ <p>Nor have I departed from this line of conduct on the
+ occasion which has produced the resolutions contained in your
+ letter of the 13th inst.</p>
+
+ <p>Without a predilection for my own judgment, I have weighed
+ with attention every argument which has at any time been
+ brought into view. But the Constitution is the guide which I
+ never can abandon. It has assigned to the President the power
+ of making treaties with the advice and consent of the Senate.
+ It was doubtless supposed that these two branches of government
+ would combine, without passion and with the best means of
+ information, those facts and principles upon which the success
+ of our foreign relations will always depend; that they ought
+ not to substitute for their own convictions the opinions of
+ others, or to seek truth through any channel but that of a
+ temperate and well-informed investigation.</p>
+
+ <p>Under this persuasion, I have resolved on the manner of
+ executing the duty before me. To the high responsibility
+ attached to it, I fully submit; and you, gentlemen, are at
+ liberty to make these sentiments known as the grounds of my
+ procedure. While I feel the most lively gratitude for the many
+ instances of approbation from my country, I can no otherwise
+ deserve it than by obeying the dictates of my conscience. With
+ due respect, I am, etc.</p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <p>It will be noticed that this letter is dated "The United
+ States, 28th of July," which is, I think, the only instance of
+ the sort to be found in his letters. In all his vast
+ correspondence there possibly may be other cases in which he used
+ this method of dating, but one cannot help feeling that on this
+ occasion at least it had a particular significance. It was not
+ George Washington writing from Mount Vernon, but the President,
+ who represented the whole country, pointing out to the people of
+ Boston that the day of small things and of local considerations
+ had gone by. This letter served also as a model for many others.
+ The Boston address had a multitude of successors, and they were
+ all answered in the same strain. Washington was not a man to
+ underrate popular feeling, for he knew that the strongest bulwark
+ of the government was in sound public opinion. On the other hand,
+ he was one of the rare men who could distinguish between a
+ temporary excitement, no matter how universal, and an abiding
+ sentiment. In this case he quietly resisted the noisy popular
+ demand, believing that the sober second thought of the people
+ would surely be with him; but at the same time the outcry against
+ the treaty, while it could not make him waver in his
+ determination to do what he believed to be right, caused him deep
+ anxiety. The day after he sent his answer to Boston he wrote to
+ Randolph:&mdash;</p>
+
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>"I view the opposition which the treaty is receiving from
+ the meetings in different parts of the Union in a very serious
+ light; not because there is more weight in any of the
+ objections which are made to it than was foreseen at first, for
+ there is none in some of them, and gross misrepresentations in
+ others; nor as it respects myself personally, for this shall
+ have no influence on my conduct, plainly perceiving, and I am
+ accordingly preparing my mind for it, the obloquy which
+ disappointment and malice are collecting to heap upon me. But I
+ am alarmed at the effect it may have on and the advantage the
+ French government may be disposed to make of, the spirit which
+ is at work to cherish a belief in them that the treaty is
+ calculated to favor Great Britain at their expense.... To sum
+ the whole up in a few words I have never, since I have been in
+ the administration of the government, seen a crisis, which, in
+ my judgment, has been so pregnant with interesting events, nor
+ one from which more is to be apprehended, whether viewed on one
+ side or the other."</p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <p>He already felt that it might be necessary for him to return
+ to Philadelphia at any moment; and, writing to Randolph to this
+ effect two days later, he said:&mdash;</p>
+
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>"To be wise and temperate, as well as firm, the present
+ crisis most eminently calls for. There is too much reason to
+ believe, from the pains which have been taken before, at, and
+ since the advice of the Senate respecting the treaty, that the
+ prejudices against it are more extensive than is generally
+ imagined. This I have lately understood to be the case in this
+ quarter from men who are of no party, but well-disposed to the
+ present administration. Nor should it be otherwise, when no
+ stone has been left unturned that could impress on the minds of
+ the people the most arrant misrepresentation of facts; that
+ their rights have not only been <i>neglected</i>, but
+ absolutely <i>sold</i>; that there are no reciprocal advantages
+ in the treaty; that the benefits are all on the side of Great
+ Britain; and, what seems to have had more weight with them than
+ all the rest, and to have been most pressed, that the treaty is
+ made with the design to oppress the French, in open violation
+ of our treaty with that nation, and contrary, too, to every
+ principle of gratitude and sound policy. In time, when passion
+ shall have yielded to sober reason, the current may possibly
+ turn; but, in the mean while, this government, in relation to
+ France and England, may be compared to a ship between the rocks
+ of Scylla and Charybdis. If the treaty is ratified, partisans
+ of the French, or rather of war and confusion, will excite them
+ to hostile measures, or at least to unfriendly sentiments; if
+ it is not, there is no foreseeing all the consequences which
+ may follow, as it respects Great Britain.</p>
+
+ <p>"It is not to be inferred from hence that I am disposed to
+ quit the ground I have taken, unless circumstances more
+ imperious than have yet come to my knowledge should compel it;
+ for there is but one straight course, and that is to seek
+ truth, and pursue it steadily. But these things are mentioned
+ to show that a close investigation of the subject is more than
+ ever necessary, and that there are strong evidences of the
+ necessity of the most circumspect conduct in carrying the
+ determination of government into effect, with prudence, as it
+ respects our own people, and with every exertion to produce a
+ change for the better from Great Britain.</p>
+
+ <p>"The memorial seems well designed to answer the end
+ proposed, and by the time it is revised and new-dressed, you
+ will probably (either in the resolutions which are or will be
+ handed to me, or in the newspaper publications, which you
+ promise to be attentive to) have seen all the objections
+ against the treaty which have any real force in them, and which
+ may be fit subjects for representation in a memorial, or in the
+ instructions, or both. But how much longer the presentation of
+ the memorial can be delayed without exciting unpleasant
+ sensations here, or involving serious evils elsewhere, you, who
+ are at the scene of information and action, can decide better
+ than I. In a matter, however, so interesting and pregnant with
+ consequences as this treaty, there ought to be no
+ precipitation; but on the contrary, every step should be
+ explored before it is taken, and every word weighed before it
+ is uttered or delivered in writing.</p>
+
+ <p>"The form of the ratification requires more diplomatic
+ experience and legal knowledge than I possess, or have the
+ means of acquiring at this place, and therefore I shall say
+ nothing about it."</p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <p>Three days later, on August 3, he wrote again to Randolph to
+ say that the mails had been delayed, and that he had not received
+ the Baltimore resolutions. He then continued:&mdash;</p>
+
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>"The like may be expected from Richmond, a meeting having
+ been had there also, at which Mr. Wythe, it is said, was seated
+ as moderator; by chance more than design, it is added. A queer
+ chance this for the chancellor of the state.</p>
+
+ <p>"All these things do not shake my determination with respect
+ to the proposed ratifications, nor will they, unless something
+ more imperious and unknown to me should, in the judgment of
+ yourself and the gentlemen with you, make it advisable for me
+ to pause."</p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <p>A few days later Washington was recalled by a letter from
+ Randolph, and also by a private note from Pickering, which said,
+ mysteriously, that there was a "special reason" for his immediate
+ return. He had been expecting to be recalled at any moment, and
+ he now hastened to Philadelphia, reaching there on August 11. He
+ little dreamed, however, of what had led his two secretaries, one
+ ignorantly and the other wittingly, to hasten his return. On the
+ very day when he dated his letter to the selectmen of Boston as
+ from the United States, the British minister placed in the hands
+ of Mr. Wolcott, the Secretary of the Treasury, an intercepted
+ letter from Fauchet, the French minister, to his own government.
+ This dispatch, bearing the number 10, had come into the
+ possession of Mr. Hammond by a series of accidents; but the
+ British government and its representatives were quick to perceive
+ that the chances of the sea had thrown into their hands a prize
+ of much more value than many French merchantmen. The dispatch
+ thus rescued from the water, where its bearer had cast it, was
+ filled with a long and somewhat imaginative dissertation on
+ political parties in the United States, and with an account of
+ the whiskey rebellion. It also gave the substance of some
+ conversations held by the writer with the Secretary of State.
+ This is not the place, nor would space serve, to examine the
+ details of this famous dispatch, with reference to the American
+ statesman whom it incriminated. On its face it showed that
+ Randolph had held conversations with the French minister which no
+ American Secretary of State ought to have held with any
+ representative of a foreign government, and it appeared further
+ that the most obvious interpretation of certain sentences, in
+ view of the readiness of man to think ill of his neighbor, was
+ that Randolph had suggested corrupt practices. Such was the
+ document, implicating in a most serious way the character of his
+ chief cabinet officer, which Pickering and Wolcott placed in
+ Washington's hands on his arrival in Philadelphia.</p>
+
+ <p>Mr. Conway, in his biography of Randolph, devotes many pages
+ to explaining what now followed. His explanations show,
+ certainly, a most refined ingenuity, and form the most elaborate
+ discussion of this incident that has ever appeared. All this
+ effort and ingenuity are needless, however, unless the object be
+ to prove that Randolph was wholly without fault, which is an
+ impossible task. There was nothing complicated about the affair,
+ and nothing strange about the President's course, if we confine
+ ourselves to the plain facts and the order of their
+ occurrence.</p>
+
+ <p>Before the treaty went to the Senate, Washington made up his
+ mind to sign it, and when the Senate ratified conditionally, he
+ still adhered to his former opinion. Then came the news of the
+ provision order, and thereupon he paused and withheld his
+ signature, at the same time ordering a memorial against the order
+ to be prepared. But there is no evidence whatever that he changed
+ his mind, or that he had determined to make his signature
+ conditional upon the revocation of the order. To argue that he
+ had is, in fact, misrepresentation. In the letter of July 22, on
+ which so much stress was laid afterwards by Randolph, Washington
+ said that his intention to ratify conditionally was to be
+ announced, if the provision order was not in operation. Put in
+ the converse form, his intention was not to be announced if the
+ order was in operation; but this is very different from saying
+ that his intention had altered, and that he would not sign unless
+ the order was revoked. This last idea was Randolph's, but not
+ Washington's. Indeed, in the very next lines of the same letter
+ he said expressly that his opinion had not changed, that he did
+ not like the treaty, but that it was best to ratify. It is a fair
+ inference, no doubt, that he was considering whether he should
+ change his intention and make his signature conditional; but if
+ this was the case, it is sure beyond a peradventure that his
+ original opinion was only confirmed as the days went by.</p>
+
+ <p>He examined with the utmost care all the remonstrances and
+ addresses that were poured in upon him, and found few solid
+ objections, and none that he had not already weighed and disposed
+ of. On July 31 he wrote to Randolph that it was not to be
+ inferred that he was disposed to quit his ground unless more
+ imperious circumstances than had yet come to his knowledge should
+ compel him to do so. The provision order was of course within his
+ knowledge, and therefore had not led him to change his mind. On
+ August 3 he wrote even more strongly that nothing had come to his
+ knowledge to shake his determination. In his letter to Randolph
+ of October 21, giving him full liberty to have and publish
+ everything he desired for his vindication, Washington said: "You
+ know that it was my determination to ratify before submission to
+ the Senate; that the doubts which arose proceeded from the
+ provision order." Doubts are mentioned here, and not changes of
+ intention. If he had changed his mind at any time he would have
+ said so, for he was neither timid nor dishonest, but as a matter
+ of fact he never had changed his mind. He came to Philadelphia
+ with his mind made up to ratify, and that being the case, it was
+ clear that further delay would be wrong and impolitic. The surest
+ way to check the popular excitement and rally the friends of the
+ administration was to act. Suspense fostered opposition more than
+ ratification, for most people accept the inevitable when the deed
+ is done.</p>
+
+ <p>The Fauchet letter, therefore, although its revelations
+ astounded and grieved him, had no effect upon his action, which
+ would have been the same in any event; for he had said over and
+ over again that he had not changed his first opinion. In the
+ letter to Randolph, just quoted, he also said: "And finally you
+ know the grounds on which my ultimate decision was taken, as the
+ same were expressed to you, the other secretaries of departments,
+ and the late attorney-general, after a thorough investigation of
+ the subject in all the aspects in which it could be placed." As
+ the Fauchet letter was not disclosed to Randolph until after the
+ treaty had been signed, it was impossible that it should have
+ been one of the grounds of the President's decision, for
+ Washington said to him, "You knew the grounds." If we are to
+ suppose that the Fauchet letter had anything to do with the
+ ratification so far as the President himself was concerned, we
+ must, in the face of this letter, set Washington down as a
+ deliberate liar, which is so wholly impossible that it disposes
+ at once of the theory that he was driven into signing by a clever
+ British intrigue.</p>
+
+ <p>Here as elsewhere the simple and obvious explanation is the
+ true one, although the whole matter is sufficiently plain on the
+ mere narration of facts. The treaty was a great public question,
+ to be decided on its merits, and the only new point raised by the
+ Fauchet dispatch was how to deal with Randolph himself at this
+ particular juncture. To have shown the letter to him at once
+ would have been to break the cabinet, with the treaty unsigned.
+ It would have resulted in much delay, extending to weeks, unless
+ the President was ready to have an acting secretary sign both
+ treaty and memorial; and it would have added during the continued
+ suspense a fresh subject of excitement to the popular mind.
+ Washington's duty plainly was to carry out his policy and bring
+ the matter to an immediate conclusion, and, as was his custom, he
+ did his duty. If, as Mr. Conway thinks, the Fauchet letter was
+ what compelled the ratification, Washington would have given it
+ to the world at once, and then, having by this means discredited
+ the opposition and roused a feeling against the French, would
+ have signed the treaty. England, of course, had taken advantage
+ of this letter, and equally of course her minister and his
+ influence were against Randolph, who was thought to be
+ unfriendly. Hammond intrigued with our public men just as all the
+ French ministers did. It is humiliating that such should have
+ been the case, but it was due to our recent escape from a
+ colonial condition, and to the way in which we allowed our
+ politics to turn on foreign affairs. Having made up his mind to
+ ratify and end the question, Washington very properly kept
+ silence as to the Fauchet letter until the work was done. To do
+ this, it was necessary of course that he should make no change in
+ his personal attitude toward Randolph, nor was he obliged to do
+ so, for he was too just a man to assume Randolph's guilt until
+ his defense had been made. The ratification was brought before
+ the cabinet at once. There was a sharp discussion, in which it
+ appeared that Randolph had advanced a good deal in his hostility
+ to the treaty, a fact not tending to make the Fauchet business
+ look better; and then ratification was voted, and a memorial
+ against the provision order was adopted. On August 18 the treaty
+ was signed, and on the 19th, Washington, in the presence of his
+ cabinet, placed the Fauchet letter in Randolph's hands. Randolph
+ read it, made some comments, and asked time to offer suitable
+ explanations. He then withdrew, and in a few hours sent in his
+ resignation.</p>
+
+ <p>There would be no need, so far as Washington is concerned, to
+ say more on this unfortunate affair of the Secretary of State,
+ were it not for the recent statements made by Randolph's
+ biographer. In order to clear his hero, Mr. Conway represents
+ that Washington, knowing Randolph to be innocent, sacrificed him
+ in great anguish of heart to an imperious political necessity,
+ while the fact was, that nobody sacrificed Randolph except
+ himself. He was represented in a dispatch written by the French
+ minister in a light which, as Washington said, gave rise to
+ strong suspicions; a moderate statement in which every candid man
+ who knew anything about the matter has agreed from that day to
+ this. According to Fauchet, Randolph not only had held
+ conversations wholly unbecoming his position, but on the same
+ authority he was represented to have asked for money. That the
+ Secretary of State was corrupt, no one who knew him, as Jefferson
+ said, for one moment believed. Whether he disposed of this charge
+ or not, it was plain to his friends, as it is to posterity, that
+ Randolph was a perfectly honorable man. But neither his own
+ vindication nor that of his biographer have in the least
+ palliated or even touched the real error which he committed.</p>
+
+ <p>As Secretary of State, the head of the cabinet, and in charge
+ of our foreign relations, he had, according to Fauchet's dispatch
+ and to his own admissions, entered into relations with a foreign
+ minister which ought to have been as impossible as they were
+ discreditable to an American statesman. That Fauchet believed
+ that Randolph deceived him did not affect the merits of the case,
+ nor, if true, did it excuse Randolph, especially as everybody
+ with whom he was brought into close contact seems at some time or
+ other to have had doubts of his sincerity. As a matter of fact,
+ Randolph could find no defense except to attack Washington and
+ discuss our foreign relations, and his biographer has followed
+ the same line. What was it then that Washington had actually done
+ which called for assault? He had been put in possession of an
+ official document which on its face implicated his Secretary of
+ State in the intrigues of a foreign minister, and suggested that
+ he was open to corruption. These were the views which the public,
+ having no personal knowledge of Randolph, would be sure to take,
+ and as a matter of fact actually took, when the affair became
+ known. There was a great international question to be settled,
+ and settled without delay. This was done in a week, during which
+ time Washington kept silent, as his public duty required. The
+ moment the treaty was signed he handed Fauchet's dispatch to
+ Randolph and asked for an explanation. None knew of the dispatch
+ except the cabinet officers, through whom it had necessarily
+ come. Washington did not prejudge the case; he did not dismiss
+ Randolph with any mark of his pleasure, as he would have been
+ quite justified in doing. He simply asked for explanation, and
+ threw open his own correspondence and the archives of the
+ department, so that Randolph might have every opportunity for
+ defense. It is difficult to see how Washington could have done
+ less in dealing with Randolph, or in what way he could have shown
+ greater consideration.</p>
+
+ <p>Randolph resigned of his own motion, and then cried out
+ against Washington because he had been obliged to pay the penalty
+ of his own errors. When it is considered that Washington did
+ absolutely nothing to Randolph except to hand him Fauchet's
+ dispatch and accept his consequent resignation, the talk about
+ Randolph's forgiving him becomes simply ludicrous. Randolph saw
+ his own error, was angry with himself, and, like the rest of
+ humanity, proceeded to vent his anger on somebody else, but
+ unfortunately he had the bad taste to turn at the outset to the
+ newspapers. Like Mr. Snodgrass, he took off his coat in public
+ and announced in a loud voice that he was going to begin. The
+ President's only response was to open the archives and bid him
+ publish everything he desired. Randolph then wrote the President
+ a private letter, which was angry and impertinent; "full of
+ innuendoes," said the recipient. Washington drafted a sharp
+ reply, and then out of pure kindness withheld it, and let the
+ private letter drop into silence, whither the bulky
+ "Vindication," which vindicated nobody, soon followed it. The
+ fact was, that Washington treated Randolph with great kindness
+ and forbearance. He had known him long; he was fond of him on his
+ own account as well as his father's; he appreciated Randolph's
+ talents; but he knew on reading that dispatch, if he had never
+ guessed it before, that Randolph, although honest and clever, and
+ certainly not bad, was a dangerously weak man. Others among our
+ public men had put themselves into relations with foreign
+ representatives which it is now intolerable to contemplate, but
+ Randolph, besides being found out at the moment, had, after the
+ fashion of weak natures, gone further and shown more feebleness
+ than any one else had. Washington's conduct was so perfectly
+ simple, and the facts of the case were so plain, that it would
+ seem impossible to complicate them. The contemporary verdict was
+ harsh, crushing, and unjust in many respects to Randolph. The
+ verdict of posterity, which is both gentler and fairer to the
+ secretary, will certainly at the same time sustain Washington's
+ course at every point as sensible, direct, and proper.</p>
+
+ <p>Only one question remains which demands a word before tracing
+ briefly the subsequent fate of the Jay treaty, and that is, to
+ know exactly why the President signed it. The answer is
+ fortunately not difficult. There was a choice of evils. When
+ Washington determined to send a special envoy, he said: "My
+ objects are, to prevent a war, if justice can be obtained by fair
+ and strong representations (to be made by a special envoy) of the
+ injuries which this country has sustained from Great Britain in
+ various ways; to put it into a complete state of military
+ defense; and to provide eventually such measures for execution as
+ seem to be now pending in Congress, if negotiation in a
+ reasonable time proves unsuccessful." From these views he never
+ varied. The treaty was not a perfect one, but it had good
+ features and was probably, as has been said, the best that could
+ then be obtained. It settled some vexed questions, and it gave us
+ time. If the United States could only have time without making
+ undue sacrifice, they could pass beyond the stage when a foreign
+ war with its consequent suffering and debt would endanger our
+ national existence. If they could only have time to grow into a
+ nation, there would be no difficulty in settling all their
+ disputes with other people satisfactorily, either by war or
+ negotiation. But if the national bonds were loosened, then all
+ was lost. It was in this spirit that Washington signed the Jay
+ treaty; and although there was much in it that he did not like,
+ and although men were bitterly divided about the ratification, a
+ dispassionate posterity has come to believe that he was right at
+ the most difficult if not the most perilous crisis in his
+ career.</p>
+
+ <p>The signature of the treaty, however, did not put an end to
+ the attacks upon it, or upon the action of the Senate and the
+ Executive. Nevertheless, it turned the tide, and, as Washington
+ foresaw, brought out a strong movement in its favor. Hamilton
+ began the work by the publication of the letters of "Camillus."
+ The opposition newspapers sneered, but after Jefferson had read a
+ few numbers he begged Madison in alarm to answer them. His fears
+ were well grounded, for the letters were reprinted in newspapers
+ throughout the country, and their powerful and temperate
+ arguments made converts and strengthened the friends of the
+ administration everywhere. The approaching surrender of the posts
+ gratified the western people when they at last stopped to think
+ about it. The obnoxious provision order was revoked, and the
+ traders and merchants found that security and commerce even under
+ unpleasant restrictions were a great deal better than the
+ uncertainty and the vexatious hostilities to which they had
+ before been exposed. Those who had been silent, although friendly
+ to the policy of the government, now began to meet in their turn
+ and send addresses to Congress; for in the House of
+ Representatives the last battle was to be fought.</p>
+
+ <p>That body came together under the impression of the agitation
+ and excitement which had been going on all through the summer.
+ There was a little wrangling at the opening over the terms to be
+ employed in the answer to the President's message, and then the
+ House relapsed into quiet, awaiting the formal announcement of
+ the treaty. At last the treaty arrived with the addition of the
+ suspending article, and the President proclaimed it to be the law
+ of the land, and sent a copy to the House. Livingston, of New
+ York, at once moved a resolution, asking the President to send in
+ all the papers relating to the negotiation, and boldly placed the
+ motion on the ground that the House was vested with a
+ discretionary power as to carrying the treaty into execution. On
+ this principle the debate went on for three weeks, and then the
+ resolution passed by 62 to 37. A great constitutional question
+ was thus raised, for there was no pretense that the papers were
+ really needed, inasmuch as committees had seen them all, and they
+ contained practically nothing which was not already known.</p>
+
+ <p>Washington took the request into consideration, and asked his
+ cabinet whether the House had the right, as set forth in the
+ resolutions, to call for the papers, and if not, whether it was
+ expedient to furnish them. Both questions were unanimously
+ answered in the negative. The inquiry was largely formal, and
+ Washington had no real doubts on the point involved. He wrote to
+ Hamilton: "I had from the first moment, and from the fullest
+ conviction in my own mind, resolved <i>to resist the
+ principle</i>, which was evidently intended to be established by
+ the call of the House of Representatives; and only deliberated on
+ the manner in which this could be done with the least bad
+ consequences." His only question was as to the method of
+ resistance, and he finally decided to refuse absolutely, and did
+ so in a message setting forth his reasons. He said that the
+ intention of the constitutional convention was known to him, and
+ that they had intended to vest the treaty-making power
+ exclusively in the Executive and Senate. On that principle he had
+ acted, and in that belief foreign nations had negotiated, and the
+ House had hitherto acquiesced. He declared further that the
+ assent of the House was not necessary to the validity of
+ treaties; that they had all necessary information; and "as it is
+ essential to the due administration of the government that the
+ boundaries fixed by the Constitution should be preserved, a just
+ regard to the Constitution and to the duty of my office, under
+ all the circumstances of this case, forbid a compliance with your
+ request." The question was a difficult one, but there could be no
+ doubt as to Washington's opinion, and the weight of authority has
+ sustained his view. From the practical and political side there
+ can be little question that his position was extremely sound. In
+ a letter to Carrington he gave the reasons for his action, and no
+ better statement of the argument in a general way has ever been
+ made. He wrote:&mdash;</p>
+
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>"No candid man in the least degree acquainted with the
+ progress of this business will believe for a moment that the
+ <i>ostensible</i> dispute was about papers, or whether the
+ British treaty was a good one or a bad one, but whether there
+ should be a treaty at all without the concurrence of the House
+ of Representatives. This was striking at once, and that boldly,
+ too, at the fundamental principles of the Constitution; and, if
+ it were established, would render the treaty-making power not
+ only a nullity, but such an absolute absurdity as to reflect
+ disgrace on the framers of it. For will any one suppose that
+ they who framed, or those who adopted, that instrument ever
+ intended to give the power to the President and Senate to make
+ treaties, and, declaring that when made and ratified they
+ should be the supreme law of the land, would in the same breath
+ place it in the power of the House of Representatives to fix
+ their vote on them, unless apparent marks of fraud or
+ corruption (which in equity would set aside any contract)
+ accompanied the measure, or such striking evidence of national
+ injury attended their adoption as to make a war or any other
+ evil preferable? Every unbiased mind will answer in the
+ negative.</p>
+
+ <p>"What the source and what the object of all this struggle
+ is, I submit to my fellow-citizens. Charity would lead me to
+ hope that the motives to it would be pure. Suspicions, however,
+ speak a different language, and my tongue for the present shall
+ be silent."</p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <p>No man who has ever held high office in this country had a
+ more real deference for the popular will than Washington. But he
+ also had always a keen sensitiveness to the dignity and the
+ prerogatives of the office which he happened to hold, whether it
+ was that of president or general of the armies. This arose from
+ no personal feeling, for he was too great a man ever to worry
+ about his own dignity; but he esteemed the great offices to which
+ he was called to be trusts, which were to suffer no injury while
+ in his hands. He regarded the attempt of the House of
+ Representatives to demand the papers as a matter of right as an
+ encroachment on the rights of the Executive Department, and he
+ therefore resisted it at once, and after his usual fashion left
+ no one in any doubt as to his views. So far as the President was
+ concerned, the struggle ended here; but it was continued for some
+ time longer in the House, where the debate went on for a
+ fortnight, with the hostile majority surely and steadily
+ declining. The current out-doors ran more and more strongly every
+ day in favor of the administration, until at last the contest
+ ended with Ames's great speech, and then the resolution to carry
+ out the treaty prevailed. Washington's policy had triumphed, and
+ was accepted by the country.</p>
+
+ <p>The Jay treaty and its ratification had, however, other
+ results than mere domestic conflicts. Spain, acting under French
+ influence, threatened to rescind the Pinckney treaty which had
+ just been made so advantageously to the United States; but, like
+ most Spanish performances at that time, these threats evaporated
+ in words, and the Mississippi remained open. With France,
+ however, the case was very different. Our demand for the recall
+ of Genet had been met by a counter-demand for the recall of
+ Morris, to which, of course, we were obliged to accede, and the
+ question as to the latter's successor was a difficult and
+ important one. Washington himself had been perfectly satisfied
+ with the conduct of Morris, but he was also aware that the known
+ dislike of that brilliant diplomatist to the revolutionary
+ methods then dominant in Paris had seriously complicated our
+ relations with France. He wished by all fair means to keep France
+ in good humor, and he therefore determined that Morris's
+ successor should be a man whose friendship toward the French
+ republic was well known. His first choice was Madison, which
+ would have answered admirably, for Madison was pre&euml;minently
+ a safe man. Very unluckily, however, Madison either could not or
+ would not go, and the President's final choice was by no means
+ equally good.</p>
+
+ <p>It was, of course, most desirable that the new minister should
+ be <i>persona grata</i> to the republic, but it was vastly more
+ important that he should be in cordial sympathy with the
+ administration at home, for no administration ought ever to
+ select for a foreign mission, especially at a critical moment,
+ any one outside the ranks of its own supporters. This was the
+ mistake which Washington, from the best of motives, now committed
+ by appointing James Monroe to be minister to France. It is one of
+ the puzzles of our history to reconcile the respectable and
+ common-place gentleman, who for two terms as President of the
+ United States had less opposition than ever fell to the lot of
+ any other man in that office, with the violent, unscrupulous, and
+ extremely light-headed politician who figured as senator from
+ Virginia and minister to France at the close of the last century.
+ Monroe at the time of his appointment had distinguished himself
+ chiefly by his extreme opposition to the administration, and by
+ his intrigues against Hamilton, which were so dishonestly
+ conducted that they ultimately compelled the publication of the
+ "Reynolds Pamphlet," a sore trial to its author, and a lasting
+ blot on the fame of the enemy who made the publication necessary.
+ From such a man loyalty to the President who appointed him was
+ hardly to be expected. But there was no reason to suppose that he
+ would lose his head, and forget that he was an American, and not
+ a French citizen.</p>
+
+ <p>Monroe reached Paris in the summer of 1794. He was publicly
+ received by the Convention, made an undignified and florid
+ speech, received the national embrace from the president of the
+ Convention, and then effected an exchange of flags with more
+ embracings and addresses. But when he came to ask redress for the
+ wrongs committed against our merchants, he got no satisfaction.
+ So far as he was concerned, this appears to have been a matter of
+ indifference, for he at once occupied himself with the French
+ proposition that we should lend France five millions of dollars,
+ and France in return was to see to it that we obtained control of
+ the Spanish possessions in North America. Monroe fell in with
+ this precious scheme to make the United States a dependency of
+ France, and received as a reward vast promises as to what the
+ great republic would do for us. Meantime he regarded with
+ suspicion Jay's movements in England, and endeavored to obtain
+ information, if not control, of that negotiation. In this he
+ completely failed; but he led the French government to believe,
+ first, that the English treaty would not be made, then that it
+ would not be ratified, and finally that the House would not make
+ the appropriations necessary to carry it into effect; and all the
+ time he was compromising his own government by his absurd efforts
+ to involve it in an offensive alliance with France. The upshot of
+ it all was that he was disowned at home, discredited in France,
+ and brought our relations with that nation into a state of
+ dangerous complication, without obtaining any redress for our
+ injuries.</p>
+
+ <p>Washington at first, little as he liked the theatrical
+ performances with which Monroe opened his mission, wrote about
+ him with great moderation to Jay, who was naturally much annoyed
+ by the manner in which Monroe had tried to interfere with his
+ negotiations. Six months later, however, Washington saw only too
+ plainly that he had been mistaken in his minister to France. He
+ wrote to Randolph on July 24, 1795: "The conduct of Mr. Monroe is
+ of a piece with that of the other; and one can scarcely forbear
+ thinking that these acts are part of a premeditated system to
+ embarrass the executive government." When it became clear that
+ Monroe had omitted to explain properly our reasons for treating
+ with England, that he had held out hopes to the French government
+ which were totally unauthorized, that he had brought on a renewal
+ of the hostilities of that government, and that he had placed us
+ in all ways in the most unenviable light, Washington recalled
+ him, and appointed Charles Cotesworth Pinckney in his place. By
+ this time too he was thoroughly disgusted with Monroe's
+ performances, and in his letter to Pinckney, on July 8, 1796,
+ offering him the appointment to Paris, he said: "It is a fact too
+ notorious to be denied that the greatest embarrassments under
+ which the administration of this government labors proceed from
+ the counter-action of people among ourselves, who are more
+ disposed to promote the views of another nation than to establish
+ a national character of their own; and that, unless the virtuous
+ and independent men of this country will come forward, it is not
+ difficult to predict the consequences. Such is my decided
+ opinion." He felt, as he wrote to Hamilton at the close of his
+ administration, that "the conduct of France towards this country
+ is, according to my ideas of it, outrageous beyond conception;
+ not to be warranted by her treaty with us, by the law of nations,
+ by any principle of justice, or even by a regard to decent
+ appearances." This was after we had begun to reap the
+ humiliations which Monroe's folly had prepared for us, and it is
+ easy to understand that Washington regarded their author with
+ anything but satisfaction or approval.</p>
+
+ <p>The culprit himself took a very different view, came home
+ presently in great wrath, and proceeded to pose as a martyr and
+ compile a vindication, which he entitled "A View of the Conduct
+ of the Executive," and which surpassed in bulk any of the
+ vindications in which that period of our history was prolific. It
+ was published after Washington had retired to private life, and
+ did not much disturb his serenity. In a letter to Nicholas, on
+ March 8, 1798, he said: "If the executive is chargeable with
+ 'premeditating the destruction of Mr. Monroe in his appointment,
+ because he was the <i>centre</i> around which the Republican
+ party rallied in the Senate' (a circumstance quite new to me), it
+ is to be hoped he will give it credit for its lenity toward that
+ gentleman in having designated several others, not of the Senate,
+ as victims to this office <i>before</i> the sacrifice of Mr.
+ Monroe was even had in contemplation. As this must be some
+ consolation to him and his friends, I hope they will embrace
+ it."</p>
+
+ <p>Washington apparently did not think Monroe was worthy of
+ anything more serious than a little sarcasm, and he was quite
+ content, as he said, to leave the book to the tribunal to which
+ the author himself had appealed. He read the book, however, with
+ care, and in his methodical way he appended a number of notes,
+ which are worth consideration by all persons interested in the
+ character of Washington. They are especially to be commended to
+ those who think that he was merely good and wise and solemn, for
+ it would be difficult to find a better piece of destructive
+ criticism, or a more ready and thorough knowledge of complicated
+ foreign relations, than are contained in these brief notes. His
+ own opinion of Monroe is concisely stated in one of them.
+ Referring to one of that gentleman's statements he said: "For
+ this there is no better proof than his own opinion; whilst there
+ is abundant evidence of his being a mere tool in the hands of the
+ French government, cajoled and led away always by unmeaning
+ assurances of friendship." With this brief comment we may leave
+ the Monroe incident. His appointment was a mistake, and increased
+ existing complications, which were not finally settled until the
+ next administration.</p>
+
+ <p>Monroe's recall was the last act, however, in the long contest
+ of the Jay treaty, and it was also, as it happened, the last
+ important act in Washington's foreign policy. That policy has
+ been traced here in its various branches, but it is worth while
+ to look at it as a whole before leaving it, in order to see just
+ what the President aimed at and just what he effected. The
+ guiding principle, which had been with him from the day when he
+ took command of the army at Cambridge, was to make the United
+ States independent. The war had achieved this so far as our
+ connection with England was concerned, but it still remained to
+ prove to the world that we were an independent nation in fact as
+ well as in name. For this the neutrality policy was adopted and
+ carried out. We were not only to cease from dependence on the
+ nations of Europe, but we were to go on our own way with a policy
+ of our own wholly apart from them. It was also necessary to lift
+ up our own politics, to detach our minds from those of other
+ nations, and to make us truly Americans. All this Washington's
+ policy did so far as it was possible to do it in the time given
+ to him. A new generation had to come upon the stage before our
+ politics were finally taken out of colonialism and made national
+ and American, but the idea was that of the first President. It
+ was the foresight and the courage of Washington which at the
+ outset placed the United States in their relations with foreign
+ nations on the ground of a firm, independent, and American
+ policy.</p>
+
+ <p>His foreign policy had, however, some immediate practical
+ results which were of vast importance. In December, 1795, he
+ wrote to Morris: "It is well known that peace has been (to borrow
+ a modern phrase) the order of the day with me since the
+ disturbances in Europe first commenced. My policy has been, and
+ will continue to be while I have the honor to remain in the
+ administration, to maintain friendly terms with, but to be
+ independent of, all the nations of the earth; to share in the
+ broils of none; to fulfill our own engagements; to supply the
+ wants and be carriers for them all; being thoroughly convinced
+ that it is our policy and interest to do so. Nothing short of
+ self-respect and that justice which is essential to a national
+ character ought to involve us in war; for sure I am, if this
+ country is preserved in tranquillity twenty years longer, it may
+ bid defiance in a just cause to any power whatever; such in that
+ time would be its population, wealth, and resources."</p>
+
+ <p>He wanted time, but he wanted space also for his country; and
+ if we look for a moment at the results of his foreign policy we
+ see clearly how he got both. The time gained by peace without any
+ humiliating concessions is plain enough. If we look a little
+ further and a little deeper, we can see how he compassed his
+ other object. The true and the first mission of the American
+ people was, in Washington's theory, the conquest of the continent
+ which stretched away wild and silent behind them, for in that
+ direction lay the sure road to national greatness. The first step
+ was to bind by interest, trade, and habit of communication the
+ Atlantic States with the settlements beyond the mountains, and
+ for this he had planned canals and highways in the days of the
+ confederation. The next step was to remove every obstacle which
+ fettered the march of American settlement; and for this he rolled
+ back the Indian tribes, patiently negotiated with Spain until the
+ Mississippi was opened, and at great personal sacrifice and trial
+ signed the Jay treaty, and obtained the surrender of the British
+ posts. When Washington went out of office, the way was open to
+ the western movement; the dangers of disintegration by reason of
+ foreign intrigues on the frontier were removed; peace had been
+ maintained; and the national sentiment had had opportunity for
+ rapid growth. France had discovered that, although she had been
+ our ally, we were not her dependants; other nations had been
+ brought to perceive that the United States meant to have a
+ foreign policy all its own; and the American people were taught
+ that their first duty was to be Americans and nothing else. There
+ is no need to comment on or to praise the greatness of a policy
+ with such objects and results as these. The mere summary is
+ enough, and it speaks for itself and for its author in a way
+ which makes words needless.</p>
+
+ <p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+ <h2><a name="V" id="V"></a>CHAPTER V</h2>
+
+ <h2>WASHINGTON AS A PARTY MAN</h2>
+
+ <p>Washington was not chosen to office by a political party; he
+ considered parties to be perilous things, and he entered the
+ presidency determined to have nothing to do with them. Yet, as
+ has already been pointed out, he took the members of his cabinet
+ entirely from one of the two parties which then existed, and
+ which had been produced by the divisions over the Constitution
+ and its adoption. To this charge he would no doubt have replied
+ that the parties caused by the constitutional differences had
+ ceased to exist when that instrument went into operation, and
+ that it was to be supposed that all men were then united in
+ support of the government. Accepting this view of it, it only
+ remains to see how he fared when new and purely political
+ parties, as was inevitable, sprang into active life.</p>
+
+ <p>Whatever his own opinions may have been as to parties and
+ party-strife, Washington was under no delusions in regard either
+ to human nature or to himself, and he had no expectation that
+ everything he said or did would meet with universal approbation.
+ He well knew that there would be dissatisfaction, and no man ever
+ took high office with a mind more ready to bear criticism and to
+ profit by it. Three months after his inauguration he wrote to his
+ friend David Stuart: "I should like to be informed of the public
+ opinion of both men and measures, and of none more than myself;
+ not so much of what may be thought commendable parts, if any, of
+ my conduct, as of those which are conceived to be of a different
+ complexion. The man who means to commit no wrong will never be
+ guilty of enormities; consequently he can never be unwilling to
+ learn what are ascribed to him as foibles. If they are really
+ such, the knowledge of them in a well-disposed mind will go
+ half-way towards a reform. If they are not errors, he can explain
+ and justify the motives of his actions." This readiness to hear
+ criticism and this watching of public opinion were
+ characteristic, for his one desire was to know the truth and
+ never deceive himself. His journey through New England in the
+ autumn of that year, his visit to Rhode Island a year later, and
+ his trip through the southern States in the spring of 1791, had a
+ double motive. He wished to bring home to the people the
+ existence and the character of the new government by his
+ appearance among them as its representative; and he desired also
+ to learn from his own observation, and from inquiries made on the
+ spot, what the people thought of the administration and its
+ policies, and of the doings of Congress. He was a keen observer
+ and a good gatherer of information; for he was patient and
+ persistent, and had that best of all gifts for getting at public
+ opinion, an absolute and cheerful readiness to listen to advice
+ from any one. His travels all had the same result. In the South
+ as in New England he found that the people were pleased with the
+ new government, and contented with the prosperity which began at
+ once to flow from the adoption of a stable national system.</p>
+
+ <p>More credit, if anything, was given to it than it really
+ deserved; for, as he had written to Lafayette before the
+ Constitution went into effect, "Many blessings will be attributed
+ to our new government which are now taking their rise from that
+ industry and frugality into which the people have been forced
+ from necessity." Whether this were true or not, the new
+ government was entitled to the benefit of all accidents, and
+ Washington's correct conclusion was that the great body of the
+ people were heartily with him and his administration. But he was
+ also quite aware that all the criticism was not friendly, and as
+ the measures of the government one by one passed Congress, he saw
+ divisions of sentiment appear, slight at first, but deepening and
+ hardening with each successive contest. Indeed, he had not been
+ in office a year when he wrote a long letter to Stuart deploring
+ the sectionalism which had begun to show itself. The South was
+ complaining that everything was done in the interest of the
+ northern and eastern States, and against this idea Washington
+ argued with great force. He was especially severe on the
+ unreasonable and childish character of such grievances, and he
+ attributed the feeling in certain States largely to the outcries
+ of persons who had come home disappointed in some personal matter
+ from the seat of government. "It is to be lamented," he said,
+ "that the editors of the different gazettes in the Union do not
+ more generally and more correctly (instead of stuffing their
+ papers with scurrility and nonsensical declamation, which few
+ would read if they were apprised of the contents) publish the
+ debates in Congress on all great national questions. And this,
+ with no uncommon pains, every one of them might do." Washington
+ evidently believed that there was no serious danger of the people
+ going wrong if they were only fully informed. But the able
+ editors of that day no doubt felt that they and their
+ correspondents were better fitted to enlighten the public than
+ any one else could be, and there is no evidence that any of them
+ ever followed the President's suggestion.</p>
+
+ <p>The jealousies and the divisions in Congress, which Washington
+ watched with hearty dislike on account of their sectional
+ character, began, as is well known, with the financial measures
+ of the Treasury. As time went on they became steadily more marked
+ and better defined, and at last they spread to the cabinet.
+ Jefferson had returned to take his place as Secretary of State
+ after an absence of many years, and during that time he had
+ necessarily dropped out of the course of home politics. He came
+ back with a very moderate liking for the Constitution, and an
+ intention undoubtedly to do his best as a member of the cabinet.
+ His first and most natural impulse, of course, was to fall in
+ with the administration of which he was a part; and so completely
+ did he do this that it was at his table that the famous bargain
+ was made which assumed the state debts and took the capital to
+ the banks of the Potomac.</p>
+
+ <p>Exactly what led to the first breach between Jefferson and
+ Hamilton, whose financial policy was then in the full tide of
+ success, is not now very easy to determine. Jefferson's action
+ was probably due to a mixture of motives and a variety of causes,
+ as is generally the case with men, even when they are founders of
+ the democratic party. In the first place, Jefferson very soon
+ discovered that Hamilton was looked upon as the leader in the
+ cabinet and in the policies of the administration, and this fact
+ excited a very natural jealousy on his part, because he was the
+ official head of the President's advisers. In the second place,
+ it was inevitable that Jefferson should dislike Hamilton, for
+ there never were two men more unlike in character and in their
+ ways of looking at things. Hamilton was bold, direct, imperious,
+ and masculine; he went straight to his mark, and if he
+ encountered opposition he either rode over it or broke it down.
+ When Jefferson met with opposition he went round it or undermined
+ it; he was adroit, flexible, and extremely averse to open
+ fighting. There was also good ground for a genuine difference of
+ opinion between the two secretaries in regard to the policy of
+ the government. Jefferson was a thorough representative of the
+ great democratic movement of the time. At bottom his democracy
+ was of the sensible, practical American type, but he had come
+ home badly bitten by many of the wild notions which at that
+ moment pervaded Paris. A man of much less insight than Jefferson
+ would have had no difficulty in perceiving that Hamilton and his
+ friends were not in sympathy with these ideas. They hoped for the
+ establishment of a republic, but they desired for it a highly
+ energetic and centralized government not devoid of aristocratic
+ tendencies. This fundamental difference of opinion, increased as
+ it was by personal jealousies, soon put Jefferson, therefore,
+ into an attitude of hostility to the men who were then guiding
+ the policy of the government. The new administration had been so
+ successful that there was at first practically no party of
+ opposition, and the task before Jefferson involved the creation
+ of a party, the formulation of principles, and the definition of
+ issues, with appropriate shibboleths for popular consumption.
+ Jefferson knew that Hamilton and all who fought with him were as
+ sincerely in favor of a republic as he himself was; but his
+ unerring genius in political management told him that he could
+ never raise a party or make a party-cry out of the statement
+ that, while he favored a democratic republic, the men to whom he
+ was opposed preferred one of a more aristocratic caste. It was
+ necessary to have something much more highly seasoned than this.
+ So he took the ground that his opponents were monarchists, bent
+ on establishing a monarchy in this country, and were backed by a
+ "corrupt squadron" in Congress in the pay of the Treasury. This
+ was of course utter nonsense, but it served its purpose
+ admirably. Jefferson, indeed, shouted these cries so much that he
+ almost came to believe in them himself, and sympathetic writers
+ to this day repeat them as if they had reality instead of having
+ been mere noise to frighten the unwary. The prime object of it
+ all was to make the great leaders odious by connecting them in
+ the popular mind with the royal government that had been
+ overthrown.</p>
+
+ <p>Jefferson's first move was a covert one. In the spring of 1791
+ he received Thomas Paine's "Rights of Man," and straightway sent
+ the pamphlet to the printer with a note of approbation reflecting
+ upon John Adams. The pamphlet promptly appeared in a reprint with
+ the note prefixed. It made much stir, and the published approval
+ of the Secretary of State excited a great deal of criticism, much
+ of which was very hostile. Jefferson thereupon expressed extreme
+ surprise that his note had been printed, and on the plea of
+ explaining the matter wrote to Washington a letter, in which he
+ declared that his friend Mr. Adams, for whom he had a most
+ cordial esteem, was an apostate to hereditary monarchy and
+ nobility. He further described his old friend as a political
+ heretic and as the bellwether Davila, upon whom and whose
+ writings Mr. Adams had recently been publishing some discourses.
+ It is but fair to say that no more ingenious attack on the
+ Vice-President could have been made, but the purpose of it was
+ simply to arrest the public attention for the real struggle which
+ was to follow.</p>
+
+ <p>The true object of all these movements was to rally a party
+ and break down Jefferson's great colleague in the cabinet. The
+ "Rights of Man" served to start the discussion; and the next step
+ was to bring on from New York Philip Freneau, a verse-writer and
+ journalist, and make him translating clerk in the State
+ Department, and editor of an opposition newspaper known as the
+ "National Gazette." The new journal proceeded to do its work
+ after the fashion of the time. It teemed with abuse not only of
+ Hamilton and Adams and all the supporters of the treasury
+ measures, denouncing them as "monarchists," "aristocrats," and "a
+ corrupt squadron," but it even began a series of coarse assaults
+ upon the President himself. Jefferson, of course, denied that he
+ had anything to do with the writing in the newspaper, and Freneau
+ made oath at the time that the Secretary wrote nothing; but in
+ his old age he declared that Jefferson wrote or dictated all the
+ most abusive articles, and he showed a file of the "Gazette" with
+ these articles marked. Strict veracity was not the strongest
+ characteristic of either Freneau or Jefferson, and it is really
+ of but little consequence whether Freneau was lying in his old
+ age or in the prime of life. The undoubted facts of the case are
+ enough to fix the responsibility upon Jefferson, where it
+ belongs. The editor of a newspaper devoted to abusing the
+ administration was brought to Philadelphia by the Secretary of
+ State, was given a place in his department, and was his
+ confidential friend. Jefferson himself took advantage of his
+ position to gather material for attacks upon his chief, and upon
+ his colleagues, to whom he was bound to be loyal by every rule
+ which dictates the conduct of honorable men. He did not,
+ moreover, content himself with this outside work. It has been too
+ much overlooked that Jefferson, in addition to forming a party
+ and organizing attacks upon the Secretary of the Treasury and his
+ friends, sought in the first instance to break down Hamilton in
+ the cabinet, to deprive him of the confidence of Washington, and
+ by driving him from the administration to get control himself. At
+ no time did Jefferson ever understand Washington, but he knew him
+ well enough to be quite aware that he would never give up a
+ friend like Hamilton on account of any newspaper attacks. He
+ therefore took a more insidious method.</p>
+
+ <p>Knowing that Washington was in the habit of consulting with
+ old friends at home of all shades of opinion in regard to public
+ affairs, he contrived through their agency to have his own
+ charges against Hamilton laid before the President. He also, to
+ make perfectly sure, wrote himself to Washington, candidly
+ setting forth outside criticism, and his letter took the form of
+ a well-arranged indictment of the Treasury measures. This method
+ had the advantage of assailing Hamilton without incurring any
+ responsibility, and the charges were skilfully formulated and
+ ingeniously constructed to raise in the mind of the reader every
+ possible suspicion. At this point Washington comes for the first
+ time into the famous controversy from which our two great
+ political parties were born. He did exactly what Jefferson would
+ not have done, sent the charges all duly formulated to Hamilton,
+ and asked him his opinion about them. As the accusations thus
+ made against the policies of the government and the Secretary of
+ the Treasury were all mere wind of the "monarchist" and "corrupt
+ squadron" order, Hamilton disposed of them with very little
+ difficulty. The whole proceeding, if Jefferson was aware of it at
+ the time, must have been a great disappointment to him. But his
+ mistake was the natural error of an ingenious man wasting his
+ efforts on one of great directness and perfect simplicity of
+ character. Hamilton's answer was what Washington undoubtedly
+ expected. He knew the hollowness of the attack, but none the less
+ he was made anxious by it as an indication of the serious party
+ divisions rising about him. This, however, was but the beginning,
+ and he was soon to have much more direct evidence of the grave
+ nature of a political conflict, which he then could not bring
+ himself to believe was irrepressible.</p>
+
+ <p>Hamilton, on his side, was not the most patient of men, and
+ although he bore the attacks of Frenean for some time in silence
+ he finally retaliated. He did not get any one to do his fighting
+ for him, but under a thin disguise proceeded to answer in Fenno's
+ newspaper the abuse of the "National Gazette." He was the best
+ political writer in the country, and when he struck, his blows
+ told. Jefferson winced and cried out under the punishment, but it
+ would have been more dignified in Hamilton to have kept out of
+ the newspapers. Still there was the fight. It had gone from the
+ cabinet to the press, and the public knew that the two principal
+ secretaries were at swords' points and were marshaling behind
+ them strong political forces. The point had been reached where
+ the President was compelled to interfere unless he wished his
+ administration to be thoroughly discredited by the bitter and
+ open conflicts of its members.</p>
+
+ <p>He wrote to both secretaries in a grave and almost pathetic
+ tone of remonstrance, urging them to abandon their quarrel, and,
+ sinking minor differences, to work with him for the success of
+ the Constitution to which they were both devoted. Each man
+ replied after his fashion. Hamilton's letter was short and
+ straight-forward. He could not profess to have changed his
+ opinion as to the conduct or purpose of his colleague, but he
+ regretted the strife which had arisen, and promised to do all
+ that was in his power to allay it by ceasing from further
+ attacks. Jefferson wrote at great length, controverting
+ Hamilton's published letters in a way which showed that he was
+ still smarting from the well-aimed shafts. He also contrived to
+ make his own defense the vehicle for a renewal of all his
+ accusations against the Treasury, and he wound up by saying that
+ he looked forward to retirement with the longing of "a wave-worn
+ mariner," and that he should reserve any further fighting that he
+ had to do until he was out of office. Soon after he followed this
+ letter with another, containing a collection of extracts from his
+ own correspondence while in Paris, to show his devotion to the
+ Constitution. One is irresistibly reminded by all this of the
+ Player Queen&mdash;"The lady protests too much, methinks."
+ Washington had not accused Jefferson of lack of loyalty to the
+ Constitution, indeed he had made no accusations against him of
+ any kind; but Jefferson knew that his own position was a false
+ one, and he could not refrain from taking a defensive tone.
+ Washington, in his reply, said that he needed no proofs of
+ Jefferson's fidelity to the Constitution, and reiterated his
+ earnest desire for an accommodation of all differences. "I will
+ frankly and solemnly declare," he said, "that I believe the views
+ of both of you to be pure and well-meant, and that experience
+ only will decide with respect to the salutariness of the measures
+ which are the subjects of dispute.... I could, and indeed was
+ about to, add more on this interesting subject, but will forbear,
+ at least for the present, after expressing a wish that the cup
+ which has been presented to us may not be snatched from our lips
+ by a discordance of action, when I am persuaded there is no
+ discordance in your views."</p>
+
+ <p>The difficulty was that there was not only discordance in the
+ views of the two secretaries, but a fundamental political
+ difference, extending throughout the people, which they typified.
+ The accommodation of views and the support of the Constitution
+ could only mean a support of Washington's administration and its
+ measures. Those measures not only had the President's approval,
+ but they were in many respects peculiarly his own, and in them he
+ rightly saw the success and maintenance of the Constitution. But,
+ unfortunately for the interests of harmony, these measures were
+ either devised or ardently sustained by the Secretary of the
+ Treasury. They were not the measures of the Secretary of State,
+ and received from him either lukewarm support or active, if
+ furtive, hostility. The only peace possible was in Jefferson's
+ giving in his entire adherence to the policies of Washington and
+ Hamilton, which were radically opposed to his own. In one word, a
+ real, profound, and inevitable party division had come, and it
+ had found the opposing chiefs side by side in the cabinet.</p>
+
+ <p>Against this conclusion Washington struggled hard. He had come
+ in as the representative and by the votes of the whole people,
+ and he shrank from any step which would seem to make him lean on
+ a party for support in his administration. He had made up his
+ cabinet with what he very justly considered the strongest
+ material. He believed that a breaking up of the cabinet or a
+ change in its membership would be an injury to the cause of good
+ government, and he was so entirely single-minded in his own views
+ and wishes, that, with all his knowledge of human nature, he
+ found it difficult to understand how any one could differ from
+ him materially. Moreover, having started with the firm intention
+ of governing without party, he determined, with his usual
+ persistence, to carry it through, if it were possible. When party
+ feeling had once developed, and division had sprung up between
+ the two principal officers of his cabinet, no greater risk could
+ have been run than that which Washington took in refusing to make
+ the changes which were necessary to render the administration
+ harmonious. With any lesser man, such a perilous experiment would
+ have failed and brought with it disastrous consequences. There is
+ no greater proof of the force of his will and the weight and
+ strength of his character than the fact that he held in his
+ cabinet Jefferson and Hamilton, despite their hatred for each
+ other and each other's principles, and that he not only prevented
+ any harm, but actually drew great results from the talents of
+ each of them. Yet, with all his strength of grasp, this
+ ill-assorted combination could not last, although Washington
+ resisted the inevitable in a surprising way, and he even begged
+ Jefferson to remain when the impossibility of doing so had become
+ quite clear to that gentleman.</p>
+
+ <p>The remonstrance in regard to the Freneau matter had but a
+ temporary effect. Hamilton stopped his attacks, it is true; but
+ Jefferson did not discontinue his, and he set on foot a movement
+ which was designed to destroy his rival's public and private
+ reputation. Hamilton met this attack in Congress, where he
+ refuted it signally; and although the ostensible movers were
+ members of the House, the defeat recoiled on the Secretary of
+ State. Having failed in Congress and before the public to ruin
+ his opponent, and having failed equally to shake Washington's
+ confidence in Hamilton or the latter's influence in the
+ administration, Jefferson made up his mind that the cabinet was
+ no longer the place for him. He became more than ever satisfied
+ that he was a "wave-worn mariner," and after some hesitation he
+ finally resigned and transferred his political operations to
+ another field. A year later Hamilton, from very different reasons
+ of a purely private character, followed him.</p>
+
+ <p>Meantime many events had occurred which all tended to show the
+ growing intensity of party divisions, and which were not without
+ their effect upon the mind of the President. In 1792 it became
+ necessary to consider the question of the approaching election,
+ and all elements united in urging upon Washington the absolute
+ necessity of accepting the presidency a second time. Hamilton and
+ the Federalists, of course, desired Washington's re&euml;lection,
+ because they regarded him as their leader, as the friend and
+ supporter of their measures, and as the great bulwark of the
+ government. Jefferson, who was equally urgent, felt that in the
+ unformed condition of his own party the withdrawal of Washington,
+ in addition to its injury to the general welfare, would leave his
+ incoherent forces at the mercy of an avowed and thorough-going
+ Federalist administration.</p>
+
+ <p>So it came about that Washington received another unanimous
+ election. He had no great longing for public office, but at this
+ time he seems to have been not without a desire to continue
+ President, in order that he might carry his measures to
+ completion. In the unanimity of the choice he took a perfectly
+ natural pleasure, for besides the personal satisfaction, he could
+ not but feel that it greatly strengthened his hands in doing the
+ work which he had at heart. On January 20, 1793, he wrote to
+ Henry Lee: "A mind must be insensible, indeed, not to be
+ gratefully impressed by so distinguished and honorable a
+ testimony of public approbation and confidence; and as I suffered
+ my name to be contemplated on this occasion, it is more than
+ probable that I should, for a moment, have experienced chagrin if
+ my re&euml;lection had not been by a pretty respectable vote. But
+ to say I feel pleasure from the prospect of commencing another
+ tour of duty would be a departure from the truth." Some time was
+ still to pass before Washington, either by word or deed, would
+ acknowledge himself to be the chief or even a member of a party;
+ but before he entered the presidency a second time, he had no
+ manner of doubt that a party existed which was opposed to him and
+ to all his measures.</p>
+
+ <p>The establishment of the government and the treasury measures
+ had very quickly rallied a strong party, which kept the name that
+ it had adopted while fighting the battles of the Constitution.
+ They were known in their own day, and have been known ever since
+ to history, as the Federalists. The opposition, composed chiefly
+ of those who had resisted the adoption of the Constitution, were
+ discredited at the very start by the success of the union and the
+ new government. When Jefferson took hold of them they were
+ disorganized and even nameless, having no better appellation than
+ that of "Anti-Federalists." In the process of time their great
+ chief gave them a name, a set of principles, a war-cry, an
+ organization, and at last an overwhelming victory. They began to
+ take on something like form and coherence in resisting Hamilton's
+ financial measures; but the success of his policy was so dazzling
+ that they were rather cowed by it, and were left by their defeat
+ little better off in the way of discipline than before. The
+ French Revolution and its consequences, including a war with
+ England, gave them a much better opportunity. It is melancholy to
+ think that American parties should have entered upon their first
+ struggle purely on questions of foreign politics. The only
+ explanation is to repeat that we were still colonists in all but
+ name and allegiance, and it was Washington's task not only to
+ establish a dignified and independent policy of his own abroad,
+ but to beat down colonial politics at home.</p>
+
+ <p>In the first burst of rejoicing over the uprising of the
+ French people, no divisions were apparent; but the arrival of
+ Genet was the signal for their beginning. The extraordinary
+ spectacle was then presented of an American party arrayed against
+ the administration under the lead of the French minister, and
+ with the strong, although covert sympathy of the Secretary of
+ State. The popular feeling in fact was so strongly with France
+ that the new party seemed on the surface to have almost universal
+ support. The firm attitude of the administration and Washington's
+ unyielding adherence to his policy of neutrality gave them their
+ first serious check, but also embittered their attacks. In the
+ first three years of the government almost every one refrained
+ from attacking Washington personally. The unlimited love and
+ respect in which he was held were the principal causes of this
+ moderation, but even those opponents who were not influenced by
+ feelings of respect were restrained by a wholesome prudence from
+ bringing upon themselves the odium of being enemies of the
+ President.</p>
+
+ <p>The fiction that the king could do no wrong was carried to the
+ last extreme by the Long Parliament when they made war on Charles
+ in order to remove him from evil counselors. It was, no doubt,
+ the exercise of a wise conservatism in that instance; but in the
+ United States, and in the ordinary condition of politics, such a
+ position was of course untenable. The President was responsible
+ for his cabinet and for the measures of his administration, and
+ it was impossible to separate them long, even when the chief
+ magistrate was so great and so well-beloved as Washington.
+ Freneau, editing his newspaper from the office of the Secretary
+ of State, seems to have been the first to break the line. He
+ passed speedily from attacks on measures to attacks on men, and
+ among the latter he soon included the President. Washington had
+ had too much experience of slander and abuse during the
+ revolutionary war to be worried by them. But Freneau took pains
+ to send him copies of his newspapers, a piece of impertinence
+ which apparently led to a little vigorous denunciation, the
+ account of which seems probable, although our only authority is
+ in Jefferson's "Ana." As the attacks went on and were extended,
+ and when Bache joined in with the "Aurora," Washington was not
+ long in coming to the unpleasant conclusion that all this
+ opposition proceeded from a well-formed plan, and was the work of
+ a party which designed to break down his measures and ruin his
+ administration. All statesmen intrusted in a representative
+ system with the work of government are naturally prone to think
+ that their opponents are also the enemies of the public welfare,
+ and Washington was no exception to the rule. Such an opinion is
+ indeed unavoidable, for a public man must have faith that his own
+ measures are the best for the country, and if he did not, he
+ would be but a faint-hearted representative, unfit to govern and
+ unable to lead. History has agreed with Washington in his view of
+ the work of his administration, and has set it down as essential
+ to the right and successful foundation of the government. It is
+ not to be wondered at that at the moment Washington should regard
+ a party swayed by the French minister and seeking to involve us
+ in war as unpatriotic and dangerous. He even thought that one
+ probable solution of Genet's conduct was that he was the tool and
+ not the leader of the party which sustained him. In fact, his
+ general view of the opposition was marked by that perfect
+ clearness which was characteristic of all his opinions when he
+ had fully formed them. In July, 1793, he wrote to Henry
+ Lee:&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>"That there are in this as well as in all other countries,
+ discontented characters, I well know; as also that these
+ characters are actuated by very different views: some good, from
+ an opinion that the general measures of the government are
+ impure; some bad, and, if I might be allowed to use so harsh an
+ expression, diabolical, inasmuch as they are not only meant to
+ impede the measures of that government generally, but more
+ especially, as a great means toward the accomplishment of it, to
+ destroy the confidence which it is necessary for the people to
+ place, until they have unequivocal proof of demerit, in their
+ public servants. In this light I consider myself whilst I am an
+ occupant of office; and if they were to go further and call me
+ their slave during this period, I would not dispute the
+ point.</p>
+
+ <p>"But in what will this abuse terminate? For the result, as it
+ respects myself, I care not; for I have a consolation within that
+ no earthly efforts can deprive me of, and that is, that neither
+ ambition nor interested motives have influenced my conduct. The
+ arrows of malevolence, therefore, however barbed and well
+ pointed, never can reach the most vulnerable part of me; though,
+ whilst I am up as a <i>mark</i>, they will be continually aimed.
+ The publications in Freneau's and Bache's papers are outrages on
+ common decency, and they progress in that style in proportion as
+ their pieces are treated with contempt, and are passed by in
+ silence by those at whom they are aimed. The tendency of them,
+ however, is too obvious to be mistaken by men of cool and
+ dispassionate minds, and, in my opinion, ought to alarm them,
+ because it is difficult to prescribe bounds to the effect."</p>
+
+ <p>He was not much given, however, to talking about his
+ assailants. If he said anything, it was usually only in the way
+ of contemptuous sarcasm, as when he wrote to Morris: "The affairs
+ of this country <i>cannot go amiss</i>. There are <i>so many
+ watchful guardians of them</i>, and such <i>infallible
+ guides</i>, that one is at no loss for a director at every turn.
+ But of these matters I shall say little." If these attacks had
+ any effect on him, it was only to make him more determined in
+ carrying out his purposes. In the first skirmish, which ended in
+ the recall of Genet, he not only prevailed, but the French
+ minister's audacity especially in venturing to appeal to the
+ people against their President, demoralized the opposition and
+ brought public opinion round to the side of the administration
+ with an overwhelming force.</p>
+
+ <p>Genet's mischief, however, did not end with him. He had sown
+ the seeds of many troubles, and among others the idea of
+ societies on the model of the famous Jacobin Club of Paris. That
+ American citizens should have so little self-respect as to borrow
+ the political jargon and ape the political manners of Paris was
+ sad enough. To put on red caps, drink confusion to tyrants, sing
+ <i>&Ccedil;a ira</i>, and call each other "citizen," was foolish
+ to the verge of idiocy, but it was at least harmless. When,
+ however, they began to form "democratic societies" on the model
+ of the Jacobins, for the defense of liberty against a government
+ which the people themselves had made, they ceased to be fatuous
+ and became mischievous. These societies, senseless imitations of
+ French examples, and having no real cause to defend liberty,
+ became simply party organizations, with a strong tendency to
+ foster license and disorder. Washington regarded them with
+ unmixed disgust, for he attributed to them the agitation and
+ discontent of the settlers beyond the mountains, which threatened
+ to embroil us with Spain, and he believed also that the much more
+ serious matter of the whiskey rebellion was their doing. After
+ having exhausted every reasonable means of concession and
+ compromise, and having concentrated the best public opinion of
+ the country behind him, he resolved to put down this "rebellion"
+ with a strong hand, and he wrote to Henry Lee, just as he was
+ preparing to take the last step: "It is with equal pride and
+ satisfaction I add that, as far as my information extends, this
+ insurrection is viewed with universal indignation and abhorrence,
+ except by those who have never missed an opportunity, by
+ side-blows or otherwise, to attack the general government; and
+ even among these there is not a spirit hardy enough yet openly to
+ justify the daring infractions of law and order; but by
+ palliatives they are attempting to suspend all proceedings
+ against the insurgents, until Congress shall have decided on the
+ case, thereby intending to gain time, and, if possible, to make
+ the evil more extensive, more formidable, and, of course, more
+ difficult to counteract and subdue.</p>
+
+ <p>"I consider this insurrection as the first formidable fruit of
+ the democratic societies, brought forth, I believe, too
+ prematurely for their own views, which may contribute to the
+ annihilation of them."</p>
+
+ <p>The insurrection vanished on the advance of the forces of the
+ United States. It had been formidable enough to alarm all
+ conservative people, and its inglorious end left the opposition,
+ which had given it a certain encouragement, much discredited.
+ This matter being settled, Washington determined to strike next
+ at what he considered the chief sources of the evil, the clubs,
+ which, to use his own words, "were instituted for the express
+ purpose of poisoning the minds of the people of this country, and
+ making them discontented with the government." Accordingly, in
+ his speech to the next Congress he denounced the democratic
+ societies. After tracing the course of the whiskey rebellion, he
+ said:&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>"And when in the calm moments of reflection they [the citizens
+ of the United States] shall have traced the origin and progress
+ of the insurrection, let them determine whether it has not been
+ fomented by combinations of men, who, careless of consequences,
+ and disregarding the unerring truth, that those who rouse cannot
+ always appease a civil convulsion, have disseminated, from an
+ ignorance or perversion of facts, suspicions, jealousies, and
+ accusations of the whole government."</p>
+
+ <p>The opposition both in Congress and in the newspapers shrieked
+ loudly over this plain speaking; but when Washington struck a
+ blow, it was usually well timed, and the present instance was no
+ exception. Coming immediately after the failure of the
+ insurrection, and the triumph of the government, this strong
+ expression of the President's disapproval had a fatal effect upon
+ the democratic societies. They withered away with the rapidity of
+ weeds when their roots have been skillfully cut.</p>
+
+ <p>After this, even if Washington still refused to consider
+ himself the head of a party, the opposition no longer had any
+ doubts on that point. They not only regarded him as the chief of
+ the Federalists, but also, and with perfect justice, as their own
+ most dangerous enemy, and the man who had dealt them and their
+ cause the most deadly blows. Whatever restraint they may have
+ hitherto placed upon themselves in dealing with him personally,
+ they now abandoned, and the opportunity for open war soon came to
+ them in the vexed question of the British treaty, where they
+ occupied much better ground than in the Genet affair, and
+ commanded much more popular sympathy. Their orators did not
+ hesitate to say that the conduct of the President in this affair
+ had been improper and monarchical, and that he ought to be
+ impeached. After the treaty was signed, the "Aurora" declared
+ that the President had violated the Constitution, and made a
+ treaty with a nation abhorred by our people; that he answered the
+ respectful remonstrances of Boston and New York as if he were the
+ omnipotent director of a seraglio, and had thundered contempt
+ upon the people with as much confidence as if he sat upon the
+ throne of "Industan."</p>
+
+ <p>All these remarks and many more of like tenor have been
+ gathered together and very picturesquely arranged by Mr.
+ McMaster, in whose volumes they may be studied with advantage by
+ any one who has doubts as to Washington's political position. It
+ is not probable that the writer of the brilliant diatribe just
+ quoted had any very distinct idea about either seraglios or
+ "Industan," but he, and others of like mind, probably took
+ pleasure in the words, as did the old woman who always loved to
+ hear Mesopotamia mentioned. Other persons, however, were more
+ definite in their statements. John Beckley, who had once been
+ clerk of the House, writing under the very opposite signature of
+ "A Calm Observer," declared that Washington had been overdrawing
+ his salary in defiance of law, and had actually stolen in this
+ way $4,750. Such being the case, the "Calm Observer" very
+ naturally inquired: "What will posterity say of the man who has
+ done this thing? Will it not say that the mask of political
+ hypocrisy has been worn by Caesar, by Cromwell, and by
+ Washington?" Another patriot, also of the Democratic party,
+ declared that the President had been false to a republican
+ government. He said that Washington maintained the seclusion of a
+ monk and the supercilious distance of a tyrant; and that the
+ concealing carriage drawn by supernumerary horses expressed the
+ will of the President, and defined the loyal duty of the
+ people.</p>
+
+ <p>The support of Genet, the democratic societies, and now this
+ concerted and bitter opposition to the Jay treaty, convinced
+ Washington, if conviction were needed, that he could carry on his
+ administration only by the help of those who were thoroughly in
+ sympathy with his policy and purposes. When Jefferson left the
+ State Department, the President promoted Randolph, and put
+ Bradford, a Federalist, in the place of Attorney-General. When
+ Hamilton left the Treasury, Oliver Wolcott, Hamilton's right-hand
+ man, and the staunchest of party men, was given the position thus
+ left vacant. If Randolph had remained in the cabinet, he would
+ have become a Federalist. Like all men disposed to turn, when he
+ was compelled to jump he sprang far, as was shown by his signing
+ the treaty and memorial, both of which he strongly disapproved.
+ He was quite ready to fall in with the rest of the cabinet, but
+ on account of the Fauchet dispatch he resigned. Then Washington,
+ after offering the portfolio to several persons known to be in
+ hearty sympathy with him, took the risk of giving it to Timothy
+ Pickering, who was by no means a safe leader, rather than take
+ any chance of getting another adviser who was not entirely of his
+ own way of thinking. At the same time he gave the secretaryship
+ of war to James McHenry, a most devoted personal friend and
+ follower. He still held back from calling himself a party chief,
+ but he had discovered, as William of Orange discovered, that he
+ could not, even with his iron will and lofty intent, overcome the
+ impossible, alter human nature, or carry on a successful
+ government under a representative system, without the assistance
+ of a party. He stated his conclusion with his wonted plainness in
+ a letter to Pickering written in September, 1795, in the midst of
+ the struggle over the treaty. "I shall not," he said, "whilst I
+ have the honor to administer the government, bring a man into any
+ office of consequence knowingly, whose political tenets are
+ adverse to the measures which the general government are
+ pursuing; for this, in my opinion, would be a sort of political
+ suicide. That it would embarrass its movements is most certain."
+ A terser statement of the doctrine of party government it would
+ be difficult to find, and in the conduct of Monroe and the course
+ of the opposition journals Washington had ample proofs of the
+ soundness of his theory.</p>
+
+ <p>If he had needed to be strengthened in his determination, his
+ opponents furnished the requisite aid. In February, 1796, the
+ House refused to adjourn on his birthday for half an hour, in
+ order to go and pay him their respects, as had been the pleasant
+ custom up to that time. The Democrats of that day were in no
+ confusion of mind as to the party to which Washington belonged,
+ and they did not hesitate to put this deliberate slight upon him
+ in order to mark their dislike. This was not the utterance of a
+ newspaper editor, but the well-considered act of the
+ representatives of a party in Congress. Party feeling, indeed,
+ could hardly have gone further; and this single incident is
+ sufficient to dispel the pleasing delusion that party strife and
+ bitterness are the product of modern days, and of more advanced
+ forms of political organization.</p>
+
+ <p>Yet despite all these attacks there can be no doubt that
+ Washington's hold upon the masses of the people was substantially
+ unshaken. They would have gladly seen him assume the presidency
+ for the third time, and if the test had been made, thousands of
+ men who gave their votes to the opposition would have still
+ supported him for the greatest office in their gift. But this
+ time Washington would not yield to the wishes of his friends or
+ of the country. He felt that he had done his work and earned the
+ rest and the privacy for which he longed above all earthly
+ things. In September, 1796, he published his farewell address,
+ and no man ever left a nobler political testament. Through much
+ tribulation he had done his great part in establishing the
+ government of the Union, which might easily have come to naught
+ without his commanding influence. He had imparted to it the
+ dignity of his own great character. He had sustained the splendid
+ financial policy of Hamilton. He had struck a fatal blow at the
+ colonial spirit in our politics, and had lifted up our foreign
+ policy to a plane worthy of an independent nation. He had
+ stricken off the fetters which impeded the march of western
+ settlement, and without loss of honor had gained time to enable
+ our institutions to harden and become strong. He had made peace
+ with our most dangerous enemies, and, except in the case of
+ France, where there were perilous complications to be solved by
+ his successor, he left the United States in far better and more
+ honorable relations with the rest of the world than even the most
+ sanguine would have dared to hope when the Constitution was
+ formed. Now from the heights of great achievement he turned to
+ say farewell to the people whom he so much loved, and whom he had
+ so greatly served. Every word was instinct with the purest and
+ wisest patriotism. "Be united," he said; "be Americans. The name
+ which belongs to you, in your national capacity, must exalt the
+ just pride of patriotism more than any appellation derived from
+ local discriminations. Let there be no sectionalism, no North,
+ South, East or West; you are all dependent one on another, and
+ should be one in union. Beware of attacks, open or covert, upon
+ the Constitution. Beware of the baneful effects of party spirit
+ and of the ruin to which its extremes must lead. Do not encourage
+ party spirit, but use every effort to mitigate and assuage it.
+ Keep the departments of government separate, promote education,
+ cherish the public credit, avoid debt. Observe justice and good
+ faith toward all nations; have neither passionate hatreds nor
+ passionate attachments to any; and be independent politically of
+ all. In one word, be a nation, be Americans, and be true to
+ yourselves."</p>
+
+ <p>His admonitions were received by the people at large with
+ profound respect, and sank deep into the public mind. As the
+ generations have come and gone, the farewell address has grown
+ dearer to the hearts of the people, and the children and the
+ children's children of those to whom it was addressed have turned
+ to it in all times and known that there was no room for error in
+ following its counsel.</p>
+
+ <p>Yet at the moment, notwithstanding the general sadness at
+ Washington's retirement and the deep regard for his last words of
+ advice, the opposition was so thoroughly hostile that they seized
+ on the address itself as a theme for renewed attack upon its
+ author. "His character," said one Democrat, "can only be
+ respectable while it is not known; he is arbitrary, avaricious,
+ ostentatious; without skill as a soldier, he has crept into fame
+ by the places he has held. His financial measures burdened the
+ many to enrich the few. History will tear the pages devoted to
+ his praise. France and his country gave him fame, and they will
+ take that fame away." "His glory has dissolved in mist," said
+ another writer, "and he has sunk from the high level of Solon or
+ Lycurgus to the mean rank of a Dutch Stadtholder or a Venetian
+ Doge. Posterity will look in vain for any marks of wisdom in his
+ administration."</p>
+
+ <p>To thoughtful persons these observations are not without a
+ curious interest, as showing that even the wisest of men may be
+ in error. The distinguished Democrat who uttered these remarks
+ has been forgotten, and the page of history on which Washington's
+ name was inscribed is still untorn. The passage of the address,
+ however, which gave the most offense, as Mr. McMaster points out,
+ was, as might have been expected from the colonial condition of
+ our politics, that which declared it to be our true policy "to
+ steer clear of permanent alliances with any portion of the
+ foreign world." This, it was held, simply meant that, having made
+ a treaty with England, we were to be stopped from making one with
+ France. Another distinguished editor declared that the farewell
+ address came from the meanest of motives; that the President knew
+ he could not be reelected because the Republicans would have
+ united to supersede him with Adams, who had the simplicity of a
+ Republican, while Washington had the ostentation of an Eastern
+ Pasha, and it was in order to save himself from this humiliation
+ that he had cunningly resigned.</p>
+
+ <p>When Washington met his last Congress, William Giles of
+ Virginia took the opportunity afforded by the usual answer to the
+ President's speech to assail him personally. It would be of
+ course a gross injustice to suppose that a coarse political
+ ruffian like Giles really represented the Democratic party. But
+ he represented the extreme wing, and after he had declared in his
+ place that Washington was neither wise nor patriotic, and that
+ his retirement was anything but a calamity, he got twelve of his
+ party friends to sustain his sentiments by voting with him. The
+ press was even more unbridled, and it was said in the "Aurora" at
+ this time that Washington had debauched and deceived the nation,
+ and that his administration had shown that the mask of patriotism
+ may be worn to conceal the foulest dangers to the liberties of
+ the people. Over and over again it was said by these writers that
+ he had betrayed France and was the slave of England.</p>
+
+ <p>This charge of being a British sympathizer was the only one of
+ all the abuse heaped upon him by the opposition that Washington
+ seems really to have resented. In August, 1794, when this slander
+ first started from the prolific source of all attacks against the
+ government, he wrote to Henry Lee: "With respect to the words
+ said to have been uttered by Mr. Jefferson, they would be
+ enigmatical to those who are acquainted with the characters about
+ me, unless supposed to be spoken ironically; and in that case
+ they are too injurious to me, and have too little foundation in
+ truth, to be ascribed to him. There could not be the trace of
+ doubt in his mind of predilection in mine toward Great Britain or
+ her politics, unless, which I do not believe, he has set me down
+ as one of the most deceitful and uncandid men living; because,
+ not only in private conversations between ourselves on this
+ subject, but in my meetings with the confidential servants of the
+ public, he has heard me often, when occasions presented
+ themselves, express very different sentiments, with an energy
+ that could not be mistaken by any one present.</p>
+
+ <p>"Having determined, as far as lay within the power of the
+ executive, to keep this country in a state of neutrality, I have
+ made my public conduct accord with the system; and whilst so
+ acting as a public character, consistency and propriety as a
+ private man forbid those intemperate expressions in favor of one
+ nation, or to the prejudice of another, which may have wedged
+ themselves in, and, I will venture to add, to the embarrassment
+ of government, without producing any good to the country."</p>
+
+ <p>He had shown by his acts as well as by his words his real
+ friendship for France, such as a proper sense of gratitude
+ required. As has been already pointed out, rather than run the
+ risk of seeming to reflect in the slightest degree upon the
+ government of the French republic, he had refused even to receive
+ distinguished <i>&eacute;migr&eacute;s</i> like Noailles,
+ Liancourt, and Talleyrand.<a id="footnotetag1-10" name=
+ "footnotetag1-10"></a><a href="#footnote1-10"><sup>1</sup></a> He
+ was so scrupulous in this respect that he actually did violence
+ to his own strong desires in not taking into his house at once
+ the son of Lafayette; and when it became necessary to choose a
+ successor to Morris, his anxiety was so great to select some one
+ agreeable to France that he took such an avowed opponent of his
+ administration as Monroe.</p>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote1-10" name="footnote1-10"></a>[<b>Footnote
+ 1:</b> <a href="#footnotetag1-10">(return)</a> See the Letter
+ to the Due de Liancourt explaining the reasons for his not
+ being received by the President. (Sparks, xi. 161.)]
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <p>On the other hand, he had never lost the strong feeling of
+ hostility toward England which he, above all men, had felt during
+ the Revolution. The conduct of England, when he was seeking an
+ honorable peace with her, tried his patience severely. He wrote
+ to Morris in 1795: "I give you these details (and if you should
+ again converse with Lord Grenville on the subject, you are at
+ liberty, unofficially, to mention them, or any of them, according
+ to circumstances), as evidences of the unpolitic conduct (for so
+ it strikes me) of the British government towards these United
+ States; that it may be seen how difficult it has been for the
+ executive, under such an accumulation of irritating
+ circumstances, to maintain the ground of neutrality which had
+ been taken; and at a time when the remembrance of the aid we had
+ received from France in the Revolution was fresh in every mind,
+ and while the partisans of that country were continually
+ contrasting the affections of <i>that</i> people with the
+ unfriendly disposition of the <i>British government</i>. And
+ that, too, as I have observed before, while <i>their own</i>
+ sufferings during the war with the latter had not been
+ forgotten." The one man in the country who above all others had
+ the highest conception of American nationality, who was the first
+ to seek to lift up our politics from the low level of
+ colonialism, who was the author of the neutrality policy, had
+ reason to resent the bitter irony of an attack which represented
+ him as a British sympathizer. The truth is, that the only foreign
+ party at that time was that which identified itself with France,
+ and which was the party of Jefferson and the opposition. The
+ Federalists and the administration under the lead of Washington
+ and Hamilton were determined that the government should be
+ American and not French, and this in the eyes of their opponents
+ was equivalent to being in the control of England. In after
+ years, when the Federalists fell from power and declined into the
+ position of a factious minority, they became British
+ sympathizers, and as thoroughly colonial in their politics as the
+ party of Jefferson had been. If they had had the wisdom of their
+ better days they would then have made themselves the champions of
+ the American idea, and would have led the country in the
+ determined effort to free itself once for all from colonial
+ politics, even if they were obliged to fight somebody to
+ accomplish it. They proved unequal to the task, and it fell to a
+ younger generation led by Henry Clay and his contemporaries to
+ sweep Federalist and Jeffersonian republican alike, with their
+ French and British politics, out of existence. In so doing the
+ younger generation did but complete the work of Washington, for
+ he it was who first trod the path and marked the way for a true
+ American policy in the midst of men who could not understand his
+ purposes.</p>
+
+ <p>Bitter and violent as had been the attacks upon Washington
+ while he held office, they were as nothing compared to the shout
+ of fierce exultation which went up from the opposition journals
+ when he finally retired from the presidency. One extract will
+ serve as an example of the general tone of the opposition
+ journals throughout the country. It is to be found in the
+ "Aurora" of March 6, 1797:&mdash;</p>
+
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>"'Lord, now lettest Thou Thy servant depart in peace,' was
+ the pious ejaculation of a pious man who beheld a flood of
+ happiness rushing in upon mankind. If ever there was a time
+ that would license the reiteration of the ejaculation, that
+ time has now arrived, for the man who is the source of all the
+ misfortunes of our country is this day reduced to a level with
+ his fellow-citizens, and is no longer possessed of power to
+ multiply evils upon the United States. If ever there was a
+ period for rejoicing, this is the moment. Every heart in unison
+ with the freedom and happiness of the people ought to beat high
+ with exultation that the name of Washington ceases from this
+ day to give currency to political insults, and to legalize
+ corruption. A new era is now opening upon us, an era which
+ promises much to the people, for public measures must now stand
+ upon their own merits, and nefarious projects can no longer be
+ supported by a name. When a retrospect has been taken of the
+ Washingtonian administration for eight years, it is a subject
+ of the greatest astonishment that a single individual should
+ have cankered the principles of republicanism in an enlightened
+ people just emerged from the gulf of despotism, and should have
+ carried his designs against the public liberty so far as to
+ have put in jeopardy its very existence. Such, however, are the
+ facts, and with these staring us in the face, the day ought to
+ be a JUBILEE in the United States."</p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <p>This was not the outburst of a single malevolent spirit. The
+ article was copied and imitated in New York and Boston, and
+ wherever the party that called Jefferson leader had a
+ representative among the newspapers. It is not probable that
+ stuff of this sort gave Washington himself a moment's anxiety,
+ for he knew too well what he had done, and he was too sure of his
+ own hold upon the hearts of the people, to be in the least
+ disturbed by the attacks of hostile editors. But the extracts are
+ of interest as showing that the opposition party of that time,
+ the party organized and led by Jefferson, regarded Washington as
+ their worst enemy, and assailed him and slandered him to the
+ utmost. They even went so far as to borrow materials from the
+ enemies of the country with whom we had lately been at war, by
+ publishing the forged letters attributed to Washington, and
+ circulated by the British in 1777, in order to discredit the
+ American general. One of Washington's last acts, on March 3,
+ 1797, was to file in the State Department a solemn declaration
+ that these letters, then republished by an American political
+ party, were base forgeries, of English origin in a time of war.
+ His own view of this performance is given in a letter to Benjamin
+ Walker, in which he said: "Amongst other attempts, ... spurious
+ letters, known at the time of their first publication (I believe
+ in the year 1777) to be forgeries, are (or extracts from them)
+ brought forward with the highest emblazoning of which they are
+ susceptible, with a view to attach principles to me which every
+ action of my life has given the lie to. But that is no
+ stumbling-block with the editors of these papers and their
+ supporters."</p>
+
+ <p>Two or three extracts from private letters will show how
+ Washington regarded the course of the opposition, and the
+ interpretation he put upon their attacks. After sketching in a
+ letter to David Stuart the general course of the hostilities
+ toward his administration, he said: "This not working so well as
+ was expected, from a supposition that there was too much
+ confidence in, and perhaps personal regard for, the present chief
+ magistrate and his politics, the batteries have lately been
+ leveled against him particularly and personally. Although he is
+ soon to become a private citizen, his opinions are knocked down,
+ and his character reduced as low as they are capable of sinking
+ it, even by resorting to absolute falsehoods." Again he said,
+ just before leaving office: "To misrepresent my motives, to
+ reprobate my politics, and to weaken the confidence which has
+ been reposed in my administration, are objects which cannot be
+ relinquished by those who will be satisfied with nothing short of
+ a change in our political system." He at least labored under no
+ misapprehension after eight years of trial as to the position or
+ purposes of the party which had fought him and his
+ administration, and which had savagely denounced his measures at
+ every step, and with ever-increasing violence.</p>
+
+ <p>Having defined the attitude of the opposition, we can now
+ consider that of Washington himself after he had retired from
+ office, and no longer felt restrained by the circumstances of his
+ election to the presidency from openly declaring his views, or
+ publicly identifying himself with a political party. He rightly
+ regarded the administration of Mr. Adams as a continuation of his
+ own, and he gave to it a cordial support. He was equally clear
+ and determined in his distrust and dislike of the opposition. Not
+ long before leaving office he had written a letter to Jefferson,
+ which, while it exonerated that gentleman from being the author
+ of certain peculiarly malicious attacks, showed very plainly that
+ the writer completely understood the position occupied by his
+ former secretary. It was a letter which must have been most
+ unpleasant reading for the person to whom it was addressed. A
+ year later he wrote to John Nicholas in regard to Jefferson:
+ "Nothing short of the evidence you have adduced, corroborative of
+ intimations which I had received long before through another
+ channel, could have shaken my belief in the sincerity of a
+ friendship which I had conceived was possessed for me by the
+ person to whom you allude." There was no doubt in his mind now as
+ to Jefferson's conduct, and he knew at last that he had been his
+ foe even when a member of his political household.</p>
+
+ <p>When the time came to fill the offices in the provisional army
+ made necessary by the menace of war with France, Washington wrote
+ to the President that he ought to have generals who were men of
+ activity, energy, health, and "sound politics," carrying
+ apparently his suspicion of the opposition even to disbelieving
+ in them as soldiers. He repeated the same idea in a letter to
+ McHenry, in which he said: "I do not conceive that a desirable
+ set could be formed from the old generals, some having never
+ displayed any talent for enterprise, and others having shown a
+ general opposition to the government, or predilection to French
+ measures, be their present conduct what it may."</p>
+
+ <p>When the question arose in regard to the relative rank of the
+ major-generals, Washington said to Knox: "No doubt remained in my
+ mind that Colonel Hamilton was designated second in command (and
+ first, if I should decline an acceptance) by the Federal
+ characters of Congress; whence alone anything like a public
+ sentiment relative thereto could be deduced." He was quite clear
+ that there was no use in looking beyond the confines of the
+ Federal party for any public sentiment worth considering. He had
+ serious doubts also as to the advisability of having the
+ opponents of the government in the army, and wrote to McHenry on
+ September 30, 1798, that brawlers against the government in
+ certain parts of Virginia had suddenly become silent and were
+ seeking commissions in the army. "The motives ascribed to them
+ are that in such a situation they would endeavor to divide and
+ contaminate the army by artful and seditious discourses, and
+ perhaps at a critical moment bring on confusion. What weight to
+ give to these conjectures you can judge as well as I. But as
+ there will be characters enough of an opposite description who
+ are ready to receive appointments, circumspection is necessary.
+ Finding the resentment of the people at the conduct of France too
+ strong to be resisted, they have in appearance adopted their
+ sentiments, and pretend that, notwithstanding the misconduct of
+ the government has brought it upon us, yet if an invasion should
+ take place, it will be found that <i>they</i> will be among the
+ first to defend it. This is their story at all elections and
+ election meetings, and told in many instances with effect." He
+ wrote again in the same strain to McHenry, on October 21:
+ "Possibly no injustice would be done, if I were to proceed a step
+ further, and give it as an opinion that most of the candidates
+ [for the army] brought forward by the opposition members possess
+ sentiments similar to their own, and might poison the army by
+ disseminating them, if they were appointed." In this period of
+ danger, when the country was on the verge of war, the attitude of
+ the opposition gave Washington much food for thought because it
+ appeared to him so false and unpatriotic. In a letter to
+ Lafayette, written on Christmas day, 1798, he gave the following
+ brief sketch of the opposition: "A party exists in the United
+ States, formed by a combination of causes, which opposed the
+ government in all its measures, and are determined, as all their
+ conduct evinces, by clogging its wheels indirectly to change the
+ nature of it, and to subvert the Constitution. The friends of
+ government, who are anxious to maintain its neutrality and to
+ preserve the country in peace, and adopt measures to secure these
+ objects, are charged by them as being monarchists, aristocrats,
+ and infractors of the Constitution, which according to their
+ interpretation of it would be a mere cipher. They arrogated to
+ themselves ... the sole merit of being the friends of France,
+ when in fact they had no more regard for that nation than for the
+ Grand Turk, further than their own views were promoted by it;
+ denouncing those who differed in opinion (those principles are
+ purely American and whose sole view was to observe a strict
+ neutrality) as acting under British influence, and being directed
+ by her counsels, or as being her pensioners."</p>
+
+ <p>Shortly before this sharp definition was written, an incident
+ had occurred which had given Washington an opportunity of
+ impressing his views directly and personally upon a distinguished
+ leader of the opposite party. Dr. Logan of Philadelphia, under
+ the promptings of Jefferson, as was commonly supposed, had gone
+ on a volunteer mission to Paris for the purpose of bringing about
+ peace between the two republics. He had apparently a fixed idea
+ that there was something very monstrous in our having any
+ differences with France, and being somewhat of a busybody,
+ although a most worthy man, he felt called upon to settle the
+ international complications which were then puzzling the brains
+ and trying the patience of the ablest men in America. It is
+ needless to say that his mission was not a success, and he was
+ eventually so unmercifully ridiculed by the Federalist editors
+ that he published a long pamphlet in his own defense. Upon his
+ return, however, he seems to have been not a little pleased with
+ himself, and he took occasion to call upon Washington, who was
+ then in Philadelphia on business. It would be difficult to
+ conceive anything more distasteful to Washington than such a
+ mission as Logan's, or that he could have a more hearty contempt
+ for any one than for a meddler of this description, who by his
+ interference might help to bring his country into contempt. He
+ was sufficiently impressed, however, by Dr. Logan's call to draw
+ up a memorandum, which gave a very realistic and amusing account
+ of it. It may be surmised that when Washington wished to be cold
+ in his manner, he was capable of being very freezing, and he was
+ not very apt at concealing his emotions when he found himself in
+ the presence of any one whom he disliked and disapproved. The
+ memorandum is as follows:&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>"<i>Tuesday, November</i> 13, 1798.&mdash;Mr. Lear, my
+ secretary, being from our lodgings on business, one of my
+ servants came into the room where I was writing and informed me
+ that a gentleman in the parlor below desired to see me; no name
+ was sent up. In a few minutes I went down, and found the Rev. Dr.
+ Blackwell and Dr. Logan there. I advanced towards and gave my
+ hand to the former; the latter did the same towards me. I was
+ backward in giving mine. He, possibly supposing from hence that I
+ did not recollect him, said his name was Logan. Finally, in a
+ very cold manner, and with an air of marked indifference, I gave
+ him my hand and asked <i>Dr. Blackwell to be seated</i>; the
+ other <i>took</i> a seat at the same time. I addressed <i>all</i>
+ my conversation to Dr. Blackwell; the other all his to me, to
+ which I only gave negative or affirmative answers as laconically
+ as I could, except asking him how Mrs. Logan did. He seemed
+ disposed to be very polite, and while Dr. Blackwell and myself
+ were conversing on the late calamitous fever, offered me an
+ asylum at his house, if it should return or I thought myself in
+ any danger in the city, and two or three rooms, by way of
+ accommodation. I thanked him slightly, observing there would be
+ no call for it."</p>
+
+ <p>"About this time Dr. Blackwell took his leave. We all rose
+ from our seats, and I moved a few paces toward the door of the
+ room, expecting the other would follow and take his leave
+ also."</p>
+
+ <p>The worthy Quaker, however, was not to be got rid of so
+ easily. He literally stood his ground, and went on talking of a
+ number of things, chiefly about Lafayette and his family, and an
+ interview with Mr. Murray, our minister in Holland. Washington,
+ meanwhile, stood facing him, and to use his own words, "showed
+ the utmost inattention," while his visitor described his journey
+ to Paris. Finally Logan said that his purpose in going to France
+ was to ameliorate the condition of our relations with that
+ country. "This," said Washington, "drew my attention more
+ pointedly to what he was saying and induced me to remark that
+ there was something very singular in this; that <i>he</i>, who
+ could only be viewed as a private character, unarmed with proper
+ powers, and presumptively unknown in France, should suppose he
+ could effect what three gentlemen of the first respectability in
+ our country, especially charged under the authority of the
+ government, were unable to do." One is not surprised to be then
+ told that Dr. Logan seemed a little confounded at this
+ observation; but he recovered himself, and went on to say that
+ only five persons knew of his going, and that his letters from
+ Mr. Jefferson and Mr. McKean obtained for him an interview with
+ M. Merlin, president of the Directory, who had been most friendly
+ in his expressions. To this Washington replied with some very
+ severe strictures on the conduct of France; and the conversation,
+ which must by this time have become a little strained, soon after
+ came to an end. One cannot help feeling a good deal of sympathy
+ for the excellent doctor, although he was certainly a busybody
+ and, one would naturally infer, a bore as well. It would have
+ been, however, a pity to have lost this memorandum, and there is
+ every reason to regret that Washington did not oftener exercise
+ his evident powers for realistic reporting. Nothing, moreover,
+ could bring out better his thorough contempt for the opposition
+ and their attitude toward France than this interview with the
+ volunteer commissioner.</p>
+
+ <p>There were, however, much more serious movements made by the
+ Democratic party than well-meant and meddling attempts to make
+ peace with France. This was the year of the Kentucky and Virginia
+ resolutions, the first note of that disunion sentiment which was
+ destined one day to involve the country in civil war and be
+ fought out on a hundred battlefields. Washington, with his love
+ for the Union and for nationality ever uppermost in his heart,
+ was quick to take alarm, and it cut him especially to think that
+ a movement which he esteemed at once desperate and wicked should
+ emanate from his own State, and as we now know, and as he perhaps
+ suspected, from a great Virginian whom he had once trusted. He
+ straightway set himself to oppose this movement with all his
+ might, and he summoned to his aid that other great Virginian who
+ in his early days had been the first to rouse the people against
+ oppression, and who now in his old age, in response to
+ Washington's appeal, came again into the forefront in behalf of
+ the Constitution and the union of the States. The letter which
+ Washington wrote to Patrick Henry on this occasion is one of the
+ most important that he ever penned, but there is room to quote
+ only a single passage here.</p>
+
+ <p>"At such a crisis as this," he said, "when everything dear and
+ valuable to us is assailed, when this party hangs upon the wheels
+ of government as a dead weight, opposing every measure that is
+ calculated for defense and self-preservation, abetting the
+ nefarious views of another nation upon our rights, preferring, as
+ long as they dare contend openly against the spirit and
+ resentment of the people, the interest of France to the welfare
+ of their own country, justifying the former at the expense of the
+ latter; when every act of their own government is tortured, by
+ constructions they will not bear, into attempts to infringe and
+ trample upon the Constitution with a view to introduce monarchy;
+ when the most unceasing and the purest exertions which were
+ making to maintain a neutrality ... are charged with being
+ measures calculated to favor Great Britain at the expense of
+ France, and all those who had any agency in it are accused of
+ being under the influence of the former and her pensioners; when
+ measures are systematically and pertinaciously pursued, which
+ must eventually dissolve the Union or produce coercion; I say,
+ when these things have become so obvious, ought characters who
+ are best able to rescue their country from the pending evil to
+ remain at home?...</p>
+
+ <p>"Vain will it be to look for peace and happiness, or for the
+ security of liberty or property, if civil discord should ensue.
+ And what else can result from the policy of those among us, who,
+ by all the measures in their power, are driving matters to
+ extremity, if they cannot be counteracted effectually? The views
+ of men can only be known, or guessed at, by their words or
+ actions. Can those of the <i>leaders</i> of opposition be
+ mistaken, then, if judged by this rule? That they are followed by
+ numbers, who are unacquainted with their designs and suspect as
+ little the tendency of their principles, I am fully persuaded.
+ But if their conduct is viewed with indifference, if there are
+ activity and misrepresentations on one side and supineness on the
+ other, their numbers accumulated by intriguing and discontented
+ foreigners under proscription, who were at war with their own
+ government, and the greater part of them with <i>all</i>
+ governments, they will increase, and nothing short of omniscience
+ can foretell the consequences."</p>
+
+ <p>It would have been difficult to draw a severer indictment of
+ the opposition party than that given in this letter, but there is
+ one other letter even more striking in its contents, without
+ which no account of the relation of Washington to the two great
+ parties which sprang up under his administration would be
+ complete. It was addressed to Governor Trumbull of Connecticut,
+ was written on July 21, 1799, less than six months before his
+ death, and although printed, has been hidden away in the appendix
+ to the "Life of Benjamin Silliman." Governor Trumbull, who bore
+ the name and filled the office of Washington's old revolutionary
+ friend, had written to the general, as many other Federalists
+ were writing at that time, urging him to come forward and stand
+ once more for the presidency, that he might heal the dissensions
+ in his own party and save the country from the impending disaster
+ of Jefferson's election. That Washington refused all these
+ requests is of course well known, but his reasons as stated to
+ Trumbull are of great interest. "I come now," he said, "my dear
+ sir, to pay particular attention to that part of your letter
+ which respects myself.</p>
+
+ <p>"I remember well the conversation which you allude to. I have
+ not forgot the answer I gave you. In my judgment it applies with
+ as much force <i>now</i> as <i>then</i>; nay, more, because at
+ that time the line between the parties was not so clearly drawn,
+ and the views of the opposition so clearly developed as they are
+ at present. Of course allowing your observation (as it respects
+ myself) to be well founded, personal influence would be of no
+ avail.</p>
+
+ <p>"Let that party set up a broomstick, and call it a true son of
+ liberty,&mdash;a democrat,&mdash;or give it any other epithet
+ that will suit their purpose, and it will command their votes
+ <i>in toto</i>!<a id="footnotetag1-11" name=
+ "footnotetag1-11"></a><a href="#footnote1-11"><sup>1</sup></a>
+ Will not the Federalists meet, or rather defend, their cause on
+ the opposite ground? Surely they must, or they will discover a
+ want of policy, indicative of weakness and pregnant of mischief,
+ which cannot be admitted. Wherein, then, would lie the difference
+ between the present gentleman in office and myself?</p>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote1-11" name="footnote1-11"></a>[<b>Footnote
+ 1:</b> <a href="#footnotetag1-11">(return)</a> "As an analysis
+ of this position, look to the pending election of governor in
+ Pennsylvania."]
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <p>"It would be matter of grave regret to me if I could believe
+ that a serious thought was turned toward me as his successor, not
+ only as it respects my ardent wishes to pass through the vale of
+ life in retirement, undisturbed in the remnant of the days I have
+ to sojourn here, unless called upon to defend my country (which
+ every citizen is bound to do); but on public grounds also; for
+ although I have abundant cause to be thankful for the good health
+ with which I am blessed, yet I am not insensible to my
+ declination in other respects. It would be criminal, therefore,
+ in me, although it should be the wish of my countrymen and I
+ could be elected, to accept an office under this conviction which
+ another would discharge with more ability; and this, too, at a
+ time when I am thoroughly convinced I should not draw a
+ <i>single</i> vote from the anti-Federal side, and of course
+ should stand upon no other ground <i>than any other Federal
+ character</i><a id="footnotetag1-12" name=
+ "footnotetag1-12"></a><a href="#footnote1-12"><sup>1</sup></a>
+ well supported; and when I should become a mark for the shafts of
+ envenomed malice and the basest calumny to fire at,&mdash;when I
+ should be charged not only with irresolution but with concealed
+ ambition, which waits only an occasion to blaze out, and, in
+ short, with dotage and imbecility.</p>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote1-12" name="footnote1-12"></a>[<b>Footnote
+ 1:</b> <a href="#footnotetag1-12">(return)</a> These italics
+ are mine.]
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <p>"All this, I grant, ought to be like dust in the balance, when
+ put in competition with a <i>great</i> public good, when the
+ accomplishment of it is apparent. But, as no problem is better
+ defined in my mind than that principle, not men, is now, and will
+ be, the object of contention; and that I could not obtain a
+ <i>solitary</i> vote from that party; <i>that any other
+ respectable Federal character could receive the same suffrages
+ that I should</i>;<a id="footnotetag1-13" name=
+ "footnotetag1-13"></a><a href="#footnote1-13"><sup>1</sup></a>
+ that at my time of life (verging towards threescore and ten) I
+ should expose myself without rendering any essential service to
+ my country, or answering the end contemplated; prudence on my
+ part must avert any attempt of the well-meant but mistaken views
+ of my friends to introduce me again into the chair of
+ government."</p>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote1-13" name="footnote1-13"></a>[<b>Footnote
+ 1:</b> <a href="#footnotetag1-13">(return)</a> These italics
+ are mine.]
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <p>It does not fall within the scope of this biography to attempt
+ to portray the history or weigh the merits of the two parties
+ which came into existence at the close of the last century, and
+ which, under varying names, have divided the people of the United
+ States ever since. But it is essential here to define the
+ relation of Washington toward them because one hears it
+ constantly said and sees it as constantly written down, that
+ Washington belonged to no party, which is perhaps a natural, but
+ is certainly a complete misconception. Washington came to the
+ presidency by a unanimous vote. He had in his mind very strongly
+ the idea of the framers of the Constitution that the President,
+ by the method of his election and by his independence of the
+ other departments of government, was to be above and beyond
+ party, and the representative of the whole people. In addition to
+ this he was so absorbed by the great conception which he had of
+ the future of the country, and was so confident of the purity and
+ rectitude of his own purposes, that he was loath to think that
+ party divisions could arise while he held the chief magistracy.
+ It was not long before he was undeceived on this point, and he
+ soon found that party divisions sprang up from the measures of
+ his own administration. Nevertheless, he clung to his
+ determination to govern without the assistance of a party as
+ such. When this, too, became impossible, he still felt that the
+ unanimity of his election required that he should not declare
+ himself to be the head of a party; but he had become thoroughly
+ convinced that under the representative system of the
+ Constitution party government could not be avoided. In his
+ farewell address he warned the people against the excesses of
+ that party spirit which he deplored; but he did not suggest that
+ it could be extinguished. Being a wise and far-seeing man, he saw
+ that if party government was an evil, it also was under a free
+ representative system, and in the present condition of human
+ nature a necessary evil, furnishing the only machinery by which
+ public affairs could be carried on.</p>
+
+ <p>In a time of deep political excitement and strong party
+ feeling, Washington was the last man in the world not to be
+ decidedly on one side or the other. He was possessed of too much
+ sense, force, and virility to be content to hold himself aloof
+ and croak over the wickedness of people, who were trying to do
+ something, even if they did not always try in the most perfect
+ way. He was himself pre&euml;minently a doer of deeds, and not a
+ critic or a phrase-maker, and we can read very distinctly in the
+ extracts which have been brought together in this chapter what he
+ thought on party and public questions. He was opposed to the
+ party which had resisted all the great measures of his
+ administration from the foundation of the government of the
+ United States. They had assailed and maligned him and his
+ ministers, and he regarded them as political enemies. He believed
+ in the principles of that party which had supported the financial
+ policy of Hamilton and his own policy of neutrality toward
+ foreign nations. He was opposed to the party which introduced the
+ interests of France as the leading issue of American politics,
+ and which embodied the doctrines of nullification and separatism
+ in the resolutions of Kentucky and Virginia. In one word,
+ Washington, in policies and politics, was an American and a
+ Nationalist; and the National and American party, from 1789 to
+ 1801, was the Federalist party. It may be added that it was the
+ only party which, at that precise time, could claim those
+ qualities. While he remained in the presidency he would not
+ declare himself to be of any party; but as soon as this fetter
+ was removed, he declared himself freely after his fashion,
+ expressing in words what he had formerly only expressed in
+ action. His feelings warmed and strengthened as the controversy
+ with France deepened, and as the attitude of the opposition
+ became more un-American and leaned more and more to separatism.
+ They culminated at last in the eloquent letter to Patrick Henry,
+ and in the carefully weighed words with which he tells Trumbull
+ that he can hope for no more votes than "any other Federal
+ character."</p>
+
+ <p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+ <h2><a name="VI" id="VI"></a>CHAPTER VI</h2>
+
+ <h2>THE LAST YEARS</h2>
+
+ <p>Washington had entered upon the presidency with the utmost
+ reluctance, and at the sacrifice of all he considered pleasantest
+ and best in life. He took it and held it for eight years from a
+ sense of duty, and with no desire to retain it beyond that which
+ every man feels who wishes to finish a great work that he has
+ undertaken. He looked forward to the approaching end of his
+ second term with a feeling of intense relief, and compared
+ himself to the wearied traveler who sees the resting-place where
+ he is at length to have repose. On March 3 he gave a farewell
+ dinner to the President and Vice-President elect, the foreign
+ ministers and their wives, and other distinguished persons, from
+ one of whom we learn that it was a very pleasant and lively
+ gathering. When the cloth was removed Washington filled his glass
+ and said: "Ladies and gentlemen, this is the last time I shall
+ drink your health as a public man. I do it with sincerity,
+ wishing you all possible happiness." The company did not take the
+ same cheerful view as their host of this leave-taking. There was
+ a pause in the gayety, some of the ladies shed tears, and the
+ little incident only served to show the warm affection felt for
+ Washington by every one who came in close contact with him.</p>
+
+ <p>The next day the last official ceremonies were performed.
+ After Jefferson had taken the oath as Vice-President and had
+ proceeded with the Senate to the House of Representatives, which
+ was densely crowded, Washington entered and was received with
+ cheers and shouts, the waving of handkerchiefs, and an enthusiasm
+ which seemed to know no bounds. Mr. Adams followed him almost
+ immediately and delivered his inaugural address, in which he paid
+ a stately compliment to the great virtues of his predecessor. It
+ was the setting and not the rising sun, however, that drew the
+ attention of the multitude, and as Washington left the hall there
+ was a wild rush from the galleries to the corridors and then into
+ the streets to see him pass. He took off his hat and bowed to the
+ people, but they followed him even to his own door, where he
+ turned once more and, unable to speak, waved to them a silent
+ farewell.</p>
+
+ <p>In the evening of the same day a great banquet was given to
+ him by the merchants of Philadelphia, and when he entered the
+ band played "Washington's March," and a series of emblematic
+ paintings were disclosed, the chief of which represented the
+ ex-President at Mount Vernon surrounded by the allegorical
+ figures then so fashionable. After the festivities Washington
+ lingered for a few days in Philadelphia to settle various private
+ matters and then started for home. Whether he was going or
+ coming, whether he was about to take the great office of
+ President or retire to the privacy of Mount Vernon, the same
+ popular enthusiasm greeted him. When he was really brought in
+ contact with the people, the clamors of the opposition press and
+ the attacks of the Jeffersonian editors all faded away and were
+ forgotten. On March 12 he reached Baltimore, and the local
+ newspaper of the next day said:&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>"Last evening arrived in this city, on his way to Mount
+ Vernon, the illustrious object of veneration and gratitude,
+ GEORGE WASHINGTON. His excellency was accompanied by his lady and
+ Miss Custis, and by the son of the unfortunate Lafayette and his
+ preceptor. At a distance from the city, he was met by a crowd of
+ citizens, on horse and foot, who thronged the road to greet him,
+ and by a detachment from Captain Hollingsworth's troop, who
+ escorted him in through as great a concourse of people as
+ Baltimore ever witnessed. On alighting at the Fountain Inn, the
+ general was saluted with reiterated and thundering huzzas from
+ the spectators. His excellency, with the companions of his
+ journey, leaves town, we understand, this morning."</p>
+
+ <p>Thus with the cheers and the acclamations still ringing in his
+ ears he came home again to Mount Vernon, where he found at once
+ plenty of occupation, which in some form was always a necessity
+ to him. An absence of eight years had not improved the property.
+ On April 3 he wrote to McHenry: "I find myself in the situation
+ nearly of a new beginner; for, although I have not houses to
+ build (except one, which I must erect for the accommodation and
+ security of my military, civil, and private papers, which are
+ voluminous and may be interesting), yet I have scarcely anything
+ else about me that does not require considerable repairs. In a
+ word, I am already surrounded by joiners, masons, and painters;
+ and such is my anxiety to get out of their hands, that I have
+ scarcely a room to put a friend into or to sit in myself without
+ the music of hammers or the odoriferous scent of paint." He
+ easily dropped back into the round of country duties and
+ pleasures, and the care of farms and plantations, which had
+ always had for him so much attraction. "To make and sell a little
+ flour annually," he wrote to Wolcott, "to repair houses going
+ fast to ruin, to build one for the security of my papers of a
+ public nature, will constitute employment for the few years I
+ have to remain on this terrestrial globe." Again he said to
+ McHenry: "You are at the source of information, and can find many
+ things to relate, while I have nothing to say that would either
+ inform or amuse a secretary of war at Philadelphia. I might tell
+ him that I begin my diurnal course with the sun; that if my
+ hirelings are not in their places by that time I send them
+ messages of sorrow for their indisposition; that having put these
+ wheels in motion I examine the state of things further; that the
+ more they are probed the deeper I find the wounds which my
+ buildings have sustained by an absence and neglect of eight
+ years; that by the time I have accomplished these matters
+ breakfast (a little after seven o'clock, about the time I presume
+ that you are taking leave of Mrs. McHenry) is ready; that this
+ being over I mount my horse and ride round my farms, which
+ employs me until it is time to dress for dinner, at which I
+ rarely miss seeing strange faces, come, as they say, out of
+ respect for me. Pray, would not the word curiosity answer as
+ well? And how different this from having a few social friends at
+ a cheerful board. The usual time of sitting at table, a walk, and
+ tea bring me within the dawn of candle-light; previous to which,
+ if not prevented by company, I resolve that as soon as the
+ glimmering taper supplies the place of the great luminary I will
+ retire to my writing-table and acknowledge the letters I have
+ received; that when the lights are brought I feel tired and
+ disinclined to engage in this work, conceiving that the next
+ night will do as well. The next night comes and with it the same
+ causes for postponement, and so on. Having given you the history
+ of a day, it will serve for a year, and I am persuaded you will
+ not require a second edition of it. But it may strike you that in
+ this detail no mention is made of any portion of time allotted
+ for reading. The remark would be just, for I have not looked into
+ a book since I came home; nor shall I be able to do it until I
+ have discharged my workmen; probably not before the nights grow
+ longer, when possibly I may be looking in Doomsday book."</p>
+
+ <p>There is not much that can be added to his own concise
+ description of the simple life he led at home. The rest and quiet
+ were very pleasant, but still there was a touch of sadness in his
+ words. The long interval of absence made the changes which time
+ had wrought stand out more vividly than if they had come one by
+ one in the course of daily life at home. Washington looked on the
+ ruins of Belvoir, and sighed to think of the many happy hours he
+ had passed with the Fairfaxes, now gone from the land forever.
+ Other old friends had been taken away by death, and the gaps were
+ not filled by the new faces of which he speaks to McHenry.
+ Indeed, the crowd of visitors coming to Mount Vernon from all
+ parts of his own country and of the world, whether they came from
+ respect or curiosity, brought a good deal of weariness to a man
+ tired with the cares of state and longing for absolute repose.
+ Yet he would not close his doors to any one, for the Virginian
+ sense of hospitality, always peculiarly strong in him, forbade
+ such action. To relieve himself, therefore, in this respect, he
+ sent for his nephew Lawrence Lewis, who took the social burden
+ from his shoulders. But although the visitors tired him when he
+ felt responsible for their pleasure, he did not shut himself up
+ now any more than at any other time in self-contemplation. He was
+ constantly thinking of others; and the education of his nephews,
+ the care of young Lafayette until he should return to France, as
+ well as the happy love-match of Nellie Custis and his nephew,
+ supplied the human interest without which he was never happy.</p>
+
+ <p>Before we trace his connection with public affairs in these
+ closing years, let us take one look at him, through the eyes of a
+ disinterested but keen observer. John Bernard, an English actor,
+ who had come to this country in the year when Washington left the
+ presidency, was playing an engagement with his company at
+ Annapolis, in 1798. One day he mounted his horse and rode down
+ below Alexandria, to pay a visit to an acquaintance who lived on
+ the banks of the Potomac. When he was returning, a chaise in
+ front of him, containing a man and a young woman, was overturned,
+ and the occupants were thrown out. As Bernard rode to the scene
+ of the accident, another horseman galloped up from the opposite
+ direction. The two riders dismounted, found that the driver was
+ not hurt, and succeeded in restoring the young woman to
+ consciousness; an event which was marked, Bernard tells us, by a
+ volley of invectives addressed to her unfortunate husband. "The
+ horse," continues Bernard, "was now on his legs, but the vehicle
+ still prostrate, heavy in its frame, and laden with at least half
+ a ton of luggage. My fellow-helper set me an example of activity
+ in relieving it of the internal weight; and when all was clear,
+ we grasped the wheel between us, and to the peril of our spinal
+ columns righted the conveyance. The horse was then put in, and we
+ lent a hand to help up the luggage. All this helping, hauling,
+ and lifting occupied at least half an hour, under a meridian sun,
+ in the middle of July, which fairly boiled the perspiration out
+ of our foreheads." The possessor of the chaise beguiled the labor
+ by a full personal history of himself and his wife, and when the
+ work was done invited the two Samaritans to go with him to
+ Alexandria, and take a drop of "something sociable." This being
+ declined, the couple mounted into the chaise and drove on.
+ "Then," says Bernard, "my companion, after an exclamation at the
+ heat, offered very courteously to dust my coat, a favor the
+ return of which enabled me to take deliberate survey of his
+ person. He was a tall, erect, well-made man, evidently advanced
+ in years, but who appeared to have retained all the vigor and
+ elasticity resulting from a life of temperance and exercise. His
+ dress was a blue coat buttoned to his chin, and buckskin
+ breeches. Though the instant he took off his hat I could not
+ avoid the recognition of familiar lineaments, which indeed I was
+ in the habit of seeing on every sign-post and over every
+ fireplace, still I failed to identify him, and to my surprise I
+ found that I was an object of equal speculation in his eyes." The
+ actor evidently did not have the royal gift of remembering faces,
+ but the stranger possessed that quality, for after a moment's
+ pause he said, "Mr. Bernard, I believe," and mentioned the
+ occasion on which he had seen him play in Philadelphia. He then
+ asked Bernard to go home with him for a couple of hours' rest,
+ and pointed out the house in the distance. At last Bernard knew
+ to whom he was speaking. "'Mount Vernon!' I exclaimed; and then
+ drawing back with a stare of wonder, 'Have I the honor of
+ addressing General Washington?' With a smile whose expression of
+ benevolence I have rarely seen equaled, he offered his hand and
+ replied: 'An odd sort of introduction, Mr. Bernard; but I am
+ pleased to find you can play so active a part in private, and
+ without a prompter.'" So they rode on together to the house and
+ had a chat, to which we must recur further on.</p>
+
+ <p>There is no contemporary narrative of which I am aware that
+ shows Washington to us more clearly than this little adventure
+ with Bernard, for it is in the common affairs of daily life that
+ men come nearest to each other, and the same rule holds good in
+ history. We know Washington much better from these few lines of
+ description left by a chance acquaintance on the road than we do
+ from volumes of state papers. It is such a pleasant story, too.
+ There is the great man, retired from the world, still handsome
+ and imposing in his old age, with the strong and ready hand to
+ succor those who had fallen by the wayside; there are the genuine
+ hospitality, the perfect manners, and the well-turned little
+ sentence with which he complimented the actor, put him at his
+ ease, and asked him to his house. Nothing can well be added to
+ the picture of Washington as we see him here, not long before the
+ end of all things came. We must break off, however, from the
+ quiet charm of home life, and turn again briefly to the affairs
+ of state. Let us, therefore, leave these two riding along the
+ road together in the warm Virginia sunshine to the house which
+ has since become one of the Meccas of humanity, in memory of the
+ man who once dwelt in it.</p>
+
+ <p>The highly prized retirement to Mount Vernon did not now, more
+ than at any previous time, separate Washington from the affairs
+ of the country. He continued to take a keen interest in all that
+ went on, to correspond with his friends, and to use his influence
+ for what he thought wisest and best for the general welfare.
+ These were stirring times, too, and the progress of events
+ brought him to take a more active part than he had ever expected
+ to play again; for France, having failed, thanks to his policy,
+ to draw us either by fair words or trickery from our independent
+ and neutral position, determined, apparently, to try the effect
+ of force and ill usage. Pinckney, sent out as minister, had been
+ rebuffed; and then Adams, with the cordial support of the
+ country, had made another effort for peace by sending Pinckney,
+ Marshall, and Gerry as a special commission. The history of that
+ commission is one of the best known episodes in our history. Our
+ envoys were insulted, asked for bribes, and browbeaten, until the
+ two who retained a proper sense of their own and their country's
+ dignity took their passports and departed. The publication of the
+ famous X, Y, Z letters, which displayed the conduct of France,
+ roused a storm of righteous indignation from one end of the
+ United States to the other. The party of France and of the
+ opposition bent before the storm, and the Federalists were at
+ last all-powerful. A cry for war went up from every corner, and
+ Congress provided rapidly for the formation of an army and the
+ beginning of a navy.</p>
+
+ <p>Then the whole country turned, as a matter of course, to one
+ man to stand at the head of the national forces of the United
+ States, and Adams wrote to Washington, urging him to take command
+ of the provisional army. To any other appeal to come forward
+ Washington would have been deaf, but he could never refuse a call
+ to arms. He wrote to Adams on July 4, 1798: "In case of <i>actual
+ invasion</i> by a formidable force, I certainly should not
+ intrench myself under the cover of age or retirement, if my
+ services should be required by my country to assist in repelling
+ it." He agreed, therefore, to take command of the army, provided
+ that he should not be called into active service except in the
+ case of actual hostilities, and that he should have the
+ appointment of the general's staff. To these terms Adams of
+ course acceded. But out of the apparently simple condition
+ relating to the appointment of officers there grew a very serious
+ trouble. There were to be three major-generals, the first of them
+ to have also the rank of inspector-general, and to be the virtual
+ commander-in-chief until the army was actually called into the
+ field. For these places, Washington after much reflection
+ selected Hamilton, Pinckney, and Knox, in the order named, and in
+ doing so he very wisely went on the general principle that the
+ army was to be organized <i>de novo</i>, without reference to
+ prior service. Apart from personal and political jealousies,
+ nothing could have been more proper and more sound than this
+ arrangement; but at this point the President's dislike of
+ Hamilton got beyond control, and he made up his mind to reverse
+ the order, and send in Knox's name first. The Federalist leaders
+ were of course utterly disgusted by this attempt to set Hamilton
+ aside, which was certainly ill-judged, and which proved to be the
+ beginning of the dissensions that ended in the ruin of the
+ Federalist party. After every effort, therefore, to move Adams
+ had failed, Pickering and others, including Hamilton himself,
+ appealed to Washington. At a distance from the scene of action,
+ and unfamiliar with the growth of differences within the party,
+ Washington was not only surprised, but annoyed by the President's
+ conduct. In addition to the evils which he believed would result
+ in a military way from this change, he felt that the conditions
+ which he had made had been violated, and that he had not been
+ treated fairly. He therefore wrote to the President with his
+ wonted plainness, on September 25, and pointed out that his
+ stipulations had not been complied with, that the change of order
+ among the major-generals was thoroughly wrong, and that the
+ President's meddling with the inferior appointments had been
+ hurtful and injudicious. His views were expressed in the most
+ courteous way, although with an undertone of severe disapproval.
+ There was no mistaking the meaning of the letter, however, and
+ Adams, bold man and President as he was, gave way at once. Mr.
+ Adams thought at the time that there had been about this matter
+ of the major-generals too much intrigue, by which Washington had
+ been deceived and he himself made a victim; but there seems no
+ good reason to take this view of it, for there is no indication
+ whatever that Washington did not know and understand the facts;
+ and it was on the facts that he made his decision, and not on the
+ methods by which they were conveyed to him. The propriety of the
+ decision will hardly now be questioned, although it did not tend
+ to make the relations between the ex-President and his successor
+ very cordial. They had always a great respect for each other, but
+ not much sympathy, for they differed too widely in temperament.
+ Even if Washington would have permitted it, it would have been
+ impossible for the President to have quarreled with him, but at
+ the same time he felt not a little awkwardness in dealing with
+ his successor, and was inclined to think that that gentleman did
+ not show him all the respect that was due. He wrote to McHenry on
+ October 1: "As no mode is yet adopted by the President by which
+ the battalion officers are to be appointed, and as I think I
+ stand on very precarious ground in my relation to him, I am not
+ over-zealous in taking <i>unauthorized</i> steps when those that
+ I thought <i>were authorized</i> are not likely to meet with much
+ respect."</p>
+
+ <div class="figleft" style="width:40%;">
+ <a href="images/illus0463.jpg"><img width="100%" src=
+ "images/illus0463.jpg" alt="HENRY KNOX" /></a>HENRY KNOX
+ </div>
+
+ <p>There was, however, another consequence of this affair which
+ gave Washington much more pain than any differences with the
+ President. His old friend and companion in arms, General Knox,
+ was profoundly hurt at the decision which placed Hamilton at the
+ head of the army. One cannot be surprised at Knox's feelings, for
+ he had been a distinguished officer, and had outranked both
+ Hamilton and Pinckney. He felt that he ought to command the army,
+ and that he was quite capable of doing so; and he did not relish
+ being told in this official manner that he had grown old, and
+ that the time had come for younger and abler men to pass beyond
+ him. The archbishop in "Gil Blas" is one of the most universal
+ types of human nature that we have. Nobody feels kindly to the
+ monitor who points out the failings which time has brought, and
+ we are all inclined to dismiss him with every wish that he may
+ fare well and have a little more taste. Poor Knox could not
+ dismiss his Gil Blas, and he felt the unpleasant admonition all
+ the more bitterly from the fact that the blow was dealt by the
+ two men whom he most loved and admired. Hamilton wrote him the
+ best and most graceful of letters, but failed to soothe him; and
+ Washington was no more fortunate. He tried with the utmost
+ kindliness, and in his most courteous manner, to soften the
+ disappointment, and to show Knox how convincing were the reasons
+ for his action. But the case was not one where argument could be
+ of avail, and when Knox persisted in his refusal to take the
+ place assigned him, Washington, with all his sympathy, was
+ perfectly frank in expressing his views.</p>
+
+ <p>In a second letter, complaining of the injustice with which he
+ had been treated, Knox intimated that he would be willing to
+ serve on the personal staff of the commander-in-chief. This was
+ all very well; but much as Washington grieved for his old
+ friend's disappointment, there was to be no misunderstanding in
+ the matter. He wrote Knox on October 21: "After having expressed
+ these sentiments with the frankness of undisguised friendship, it
+ is hardly necessary to add that, if you should finally decline
+ the appointment of major-general, there is none to whom I would
+ give a more decided preference as an aide-de-camp, the offer of
+ which is highly flattering, honorable, and grateful to my
+ feelings, and for which I entertain a high sense. But, my dear
+ General Knox, and here again I speak to you in a language of
+ candor and friendship, examine well your mind upon this subject.
+ Do not unite yourself to the suite of a man whom you may consider
+ as the primary cause of what you call a degradation, with
+ unpleasant sensations. This, while it was gnawing upon you,
+ would, if I should come to the knowledge of it, make me unhappy;
+ as my first wish would be that my military family and the whole
+ army should consider themselves a band of brothers, willing and
+ ready to die for each other."</p>
+
+ <p>Knox would not serve; and his ill temper, irritated still
+ further by the apparent preference of the President and by the
+ talk of his immediate circle, prevailed. On the other hand,
+ Pinckney, one of the most generous and patriotic of men, accepted
+ service at once without a syllable of complaint on the score that
+ he had ranked Hamilton in the former war. It was with these two,
+ therefore, that Washington carried on the work of organizing the
+ provisional army. Despite his determination to remain in
+ retirement until called to the field, his desire for perfection
+ in any work that he undertook brought him out, and he gave much
+ time and attention not only to the general questions which were
+ raised, but to the details of the business, and on November 10 he
+ addressed a series of inquiries, both general and particular, to
+ Hamilton and Pinckney. These inquiries covered the whole scope of
+ possible events, probable military operations, and the formation
+ of the army. They were written in Philadelphia, whither he had
+ gone, and where he passed a month with the two major-generals in
+ the discussion of plans and measures. The result of their
+ conferences was an elaborate and masterly report on army
+ organization drawn up by Hamilton, upon whom, throughout this
+ period of impending war, the brunt of the work fell.</p>
+
+ <p>Careful and painstaking, however, as Washington was in the
+ matter of appointments and organization, dealing with them as if
+ he was about to take the field at the head of the army, there was
+ never a moment when he felt that there was danger of actual war.
+ He had studied foreign affairs and the conditions of Europe too
+ well to be much deceived about them, and least of all in regard
+ to France. He felt from the beginning that the moment we
+ displayed a proper spirit, began to arm, and fought one or two
+ French ships successfully, that France would leave off bullying
+ and abusing us, and make a satisfactory peace. The declared
+ adherent of the maxim that to prepare for war was the most
+ effectual means of preserving peace, he felt that never was it
+ more important to carry out this doctrine than now; and it was
+ for this reason that he labored so hard and gave so much thought
+ to army organization at a time when he felt more than ever the
+ need of repose, and shrank from the least semblance of a return
+ to public life. In all his long career there was never a better
+ instance of his devoted patriotism than his coming forward in
+ this way at the sacrifice of every personal wish after his
+ retirement from the presidency.</p>
+
+ <p>Yet, although he closely watched the course of politics, and
+ gave, as has been said, a cordial support to the administration,
+ his sympathies were rather with the opponents of the President
+ within the ranks of their common party. The conduct of Gerry, who
+ had been Adams's personal selection for a commissioner, was very
+ distasteful to Washington, and was very far from exciting in his
+ mind the approval which it drew from Mr. Adams. He wrote to
+ Pickering on October 18: "With respect to Mr. Gerry, his own
+ character and public satisfaction require better evidence than
+ his letter to the minister of foreign relations to prove the
+ propriety of his conduct during his envoyship." He did not
+ believe that we were to have war with France, but he was very
+ confident that a bold and somewhat uncompromising attitude was
+ the best one for the country, and that above all we should not
+ palter with France after the affronts to which we had been
+ subjected. When President Adams, therefore, made his sudden
+ change of policy by nominating Murray as a special envoy,
+ Washington, despite his desire for peace, was by no means
+ enthusiastic in his approval of the methods by which it was
+ sought. The President wrote him announcing the appointment of
+ Murray, and Washington acknowledged the letter and the
+ information without any comment. He saw, of course, that as the
+ President had seen fit to take the step he must be sustained, and
+ he wrote to Murray to impress upon him the gravity of the mission
+ with which he was intrusted; but he had serious doubts as to the
+ success of such a mission under such conditions, and when delays
+ occurred he was not without hopes of a final abandonment. The day
+ after his letter to Murray he wrote to Hamilton: "I was surprised
+ at the <i>measure</i>, how much more so at the manner of it! This
+ business seems to have commenced in an evil hour, and under
+ unfavorable auspices. I wish mischief may not tread in all its
+ steps, and be the final result of the measure. A wide door was
+ open, through which a retreat might have been made from the first
+ <i>faux pas</i>, the shutting of which, to those who are not
+ behind the curtain and are as little acquainted with the secrets
+ of the cabinet as I am, is, from the present aspect of European
+ affairs, quite incomprehensible." He hoped but little good from
+ the mission, although it had his fervent wishes for its success,
+ expressed repeatedly in letters to members of the cabinet; and
+ while he was full of apprehension, he had a firm faith that all
+ would end well.</p>
+
+ <p>For this anxiety, indeed, there was abundant reason. A violent
+ change of policy toward France, the disorders occasioned by
+ political dissensions at home, and the sudden appearance of the
+ deadly doctrine of nullification, all combined to excite alarm in
+ the mind of a man who looked as far into the future and as deep
+ beneath the surface of things as did Washington. It was then that
+ he urged Patrick Henry to reenter public life, and exerted his
+ own influence wherever he could to check the separatist movement
+ set on foot by Jefferson. He was deeply disturbed, too, by the
+ tendencies of the times in other directions. The delirium of the
+ French Revolution was not confined to France. Her soldiers bore
+ with them the new doctrines, while far beyond the utmost reach of
+ her armies flew the ideas engendered in the fevered air of Paris.
+ Wherever they alighted they touched men and stung them to
+ madness, and the madness that they bred was not confined to those
+ who believed the new gospel, but was shared equally by those who
+ resisted and loathed it. Burke, in his way, was as much crazed as
+ Camille Desmoulins, and it seemed impossible for people living in
+ the midst of that terrific convulsion of society to retain their
+ judgment. Nowhere ought men to have been better able to withstand
+ the contagion of the revolution than in America, and yet even
+ here it produced the same results as in countries nearly affected
+ by it. The party of opposition to the government became first
+ ludicrous and then dangerous, in their wild admiration and
+ senseless imitation of ideas and practices as utterly alien to
+ the people of the United States as cannibalism or fire-worship.
+ Then the Federalists, on their side, fell beneath the spell. The
+ overthrow of religion, society, property, and morals, which they
+ beheld in Paris, seemed to them to be threatening their own
+ country, and they became as extreme as their opponents in the
+ exactly opposite direction. Federalist divines came to look upon
+ Jefferson, the most timid and prudent of men, as a Marat or
+ Robespierre, ready to reproduce the excesses of his prototypes;
+ while Pickering, Wolcott, and all their friends in public life
+ regarded themselves as engaged in a struggle for the preservation
+ of order and society and of all that they held most dear. They
+ were in the habit of comparing French principles to a pestilence,
+ and the French republic to a raging tiger. Even Hamilton was so
+ moved as to believe that the United States were on the verge of
+ anarchy, and he laid down his life at last in a senseless duel
+ because he thought that his refusal to fight would disable him
+ for leading the forces of order when the final crash came.</p>
+
+ <p>Washington, with his strong, calm judgment and his penetrating
+ vision, was less affected than any of those who had followed and
+ sustained him; but he was by no means untouched, and if we try to
+ put ourselves in his place, his views seem far from unreasonable.
+ He had at the outset wished well to the great movement in France,
+ although even then he doubted its final success. Very soon,
+ however, doubts changed to suspicions, and suspicions to
+ conviction. As he saw the French revolution move on in its
+ inevitable path, he came to hate and dread its deeds, its
+ policies, and its doctrines. To a man of his temper it could not
+ have been otherwise, for license and disorder were above all
+ things detestable to him. They were the immediate fruits of the
+ French revolution, and when he saw a party devoted to France
+ preaching the same ideas in the United States, he could not but
+ feel that there was a real and practical danger confronting the
+ country. This was why he felt that we needed an energetic policy,
+ and it was on this account that he distrusted the President's
+ renewed effort for peace. The course of the opposition, as he saw
+ it, threatened not merely the existence of the Union, but
+ wittingly or unwittingly struck at the very foundations of
+ society. His anxiety did not make him violent, as was the case
+ with lesser men, but it convinced him of the necessity of strong
+ measures, and he was not a man to shrink from vigorous action. He
+ was quite prepared to do all that could be done to maintain the
+ authority of the government, which he considered equivalent to
+ the protection of society, and for this reason he approved of the
+ Alien and Sedition acts.</p>
+
+ <p>In the process of time these two famous laws have come to be
+ universally condemned, and those who have not questioned their
+ constitutionality have declared them wrong, inexpedient and
+ impolitic, and the immediate cause of the overthrow of the party
+ responsible for them. Everybody has made haste to disown them,
+ and there has been a general effort on the part of Federalist
+ sympathizers to throw the blame for them on persons unknown.
+ Biographers, especially, have tried zealously to clear the skirts
+ of their heroes from any connection with these obnoxious acts;
+ but the truth is, that, whether right or wrong, wise or unwise,
+ these laws had the entire support of the ruling party from the
+ President down. Hamilton, who objected to the first draft because
+ it was needlessly violent, approved the purpose and principle of
+ the legislation; and Washington was no exception to the general
+ rule. He was calm about it, but his approbation was none the less
+ distinct, and he took pains to circulate a sound argument, when
+ he met with one, in justification of the Alien and Sedition
+ acts.<a id="footnotetag1-14" name="footnotetag1-14"></a><a href=
+ "#footnote1-14"><sup>1</sup></a> In November, 1798, Alexander
+ Spotswood wrote to him, asking his judgment on those laws. As the
+ writer announced himself to be thoroughly convinced of their
+ unconstitutionally, Washington, with a little sarcasm, declined
+ to enter into argument with him. "But," he continued, "I will
+ take the liberty of advising such as are not 'thoroughly
+ convinced,' and whose minds are yet open to conviction, to read
+ the pieces and hear the arguments which have been adduced in
+ favor of, as well as those against, the constitutionality and
+ expediency of those laws, before they decide and consider to what
+ lengths a certain description of men in our country have already
+ driven, and seem resolved further to drive matters, and then ask
+ themselves if it is not time and expedient to resort to
+ protecting laws against aliens (for citizens, you certainly know,
+ are not affected by that law), who acknowledge no allegiance to
+ this country, and in many instances are sent among us, as there
+ is the best circumstantial evidence to prove, for the express
+ purpose of poisoning the minds of our people and sowing
+ dissensions among them, in order to alienate their affections
+ from the government of their choice, thereby endeavoring to
+ dissolve the Union, and of course the fair and happy prospects
+ which are unfolding to our view from the Revolution."</p>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote1-14" name="footnote1-14"></a>[<b>Footnote
+ 1:</b> <a href="#footnotetag1-14">(return)</a> See letter to
+ Bushrod Washington, Sparks, vi. p. 387.]
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <p>With these strong and decided feelings as to the proper policy
+ to be adopted, and with such grave apprehensions as to the
+ outcome of existing difficulties, Washington was deeply
+ distressed by the divisions which he saw springing up among the
+ Federalists. From his point of view it was bad enough to have the
+ people of the country divided into two great parties; but that
+ one of those parties, that which was devoted to the maintenance
+ of order and the preservation of the Union, should be torn by
+ internal dissensions, seemed to him almost inconceivable. He
+ regarded the conduct of the party and of its leaders with quite
+ as much indignation as sorrow, for it seemed to him that they
+ were unpatriotic and false to their trust in permitting for a
+ moment these personal factions which could have but one result.
+ He wrote to Trumbull on August 30, 1799:&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>"It is too interesting not to be again repeated, that if
+ principles instead of men are not the steady pursuit of the
+ Federalists, their cause will soon be at an end; if these are
+ pursued they will not <i>divide</i> at the next election of
+ President; if they do divide on so <i>important</i> a point, it
+ would be dangerous to trust them on any other,&mdash;and none
+ except those who might be solicitous to fill the chair of
+ government would do it."<a id="footnotetag1-15" name=
+ "footnotetag1-15"></a><a href=
+ "#footnote1-15"><sup>1</sup></a></p>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote1-15" name="footnote1-15"></a>[<b>Footnote
+ 1:</b> <a href="#footnotetag1-15">(return)</a> <i>Life of
+ Silliman</i>, vol. ii. p. 385.]
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <p>He was a true prophet, but he did not live to see the
+ verification of his predictions, which would have been to him a
+ source of so much grief. In the midst of his anxieties about
+ public affairs, and of the quiet, homely interests which made the
+ days at Mount Vernon so pleasant, the end suddenly came. There
+ was no more forewarning than if he had been struck down by
+ accident or violence. He had always been a man of great physical
+ vigor, and although he had had one or two acute and dangerous
+ illnesses arising from mental strain and much overwork, there is
+ no indication that he had any organic disease, and since his
+ retirement from the presidency he had been better than for many
+ years. There was not only no sign of breaking up, but he appeared
+ full of health and activity, and led his usual wholesome outdoor
+ life with keen enjoyment.</p>
+
+ <p>The morning of December 12 was overcast. He wrote to Hamilton
+ warmly approving the scheme for a military academy; and having
+ finished this, which was probably the last letter he ever wrote,
+ he mounted his horse and rode off for his usual round of duties.
+ He noted in his diary, where he always described the weather with
+ methodical exactness, that it began to snow about one o'clock,
+ soon after to hail, and then turned to a settled cold rain. He
+ stayed out notwithstanding for about two hours, and then came
+ back to the house and franked his letters. Mr. Lear noticed that
+ his hair was damp with snow, and expressed a fear that he had got
+ wet; but the General said no, that his coat had kept him dry, and
+ sat down to dinner without changing his clothes. The next morning
+ snow was still falling so that he did not ride, and he complained
+ of a slight sore throat, but nevertheless went out in the
+ afternoon to mark some trees that were to be cut down. His
+ hoarseness increased toward night, yet still he made light of it,
+ and read the newspapers and chatted with Mrs. Washington during
+ the evening.</p>
+
+ <p>When he went to bed Mr. Lear urged him to take something for
+ his cold. "No," he replied, "you know I never take anything for a
+ cold. Let it go as it came." In the night he had a severe chill,
+ followed by difficulty in breathing; and between two and three in
+ the morning he awoke Mrs. Washington, but would not allow her to
+ get up and call a servant lest she should take cold. At daybreak
+ Mr. Lear was summoned, and found Washington breathing with
+ difficulty and hardly able to speak. Dr. Craik, the friend and
+ companion of many years, was sent for at once, and meantime the
+ General was bled slightly by one of the overseers. A futile
+ effort was also made to gargle his throat, and external
+ applications were tried without affording relief. Dr. Craik
+ arrived between eight and nine o'clock with two other physicians,
+ when other remedies were tried and the patient was bled again,
+ all without avail. About half-past four he called Mrs. Washington
+ to his bedside and asked her to get two wills from his desk. She
+ did so, and after looking them over he ordered one to be
+ destroyed and gave her the other to keep. He then said to Lear,
+ speaking with the utmost difficulty, but saying what he had to
+ say with characteristic determination and clearness: "I find I am
+ going; my breath cannot last long. I believed from the first that
+ the disorder would prove fatal. Do you arrange and record all my
+ late military letters and papers. Arrange my accounts and settle
+ my books, as you know more about them than any one else; and let
+ Mr. Rawlins finish recording my other letters, which he has
+ begun." He then asked if Lear recollected anything which it was
+ essential for him to do, as he had but a very short time to
+ continue with them. Lear replied that he could recollect nothing,
+ but that he hoped the end was not so near. Washington smiled, and
+ said that he certainly was dying, and that as it was the debt
+ which we must all pay, he looked to the event with perfect
+ resignation.</p>
+
+ <p>The disease which was killing him was acute oedematous
+ laryngitis,<a id="footnotetag1-16" name=
+ "footnotetag1-16"></a><a href="#footnote1-16"><sup>1</sup></a>
+ which is as simple as it is rare and fatal,<a id=
+ "footnotetag2-17" name="footnotetag2-17"></a><a href=
+ "#footnote2-17"><sup>2</sup></a> and he was being slowly
+ strangled to death by the closing of the throat. He bore the
+ suffering, which must have been intense, with his usual calm
+ self-control, but as the afternoon wore on the keen distress and
+ the difficulty of breathing made him restless. From time to time
+ Mr. Lear tried to raise him and make his position easier. The
+ General said, "I fear I fatigue you too much;" and again, on
+ being assured to the contrary, "Well, it is a debt we must pay to
+ each other, and I hope when you want aid of this kind you will
+ find it." He was courteous and thoughtful of others to the last,
+ and told his servant, who had been standing all day in attendance
+ upon him, to sit down. To Dr. Craik he said: "I die hard, but I
+ am not afraid to go. I believed from my first attack that I
+ should not survive it. My breath cannot last long." When a little
+ later the other physicians came in and assisted him to sit up, he
+ said: "I feel I am going. I thank you for your attentions, but I
+ pray you will take no more trouble about me. Let me go off
+ quietly. I cannot last long." He lay there for some hours longer,
+ restless and suffering, but utterly uncomplaining, taking such
+ remedies as the physicians ordered in silence. About ten o'clock
+ he spoke again to Lear, although it required a most desperate
+ effort to do so. "I am just going," he said. "Have me decently
+ buried, and do not let my body be put into the vault in less than
+ three days after I am dead." Lear bowed, and Washington said, "Do
+ you understand me?" Lear answered, "Yes." "'Tis well," he said,
+ and with these last words again fell silent. A little later he
+ felt his own pulse, and, as he was counting the strokes, Lear saw
+ his countenance change. His hand dropped back from the wrist he
+ had been holding, and all was over. The end had come. Washington
+ was dead. He died as he had lived, simply and bravely, without
+ parade and without affectation. The last duties were done, the
+ last words said, the last trials borne with the quiet fitness,
+ the gracious dignity, that even the gathering mists of the
+ supreme hour could neither dim nor tarnish. He had faced life
+ with a calm, high, victorious spirit. So did he face death and
+ the unknown when Fate knocked at the door.</p>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote1-16" name="footnote1-16"></a>[<b>Footnote
+ 1:</b> <a href="#footnotetag1-16">(return)</a> It was called at
+ the time a quinsy.]
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote2-17" name="footnote2-17"></a>[<b>Footnote
+ 2:</b> <a href="#footnotetag2-17">(return)</a> See Memoir on
+ <i>The Last Sickness of Washington</i>, by James Jackson, M.D.
+ In response to an inquiry as to the modern treatment of this
+ disease, the late Dr. F.H. Hooper of Boston, well known as an
+ authority on diseases of the throat, wrote me: "Washington's
+ physicians are not to be criticised for their treatment, for
+ they acted according to their best light and knowledge. To
+ treat such a case in such a manner in the year 1889 would be
+ little short of criminal. At the present time the physicians
+ would use the laryngoscope and <i>look</i> and <i>see</i> what
+ the trouble was. (The laryngoscope has only been used since
+ 1857.) In this disease the function most interfered with is
+ breathing. The one thing which saves a patient in this disease
+ is a <i>timely tracheotomy</i>. (I doubt if tracheotomy had
+ ever been performed in Virginia in Washington's time.)
+ Washington ought to have been tracheotomized, or rather that is
+ the way cases are saved to-day. No one would think of antimony,
+ calomel, or bleeding now. The point is to let in the air, and
+ not to let out the blood. After tracheotomy has been performed,
+ the oedema and swelling of the larynx subside in three to six
+ days. The tracheotomy tube is then removed, and respiration
+ goes on again through the natural channels."]
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+ <h2><a name="VII" id="VII"></a>CHAPTER VII</h2>
+
+ <h2>GEORGE WASHINGTON</h2>
+
+ <p>This last chapter cannot begin more fitly than by quoting
+ again the words of Mr. McMaster: "George Washington is an unknown
+ man." Mr. McMaster might have added that to no man in our history
+ has greater injustice of a certain kind been done, or more
+ misunderstanding been meted out, than to Washington, and although
+ this sounds like the merest paradox, it is nevertheless true.
+ From the hour when the door of the tomb at Mount Vernon closed
+ behind his coffin to the present instant, the chorus of praise
+ and eulogy has never ceased, but has swelled deeper and louder
+ with each succeeding year. He has been set apart high above all
+ other men, and reverenced with the unquestioning veneration
+ accorded only to the leaders of mankind and the founders of
+ nations; and in this very devotion lies one secret at least of
+ the fact that, while all men have praised Washington,
+ comparatively few have understood him. He has been lifted high up
+ into a lonely greatness, and unconsciously put outside the range
+ of human sympathy. He has been accepted as a being as nearly
+ perfect as it is given to man to be, but our warm personal
+ interest has been reserved for other and lesser men who seemed to
+ be nearer to us in their virtues and their errors alike. Such
+ isolation, lofty though it be, is perilous and leads to grievous
+ misunderstandings. From it has come the widespread idea that
+ Washington was cold, and as devoid of human sympathies as he was
+ free from the common failings of humanity.</p>
+
+ <p>Of this there will be something to say presently, but meantime
+ there is another more prolific source of error in regard to
+ Washington to be considered. Men who are loudly proclaimed to be
+ faultless always excite a certain kind of resentment. It is a
+ dangerous eminence for any one to occupy. The temples of Greece
+ are in ruins, and her marvelous literature is little more than a
+ collection of fragments, but the feelings of the citizens who
+ exiled Aristides because they were weary of hearing him called
+ "just," exist still, unchanged and unchangeable. Washington has
+ not only been called "just," but he has had every other good
+ quality attributed to him by countless biographers and eulogists
+ with an almost painful iteration, and the natural result has
+ followed. Many persons have felt the sense of fatigue which the
+ Athenians expressed practically by their oyster shells, and have
+ been led to cast doubts on Washington's perfection as the only
+ consolation for their own sense of injury. Then, again,
+ Washington's fame has been so overshadowing, and his greatness so
+ immutable, that he has been very inconvenient to the admirers and
+ the biographers of other distinguished men. From these two
+ sources, from the general jealousy of the classic Greek variety,
+ and the particular jealousy born of the necessities of some other
+ hero, much adverse and misleading criticism has come. It has
+ never been a safe or popular amusement to assail Washington
+ directly, and this course usually has been shunned; but although
+ the attacks have been veiled they have none the less existed, and
+ they have been all the more dangerous because they were
+ insidious.</p>
+
+ <p>In his lifetime Washington had his enemies and detractors in
+ abundance. During the Revolution he was abused and intrigued
+ against, thwarted and belittled, to a point which posterity in
+ general scarcely realizes. Final and conclusive victory brought
+ an end to this, and he passed to the presidency amid a general
+ acclaim. Then the attacks began again. Their character has been
+ shown in a previous chapter, but they were of no real moment
+ except as illustrations of the existence and meaning of party
+ divisions. The ravings of Bache and Freneau, and the coarse
+ insults of Giles, were all totally unimportant in themselves.
+ They merely define the purposes and character of the party which
+ opposed Washington, and but for him would be forgotten. Among his
+ eminent contemporaries, Jefferson and Pickering, bitterly opposed
+ in all things else, have left memoranda and letters reflecting
+ upon the abilities of their former chief. Jefferson disliked him
+ because he blocked his path, but with habitual caution he never
+ proceeded beyond a covert sneer implying that Washington's mental
+ powers, at no time very great, were impaired by age during his
+ presidency, and that he was easily deceived by practised
+ intriguers. Pickering, with more boldness, set Washington down as
+ commonplace, not original in his thought, and vastly inferior to
+ Hamilton, apparently because he was not violent, and did not make
+ up his mind before he knew the facts.</p>
+
+ <p>Adverse contemporary criticism, however, is slight in amount
+ and vague in character; it can be readily dismissed, and it has
+ in no case weight enough to demand much consideration. Modern
+ criticism of the same kind has been even less direct, but is much
+ more serious and cannot be lightly passed over. It invariably
+ proceeds by negations setting out with an apparently complete
+ acceptance of Washington's greatness, and then assailing him by
+ telling us what he was not. Few persons who have not given this
+ matter a careful study realize how far criticism of this sort has
+ gone, and there is indeed no better way of learning what
+ Washington really was than by examining the various negations
+ which tell us what he was not.</p>
+
+ <p>Let us take the gravest first. It has been confidently
+ asserted that Washington was not an American in anything but the
+ technical sense. This idea is more diffused than, perhaps, would
+ be generally supposed, and it has also been formally set down in
+ print, in which we are more fortunate than in many other
+ instances where the accusation has not got beyond the elusive
+ condition of loose talk.</p>
+
+ <p>In that most noble poem, the "Commemoration Ode," Mr. Lowell
+ speaks of Lincoln as "the first American." The poet's winged
+ words fly far, and find a resting-place in many minds. This idea
+ has become widespread, and has recently found fuller expression
+ in Mr. Clarence King's prefatory note to the great life of
+ Lincoln by Hay and Nicolay.<a id="footnotetag1-18" name=
+ "footnotetag1-18"></a><a href="#footnote1-18"><sup>1</sup></a>
+ Mr. King says: "Abraham Lincoln was the first American to reach
+ the lonely height of immortal fame. Before him, within the narrow
+ compass of our history, were but two pre&euml;minent
+ names,&mdash;Columbus the discoverer, and Washington the founder;
+ the one an Italian seer, the other an English country gentleman.
+ In a narrow sense, of course, Washington was an American.... For
+ all that he was English in his nature, habits, moral standards,
+ and social theories; in short, in all points which, aside from
+ mere geographical position, make up a man, he was as
+ thorough-going a British colonial gentleman as one could find
+ anywhere beneath the Union Jack. The genuine American of
+ Lincoln's type came later.... George Washington, an English
+ commoner, vanquished George, an English king."</p>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote1-18" name="footnote1-18"></a>[<b>Footnote
+ 1:</b> <a href="#footnotetag1-18">(return)</a> Mr. Matthew
+ Arnold, and more recently Professor Goldwin Smith, have both
+ spoken of Washington as an Englishman. I do not mention this to
+ discredit the statements of Mr. Lowell or Mr. King, but merely
+ to indicate how far this mistaken idea has traveled.]
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <p>In order to point his sentence and prove his first postulate,
+ Mr. King is obliged not only to dispose of Washington, but to
+ introduce Columbus, who never was imagined in the wildest fantasy
+ to be an American, and to omit Franklin. The omission of itself
+ is fatal to Mr. King's case. Franklin has certainly a
+ "pre&euml;minent name." He has, too, "immortal fame," although of
+ course of a widely different character from that of either
+ Washington or Lincoln, but he was a great man in the broad sense
+ of a world-wide reputation. Yet no one has ever ventured to call
+ Benjamin Franklin an Englishman. He was a colonial American, of
+ course, but he was as intensely an American as any man who has
+ lived on this continent before or since. A man of the people, he
+ was American by the character of his genius, by his versatility,
+ the vivacity of his intellect, and his mental dexterity. In his
+ abilities, his virtues, and his defects he was an American, and
+ so plainly one as to be beyond the reach of doubt or question.
+ There were others of that period, too, who were as genuine
+ Americans as Franklin or Lincoln. Such were Jonathan Edwards, the
+ peculiar product of New England Calvinism; Patrick Henry, who
+ first broke down colonial lines to declare himself an American;
+ Samuel Adams, the great forerunner of the race of American
+ politicians; Thomas Jefferson, the idol of American democracy.
+ These and many others Mr. King might exclude on the ground that
+ they did not reach the lonely height of immortal fame. But
+ Franklin is enough. Unless one is prepared to set Franklin down
+ as an Englishman, which would be as reasonable as to say that
+ Daniel Webster was a fine example of the Slavic race, it must be
+ admitted that it was possible for the thirteen colonies to
+ produce in the eighteenth century a genuine American who won
+ immortal fame. If they could produce one of one type, they could
+ produce a second of another type, and there was, therefore,
+ nothing inherently impossible in existing conditions to prevent
+ Washington from being an American.</p>
+
+ <p>Lincoln was undoubtedly the first great American of his type,
+ but that is not the only type of American. It is one which, as
+ bodied forth in Abraham Lincoln, commands the love and veneration
+ of the people of the United States, and the admiration of the
+ world wherever his name is known. To the noble and towering
+ greatness of his mind and character it does not add one hair's
+ breadth to say that he was the first American, or that he was of
+ a common or uncommon type. Greatness like Lincoln's is far beyond
+ such qualifications, and least of all is it necessary to his fame
+ to push Washington from his birthright. To say that George
+ Washington, an English commoner, vanquished George, an English
+ king, is clever and picturesque, but like many other pleasing
+ antitheses it is painfully inaccurate. Allegiance does not make
+ race or nationality. The Hindoos are subjects of Victoria, but
+ they are not Englishmen.</p>
+
+ <p>Franklin shows that it was possible to produce a most genuine
+ American of unquestioned greatness in the eighteenth century, and
+ with all possible deference to Mr. Lowell and Mr. King, I venture
+ the assertion that George Washington was as genuine an American
+ as Lincoln or Franklin. He was an American of the eighteenth and
+ not of the nineteenth century, but he was none the less an
+ American. I will go further. Washington was not only an American
+ of a pure and noble type, but he was the first thorough American
+ in the broad, national sense, as distinct from the colonial
+ American of his time.</p>
+
+ <p>After all, what is it to be an American? Surely it does not
+ consist in the number of generations merely which separate the
+ individual from his forefathers who first settled here.
+ Washington was fourth in descent from the first American of his
+ name, while Lincoln was in the sixth generation. This difference
+ certainly constitutes no real distinction. There are people
+ to-day, not many luckily, whose families have been here for two
+ hundred and fifty years, and who are as utterly un-American as it
+ is possible to be, while there are others, whose fathers were
+ immigrants, who are as intensely American as any one can desire
+ or imagine. In a new country, peopled in two hundred and fifty
+ years by immigrants from the Old World and their descendants, the
+ process of Americanization is not limited by any hard and fast
+ rules as to time and generations, but is altogether a matter of
+ individual and race temperament. The production of the
+ well-defined American types and of the fixed national
+ characteristics which now exist has been going on during all that
+ period, but in any special instance the type to which a given man
+ belongs must be settled by special study and examination.</p>
+
+ <p>Washington belonged to the English-speaking race. So did
+ Lincoln. Both sprang from the splendid stock which was formed
+ during centuries from a mixture of the Celtic, Teutonic,
+ Scandinavian, and Norman peoples, and which is known to the world
+ as English. Both, so far as we can tell, had nothing but English
+ blood, as it would be commonly called, in their veins, and both
+ were of that part of the English race which emigrated to America,
+ where it has been the principal factor in the development of the
+ new people called Americans. They were men of English race,
+ modified and changed in the fourth and sixth generations by the
+ new country, the new conditions, and the new life, and by the
+ contact and admixture of other races. Lincoln, a very great man,
+ one who has reached "immortal fame," was clearly an American of a
+ type that the Old World cannot show, or at least has not
+ produced. The idea of many persons in regard to Washington seems
+ to be, that he was a great man of a type which the Old World, or,
+ to be more exact, which England, had produced. One hears it often
+ said that Washington was simply an American Hampden. Such a
+ comparison is an easy method of description, nothing more.
+ Hampden is memorable among men, not for his abilities, which
+ there is no reason to suppose were very extraordinary, but for
+ his devoted and unselfish patriotism, his courage, his honor, and
+ his pure and lofty spirit. He embodied what his countrymen
+ believe to be the moral qualities of their race in their finest
+ flower, and no nation, be it said, could have a nobler ideal.
+ Washington was conspicuous for the same qualities, exhibited in
+ like fashion. Is there a single one of the essential attributes
+ of Hampden that Lincoln also did not possess? Was he not an
+ unselfish and devoted patriot, pure in heart, gentle of spirit,
+ high of honor, brave, merciful, and temperate? Did he not lay
+ down his life for his country in the box at Ford's Theatre as
+ ungrudgingly as Hampden offered his in the smoke of battle upon
+ Chalgrove field? Surely we must answer Yes. In other words, these
+ three men all had the great moral attributes which are the
+ characteristics of the English race in its highest and purest
+ development on either side of the Atlantic. Yet no one has ever
+ called Lincoln an American Hampden simply because Hampden and
+ Washington were men of ancient family, members of an aristocracy
+ by birth, and Lincoln was not. This is the distinction between
+ them; and how vain it is, in the light of their lives and deeds,
+ which make all pedigrees and social ranks look so poor and
+ worthless! The differences among them are trivial, the
+ resemblances deep and lasting.</p>
+
+ <p>I have followed out this comparison because it illustrates
+ perfectly the entirely superficial character of the reasons which
+ have led men to speak of Washington as an English country
+ gentleman. It has been said that he was English in his habits,
+ moral standards, and social theories, which has an important
+ sound, but which for the most part comes down to a question of
+ dress and manners. He wore black velvet and powdered hair,
+ knee-breeches and diamond buckles, which are certainly not
+ American fashions to-day. But they were American fashions in the
+ last century, and every man wore them who could afford to, no
+ matter what his origin. Let it be remembered, however, that
+ Washington also wore the hunting-shirt and fringed leggins of the
+ backwoodsman, and that it was he who introduced this purely
+ American dress into the army as a uniform.</p>
+
+ <p>His manners likewise were those of the century in which he
+ lived, formal and stately, and of course colored by his own
+ temperament. His moral standards were those of a high-minded,
+ honorable man. Are we ready to say that they were not American?
+ Did they differ in any vital point from those of Lincoln? His
+ social theories were simple in the extreme. He neither overvalued
+ nor underrated social conventions, for he knew that they were a
+ part of the fabric of civilized society, not vitally important
+ and yet not wholly trivial. He was a member of an aristocracy, it
+ is true, both by birth and situation. There was a recognized
+ social aristocracy in every colony before the Revolution, for the
+ drum-beat of the great democratic march had not then sounded. In
+ the northern colonies it was never strong, and in New England it
+ was especially weak, for the governments and people there were
+ essentially democratic, although they hardly recognized it
+ themselves. In Virginia and the southern colonies, on the other
+ hand, there was a vigorous aristocracy resting on the permanent
+ foundation of slavery. Where slaves are there must be masters,
+ and where there are masters there are aristocrats; but it was an
+ American and not an English aristocracy. Lineage and family had
+ weight in the south as in the north, but that which put a man
+ undeniably in the ruling class was the ownership of black slaves
+ and the possession of a white skin. This aristocracy lasted with
+ its faults and its virtues until it perished in the shock of
+ civil war, when its foundation of human slavery was torn from
+ under it. From the slave-holding aristocracy of Virginia came,
+ with the exception of Patrick Henry, all the great men of that
+ State who did so much for American freedom, and who rendered such
+ imperishable service to the republic in law, in politics, and in
+ war. From this aristocracy came Marshall, and Mason, and Madison,
+ the Lees, the Randolphs, the Harrisons, and the rest. From it
+ came also Thomas Jefferson, the hero of American democracy; and
+ to it was added Patrick Henry, not by lineage or slave-holding,
+ but by virtue of his brilliant abilities, and because he, too,
+ was an aristocrat by the immutable division of race. It was this
+ aristocracy into which Washington was born, and amid which he was
+ brought up. To say that it colored his feelings and habits is
+ simply to say that he was human; but to urge that it made him
+ un-American is to exclude at once from the ranks of Americans all
+ the great men given to the country by the South. Washington, in
+ fact, was less affected by his surroundings, and rose above them
+ more quickly, than any other man of his day, because he was the
+ greatest man of his time, with a splendid breadth of vision.</p>
+
+ <p>When he first went among the New England troops at the siege
+ of Boston, the rough, democratic ways of the people jarred upon
+ him, and offended especially his military instincts, for he was
+ not only a Virginian but he was a great soldier, and military
+ discipline is essentially aristocratic. These volunteer soldiers,
+ called together from the plough and the fishing-smack, were free
+ and independent men, unaccustomed to any rule but their own, and
+ they had still to learn the first rudiments of military service.
+ To Washington, soldiers who elected and deposed their officers,
+ and who went home when they felt that they had a right to do so,
+ seemed well-nigh useless and quite incomprehensible. They angered
+ him and tried his patience almost beyond endurance, and he spoke
+ of them at the outset in harsh terms by no means wholly
+ unwarranted. But they were part of his problem, and he studied
+ them. He was a soldier, but not an aristocrat wrapped up in
+ immutable prejudices, and he learned to know these men, and they
+ came to love, obey, and follow him with an intelligent devotion
+ far better than anything born of mere discipline. Before the year
+ was out, he wrote to Lund Washington praising the New England
+ troops in the highest terms, and at the close of the war he said
+ that practically the whole army then was composed of New England
+ soldiers. They stayed by him to the end, and as they were
+ steadfast in war so they remained in peace. He trusted and
+ confided in New England, and her sturdy democracy gave him a
+ loyal and unflinching support to the day of his death.</p>
+
+ <p>This openness of mind and superiority to prejudice were
+ American in the truest and best sense; but Washington showed the
+ same qualities in private life and toward individuals which he
+ displayed in regard to communities. He was free, of course, from
+ the cheap claptrap which abuses the name of democracy by saying
+ that birth, breeding, and education are undemocratic, and
+ therefore to be reckoned against a man. He valued these qualities
+ rightly, but he looked to see what a man was and not who he was,
+ which is true democracy. The two men who were perhaps nearest to
+ his affections were Knox and Hamilton. One was a Boston
+ bookseller, who rose to distinction by bravery and good service,
+ and the other was a young adventurer from the West Indies,
+ without either family or money at his back. It was the same with
+ much humbler persons. He never failed, on his way to
+ Philadelphia, to stop at Wilmington and have a chat with one
+ Captain O'Flinn, who kept a tavern and had been a Revolutionary
+ soldier; and this was but a single instance among many of like
+ character. Any soldier of the Revolution was always sure of a
+ welcome at the hands of his old commander. Eminent statesmen,
+ especially of the opposition, often found his manner cold, but no
+ old soldier ever complained of it, no servant ever left him, and
+ the country people about Mount Vernon loved him as a neighbor and
+ friend, and not as the distant great man of the army and the
+ presidency.</p>
+
+ <p>He believed thoroughly in popular government. One does not
+ find in his letters the bitter references to democracy and to the
+ populace which can be discovered in the writings of so many of
+ his party friends, legacies of pre-revolutionary ideas inflamed
+ by hatred of Parisian mobs. He always spoke of the people at
+ large with a simple respect, because he knew that the future of
+ the United States was in their hands and not in that of any
+ class, and because he believed that they would fulfill their
+ mission. The French Revolution never carried him away, and when
+ it bred anarchy and bloodshed he became hostile to French
+ influence, because license and disorder were above all things
+ hateful to him. Yet he did not lose his balance in the other
+ direction, as was the case with so many of his friends. He
+ resisted and opposed French ideas and French democracy, so
+ admired and so loudly preached by Jefferson and his followers,
+ because he esteemed them perilous to the country. But there is
+ not a word to indicate that he did not think that such dangers
+ would be finally overcome, even if at the cost of much suffering,
+ by the sane sense and ingrained conservatism of the American
+ people. Other men talked more noisily about the people, but no
+ one trusted them in the best sense more than Washington, and his
+ only fear was that evils might come from their being misled by
+ false lights.</p>
+
+ <p>Once more, what is it to be an American? Putting aside all the
+ outer shows of dress and manners, social customs and physical
+ peculiarities, is it not to believe in America and in the
+ American people? Is it not to have an abiding and moving faith in
+ the future and in the destiny of America?&mdash;something above
+ and beyond the patriotism and love which every man whose soul is
+ not dead within him feels for the land of his birth? Is it not to
+ be national and not sectional, independent and not colonial? Is
+ it not to have a high conception of what this great new country
+ should be, and to follow out that ideal with loyalty and
+ truth?</p>
+
+ <p>Has any man in our history fulfilled these conditions more
+ perfectly and completely than George Washington? Has any man ever
+ lived who served the American people more faithfully, or with a
+ higher and truer conception of the destiny and possibilities of
+ the country? Born of an old and distinguished family, he found
+ himself, when a boy just out of school, dependent on his mother,
+ and with an inheritance that promised him more acres than
+ shillings. He did not seek to live along upon what he could get
+ from the estate, and still less did he feel that it was only
+ possible for him to enter one of the learned professions. Had he
+ been an Englishman in fact or in feeling, he would have felt very
+ naturally the force of the limitations imposed by his social
+ position. But being an American, his one idea was to earn his
+ living honestly, because it was the creed of his country that
+ earning an honest living is the most creditable thing a man can
+ do. Boy as he was, he went out manfully into the world to win
+ with his own hands the money which would make him self-supporting
+ and independent. His business as a surveyor took him into the
+ wilderness, and there he learned that the first great work before
+ the American people was to be the conquest of the continent. He
+ dropped the surveyor's rod and chain to negotiate with the
+ savages, and then took up the sword to fight them and the French,
+ so that the New World might be secured to the English-speaking
+ race. A more purely American training cannot be imagined. It was
+ not the education of universities or of courts, but that of
+ hard-earned personal independence, won in the backwoods and by
+ frontier fighting. Thus trained, he gave the prime of his manhood
+ to leading the Revolution which made his country free, and his
+ riper years to building up that independent nationality without
+ which freedom would have been utterly vain.</p>
+
+ <p>He was the first to rise above all colonial or state lines,
+ and grasp firmly the conception of a nation to be formed from the
+ thirteen jarring colonies. The necessity of national action in
+ the army was of course at once apparent to him, although not to
+ others; but he carried the same broad views into widely different
+ fields, where at the time they wholly escaped notice. It was
+ Washington, oppressed by a thousand cares, who in the early days
+ of the Revolution saw the need of Federal courts for admiralty
+ cases and for other purposes. It was he who suggested this
+ scheme, years before any one even dreamed of the Constitution;
+ and from the special committees of Congress, formed for this
+ object in accordance with this advice, came, in the process of
+ time, the Federal judiciary of the United States.<a id=
+ "footnotetag1-19" name="footnotetag1-19"></a><a href=
+ "#footnote1-19"><sup>1</sup></a> Even in that early dawn of the
+ Revolution, Washington had clear in his own mind the need of a
+ continental system for war, diplomacy, finance, and law, and he
+ worked steadily to bring this policy to fulfilment.</p>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote1-19" name="footnote1-19"></a>[<b>Footnote
+ 1:</b> <a href="#footnotetag1-19">(return)</a> See the very
+ interesting memoir on this subject by the Hon. J.C. Bancroft
+ Davis.]
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <p>When the war was over, the thought that engaged his mind most
+ was of the best means to give room for expansion, and to open up
+ the unconquered continent to the forerunners of a mighty army of
+ settlers. For this purpose all his projects for roads, canals,
+ and surveys were formed and forced into public notice. He looked
+ beyond the limits of the Atlantic colonies. His vision went far
+ over the barriers of the Alleghanies; and where others saw
+ thirteen infant States backed by the wilderness, he beheld the
+ germs of a great empire. While striving thus to lay the West open
+ to the march of the settler, he threw himself into the great
+ struggle, where Hamilton and Madison, and all who "thought
+ continentally," were laboring for that union without which all
+ else was worse than futile.</p>
+
+ <p>From the presidency of the convention that formed the
+ Constitution, he went to the presidency of the government which
+ that convention brought into being; and in all that followed, the
+ one guiding thought was to clear the way for the advance of the
+ people, and to make that people and their government independent
+ in thought, in policy, and in character, as the Revolution had
+ made them independent politically. The same spirit which led him
+ to write during the war that our battles must be fought and our
+ victories won by Americans, if victory and independence were to
+ be won at all, or to have any real and solid worth, pervaded his
+ whole administration. We see it in his Indian policy, which was
+ directed not only to pacifying the tribes, but to putting it out
+ of their power to arrest or even delay western settlement. We see
+ it in his attitude toward foreign ministers, and in his watchful
+ persistence in regard to the Mississippi, which ended in our
+ securing the navigation of the great river. We see it again in
+ his anxious desire to keep peace until we had passed the point
+ where war might bring a dissolution; and how real that danger
+ was, and how clear and just his perception of it, is shown by the
+ Kentucky and Virginia Resolutions and by the separatist movement
+ in New England during the later war of 1812. Even in 1812 the
+ national existence was menaced, but the danger would have proved
+ fatal if it had come twenty years earlier, with parties divided
+ by their sympathies with contending foreign nations. It was for
+ the sake of the Union that Washington was so patient with France,
+ and faced so quietly the storm of indignation aroused by the Jay
+ treaty.</p>
+
+ <p>In his whole foreign policy, which was so peculiarly his own,
+ the American spirit was his pole star; and of all the attacks
+ made upon him, the only one which really tried his soul was the
+ accusation that he was influenced by foreign predilections. The
+ blind injustice, which would not comprehend that his one purpose
+ was to be American and to make the people and the government
+ American, touched him more deeply than anything else. As party
+ strife grew keener over the issues raised by the war between
+ France and England, and as French politics and French ideas
+ became more popular, his feelings found more frequent utterance,
+ and it is interesting to see how this man, who, we are now told,
+ was an English country gentleman, wrote and felt on this matter
+ in very trying times. Let us remember, as we listen to him now in
+ his own defense, that he was an extremely honest man, silent for
+ the most part in doing his work, but when he spoke meaning every
+ word he said, and saying exactly what he meant. This was the way
+ in which he wrote to Patrick Henry in October, 1795, when he
+ offered him the secretaryship of State:&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>"My ardent desire is, and my aim has been as far as depended
+ upon the executive department, to comply strictly with all our
+ engagements, foreign and domestic; but to keep the United States
+ free from political connection with every other country, to see
+ them independent of all and under the influence of none. In a
+ word, I want an <i>American</i> character, that the powers of
+ Europe may be convinced that we act for <i>ourselves</i>, and not
+ for others. This, in my judgment, is the only way to be respected
+ abroad and happy at home; and not, by becoming partisans of Great
+ Britain or France, create dissensions, disturb the public
+ tranquillity, and destroy, perhaps forever, the cement which
+ binds the Union."</p>
+
+ <p>Not quite a year later, when the Jay treaty was still
+ agitating the public mind in regard to our relations with France,
+ he wrote to Pickering:&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>"The Executive has a plain road to pursue, namely, to fulfill
+ all the engagements which duty requires; be influenced beyond
+ this by none of the contending parties; maintain a strict
+ neutrality unless obliged by imperious circumstances to depart
+ from it; do justice to all, and never forget that we are
+ Americans, the remembrance of which will convince us that we
+ ought not to be French or English."</p>
+
+ <p>After leaving the presidency, when our difficulties with
+ France seemed to be thickening, and the sky looked very dark, he
+ wrote to a friend saying that he firmly believed that all would
+ come out well, and then added: "To me this is so demonstrable,
+ that not a particle of doubt could dwell on my mind relative
+ thereto, if our citizens would advocate their own cause, instead
+ of that of any other nation under the sun; that is, if, instead
+ of being Frenchmen or Englishmen in politics they would be
+ Americans, indignant at every attempt of either or any other
+ powers to establish an influence in our councils or presume to
+ sow the seeds of discord or disunion among us."</p>
+
+ <p>A few days later he wrote to Thomas Pinckney:</p>
+
+ <p>"It remains to be seen whether our country will stand upon
+ independent ground, or be directed in its political concerns by
+ any other nation. A little time will show who are its true
+ friends, or, what is synonymous, who are true Americans."</p>
+
+ <p>But this eager desire for a true Americanism did not stop at
+ our foreign policy, or our domestic politics. He wished it to
+ enter into every part of the life and thought of the people, and
+ when it was proposed to bring over the entire staff of a Genevan
+ university to take charge of a national university here, he threw
+ his influence against it, expressing grave doubts as to the
+ advantage of importing an entire "seminary of foreigners," for
+ the purpose of American education. The letter on this subject,
+ which was addressed to John Adams, then continued:&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>"My opinion with respect to emigration is that except of
+ useful mechanics, and some particular descriptions of men or
+ professions, there is no need of encouragement; while the policy
+ or advantage of its taking place in a body (I mean the settling
+ of them in a body) may be much questioned; for by so doing they
+ retain the language, habits, and principles, good or bad, which
+ they bring with them. Whereas by an intermixture with our people,
+ they or their descendants get assimilated to our customs,
+ measures, and laws; in a word, soon become one people."</p>
+
+ <p>He had this thought so constantly in his mind that it found
+ expression in his will, in the clause bequeathing certain
+ property for the foundation of a university in the District of
+ Columbia. "I proceed," he said, "after this recital for the more
+ correct understanding of the case, to declare that it has always
+ been a source of serious regret with me to see the youth of these
+ United States sent to foreign countries for the purposes of
+ education, often before their minds were formed, or they had
+ imbibed any adequate ideas of the happiness of their own;
+ contracting too frequently not only habits of dissipation and
+ extravagance, but <i>principles unfriendly to republican
+ government and to the true and genuine liberties of mankind</i>,
+ which thereafter are rarely overcome; for these reasons it has
+ been my ardent wish to see a plan devised on a liberal scale,
+ which would have a tendency to spread systematic ideas through
+ all parts of this rising empire, thereby to do away with local
+ attachments and state prejudices, as far as the nature of things
+ would or indeed ought to admit, from our national councils."</p>
+
+ <p>Were these the words of an English country gentleman, who
+ chanced to be born in one of England's colonies? Persons of the
+ English country gentleman pattern at that time were for the most
+ part loyalists; excellent people, very likely, but not of the
+ Washington type. Their hopes and ideals, their policies and their
+ beliefs were in the mother country, not here. The faith, the
+ hope, the thought, of Washington were all in the United States.
+ His one purpose was to make America independent in thought and
+ action, and he strove day and night to build up a nation. He
+ labored unceasingly to lay the foundations of the great empire
+ which, with almost prophetic vision, he saw beyond the mountains,
+ by opening the way for the western movement. His foreign policy
+ was a declaration to the world of a new national existence, and
+ he strained every nerve to lift our politics from the colonial
+ condition of foreign issues. He wished all immigration to be
+ absorbed and moulded here, so that we might be one people, one in
+ speech and in political faith. His last words, given to the world
+ after the grave had closed over him, were a solemn plea for a
+ home training for the youth of the Republic, so that all men
+ might think as Americans, untainted by foreign ideas, and rise
+ above all local prejudices. He did not believe that mere material
+ development was the only or the highest goal; for he knew that
+ the true greatness of a nation was moral and intellectual, and
+ his last thoughts were for the up-building of character and
+ intelligence. He was never a braggart, and mere boasting about
+ his country as about himself was utterly repugnant to him. He
+ never hesitated to censure what he believed to be wrong, but he
+ addressed his criticisms to his countrymen in order to lead them
+ to better things, and did not indulge in them in order to express
+ his own discontent, or to amuse or curry favor with foreigners.
+ In a word, he loved his country, and had an abiding faith in its
+ future and in its people, upon whom his most earnest thoughts and
+ loftiest aspirations were centred. No higher, purer, or more
+ thorough Americanism than his could be imagined. It was a
+ conception far in advance of the time, possible only to a
+ powerful mind, capable of lifting itself out of existing
+ conditions and alien influences, so that it might look with
+ undazzled gaze upon the distant future. The first American in the
+ broad national sense, there has never been a man more thoroughly
+ and truly American than Washington. It will be a sorry day when
+ we consent to take that noble figure from "the forefront of the
+ nation's life," and rank George Washington as anything but an
+ American of Americans, instinct with the ideas, as he was devoted
+ to the fortunes of the New World which gave him birth.</p>
+
+ <p>There is another class of critics who have attacked Washington
+ from another side. These are the gentlemen who find him in the
+ way of their own heroes. Washington was a man of decided opinions
+ about men as well as measures, and he was extremely positive. He
+ had his enemies as well as his friends, his likes and his
+ dislikes, strong and clear, according to his nature. The respect
+ which he commanded in his life has lasted unimpaired since his
+ death, and it is an awkward thing for the biographers of some of
+ his contemporaries to know that Washington opposed, distrusted,
+ or disliked their heroes. Therefore, in one way or another they
+ have gone round a stumbling-block which they could not remove.
+ The commonest method is to eliminate Washington by representing
+ him vaguely as the great man with whom every one agreed, who
+ belonged to no party, and favored all; then he is pushed quietly
+ aside. Evils and wrong-doing existed under his administration
+ from the opposition point of view, but they were the work of his
+ ministers and of wicked advisers. The king could do no wrong, and
+ this pleasant theory, which is untrue in fact, amounts to saying
+ that Washington had no opinions, but was simply a grand and
+ imposing figure-head. The only ground for it which is even
+ suggested is that he sought advice, that he used other men's
+ ideas, and that he made up his mind slowly. All this is true, and
+ these very qualities help to show his greatness, for only small
+ minds mistake their relations with the universe, and confuse
+ their finite powers with omniscience. The great man, who sees
+ facts and reads the future, uses other men, knows the bounds of
+ possibility in action, can decide instantly if need be, but
+ leaves rash conclusions to those who are incapable of reaching
+ any others. In reality there never was a man who had more
+ definite and vigorous opinions than Washington, and the
+ responsibility which he bore he never shifted to other shoulders.
+ The work of the Revolution and the presidency, whether good or
+ bad, was his own, and he was ready to stand or fall by it.</p>
+
+ <p>There is a still further extension of the idea that Washington
+ represented all parties and all views, and had neither party nor
+ opinions of his own. This theory is to the effect that he was
+ great by character alone, but that in other respects he did not
+ rise above the level of dignified common-place. Such, for
+ instance, is apparently the view of Mr. Parton, who in a clever
+ essay discusses in philosophical fashion the possible advantages
+ arising from the success attained by mere character, as in the
+ case of Washington. Mr. Parton points his theory by that last
+ incident of counting the pulse as death drew nigh. How
+ characteristic, he exclaims, of the methodical, common-place man,
+ is such an act. It was not common, be it said, even were it
+ common-place. It was certainly a very simple action, but rare
+ enough so far as we know on the every-day deathbed, or in the
+ supreme hour of dying greatness, and it was wholly free from that
+ affectation which Dr. Johnson thought almost inseparable from the
+ last solemn moment. Irregularity is not proof of genius any more
+ than method, and of the two, the latter is the surer companion of
+ greatness. The last hour of Washington showed that calm,
+ collected courage which had never failed in war or peace; and so
+ far it was proof of character. But was it not something more? The
+ common-place action of counting the pulse was in reality
+ profoundly characteristic, for it was the last exhibition of the
+ determined purpose to know the truth, and grasp the fact. Death
+ was upon him; he would know the fact. He had looked facts in the
+ face all his life, and when the mists gathered, he would face
+ them still.</p>
+
+ <p>High and splendid character, great moral qualities for
+ after-ages to admire, he had beyond any man of modern times. But
+ to suppose that in other respects he belonged to the ranks of
+ mediocrity is not only a contradiction in terms, but utterly
+ false. It was not character that fought the Trenton campaign and
+ carried the revolution to victory. It was military genius. It was
+ not character that read the future of America and created our
+ foreign policy. It was statesmanship of the highest order.
+ Without the great moral qualities which he possessed, his career
+ would not have been possible; but it would have been quite as
+ impossible if the intellect had not equaled the character. There
+ is no need to argue the truism that Washington was a great man,
+ for that is universally admitted. But it is very needful that his
+ greatness should be rightly understood, and the right
+ understanding of it is by no means universal. His character has
+ been exalted at the expense of his intellect, and his goodness
+ has been so much insisted upon both by admirers and critics that
+ we are in danger of forgetting that he had a great mind as well
+ as high moral worth.</p>
+
+ <p>This false attitude both of praise and criticism has been so
+ persisted in that if we accept the premises we are forced to the
+ conclusion that Washington was actually dull, while with much
+ more openness it is asserted that he was cold and at times even
+ harsh. "In the mean time," says Mr. McMaster, "Washington was
+ deprived of the services of the only two men his cold heart ever
+ really loved." "A Cromwell with the juice squeezed out," says
+ Carlyle somewhere, in his rough and summary fashion. Are these
+ judgments correct? Was Washington really, with all his greatness,
+ dull and cold? He was a great general and a great President,
+ first in war and first in peace and all that, says our caviler,
+ but his relaxation was in farm accounts, and his business war and
+ politics. He could plan a campaign, preserve a dignified manner,
+ and conduct an administration, but he could write nothing more
+ entertaining than a state paper or a military report. He gave
+ himself up to great affairs, he was hardly human, and he shunned
+ the graces, the wit, and all the salt of life, and passed them by
+ on the other side.</p>
+
+ <p>That Washington was serious and earnest cannot be doubted, for
+ no man could have done what he did and been otherwise. He had
+ little time for the lighter sides of life, and he never exerted
+ himself to say brilliant and striking things. He was not a maker
+ of phrases and proclamations, and the quality of the charlatan,
+ so often found in men of the highest genius, was utterly lacking
+ in him. He never talked or acted with an eye to dramatic effect,
+ and this is one reason for the notion that he was dull and dry;
+ for the world dearly loves a little charlatanism, and is never
+ happier than in being brilliantly duped. But was he therefore
+ really dull and juiceless, unlovable and unloving? Responsibility
+ came upon him when a boy, and he was hardly of age when he was
+ carrying in his hands the defense of his colony and the heavy
+ burden of other human lives. Experience like this makes a man who
+ is good for anything sober; but sobriety is not dullness, and if
+ we look a little below the surface we find the ready refutation
+ of such an idea. In his letters and even in the silent diaries we
+ detect the keenest observation. He looked at the country, as he
+ traveled, with the eye of the soldier and the farmer, and
+ mastered its features and read its meaning with rapid and certain
+ glance. It was not to him a mere panorama of fields and woods, of
+ rivers and mountains. He saw the beauties of nature and the
+ opportunities of the farmer, the trader, or the manufacturer
+ wherever his gaze rested. He gathered in the same way the
+ statistics of the people and of their various industries. In the
+ West Indies, on the Virginian frontier, in his journeys when he
+ was President, he read the story of all he saw as he would have
+ read a book, and brought it home with him for use.</p>
+
+ <div class="figleft" style="width:40%;">
+ <a href="images/illus0465.jpg"><img width="100%" src=
+ "images/illus0465.jpg" alt="NATHANAEL GREENE" /></a>NATHANAEL
+ GREENE
+ </div>
+
+ <p>In the same way he read and understood men, and had that power
+ of choosing among them which is essential in its highest form to
+ the great soldier or statesman. His selection never erred unless
+ in a rare instance like that of Monroe, forced on him by
+ political exigencies, or when the man of his choice would not
+ serve. Congress chose Gates for the southern campaign, but
+ Washington selected Greene, in whom he saw great military ability
+ before any one else realized it. He took Hamilton, young and
+ unknown, from the captaincy of an artillery company, and placed
+ him on his personal staff. He bore with Hamilton's outbreak of
+ temper, kept him ever in his confidence, and finally gave him the
+ opportunity to prove himself the most brilliant of American
+ statesmen. In the crowd of foreign volunteers, the men whom he
+ especially selected and trusted were Lafayette and Steuben, each
+ in his way of real value to the service. Even more remarkable
+ than the ability to recognize great talent was his capacity to
+ weigh and value with a nice exactness the worth of men who did
+ not rise to the level of greatness. There is a recently published
+ letter, too long for quotation here, in which he gives his
+ opinions of all the leading officers of the Revolution,<a id=
+ "footnotetag1-20" name="footnotetag1-20"></a><a href=
+ "#footnote1-20"><sup>1</sup></a> and each one shows the most
+ remarkable insight, as well as a sharp definiteness of outline
+ that indicates complete mastery. These compact judgments were so
+ sound that even the lapse of a century and all the study of
+ historians and biographers find nothing in their keen analysis to
+ alter and little to add. He did not expect to discover genius
+ everywhere, or to find a marshal's baton in every knapsack, but
+ he used men according to their value and possibilities, which is
+ quite as essential as the preliminary work of selection. His
+ military staff illustrated this faculty admirably. Every man,
+ after a few trials and changes, fitted his place and did his
+ particular task better than any one else could have done it.
+ Colonel Meade, loyal and gallant, a good soldier and planter,
+ said that Hamilton did the headwork of Washington's staff and he
+ the riding. When the war was drawing to a close, Washington said
+ one day to Hamilton, "You must go to the Bar, which you can reach
+ in six months." Then turning to Meade, "Friend Dick, you must go
+ to your plantation; you will make a good farmer, and an honest
+ foreman of the grand jury."<a id="footnotetag2-21" name=
+ "footnotetag2-21"></a><a href="#footnote2-21"><sup>2</sup></a>
+ The prediction was exactly fulfilled, with all that it implied,
+ in both cases. But let it not be supposed that there was any
+ touch of contempt in the advice to Meade. On the contrary, there
+ was a little warmer affection, if anything, for he honored
+ success in any honest pursuit, especially in farming, which he
+ himself loved. But he distinguished the two men perfectly, and he
+ knew what each was and what each meant. It seems little to say,
+ but if we stop to think of it, this power to read men aright and
+ see the truth in them and about them is a power more precious
+ than any other bestowed by the kindest of fairy godmothers. The
+ lame devil of Le Sage looked into the secrets of life through the
+ roofs of houses, and much did he find of the secret story of
+ humanity. But the great man looking with truth and kindliness
+ into men's natures, and reading their characters and abilities in
+ their words and acts, has a higher and better power than that
+ attributed to the wandering sprite, for such a man holds in his
+ hand the surest key to success. Washington, quiet and always on
+ the watch, after the fashion of silent greatness, studied
+ untiringly the ever recurring human problems, and his just
+ conclusions were powerful factors in the great result. He was
+ slow, when he had plenty of time, in adopting a policy or plan,
+ or in settling a public question, but he read men very quickly.
+ He was never under any delusion as to Lee, Gates, Conway, or any
+ of the rest who engaged against him because they were restless
+ from the first under the suspicion that he knew them thoroughly.
+ Arnold deceived him because his treason was utterly inconceivable
+ to Washington, and because his remarkable gallantry excused his
+ many faults. But with this exception it may be safely said that
+ Washington was never misled as to men, either as general or
+ President. His instruments were not invariably the best and
+ sometimes failed him, but they were always the best he could get,
+ and he knew their defects and ran the inevitable risks with his
+ eyes open. Such sure and rapid judgments of men and their
+ capabilities were possible only to a man of keen perception and
+ accurate observation, neither of which is characteristic of a
+ slow or common-place mind.</p>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote1-20" name="footnote1-20"></a>[<b>Footnote
+ 1:</b> <a href="#footnotetag1-20">(return)</a> <i>Magazine of
+ American History</i>, vol. iii., 1879, p. 81.]
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote2-21" name="footnote2-21"></a>[<b>Footnote
+ 2:</b> <a href="#footnotetag2-21">(return)</a> <i>Memoir of Rt.
+ Rev. William Meade</i>, by Philip Slaughter, D.D., p. 7.]
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <p>These qualities were, of course, gifts of nature, improved and
+ developed by the training of a life of action on a great scale.
+ He had received, indeed, little teaching except that of
+ experience, and the world of war and politics had been to him
+ both school and college. His education had been limited in the
+ extreme, scarcely going beyond the most rudimentary branches
+ except in mathematics, and this is very apparent in his early
+ letters. He seems always to have written a handsome hand and to
+ have been good at figures, but his spelling at the outset was far
+ from perfect, and his style, although vigorous, was abrupt and
+ rough. He felt this himself, took great pains to correct his
+ faults in this respect, and succeeded, as he did in most things.
+ Mr. Sparks has produced a false impression in this matter by
+ smoothing and amending in very extensive fashion all the earlier
+ letters, so as to give an appearance of uniformity throughout the
+ correspondence; a process which not only destroyed much of the
+ vigor and force of the early writings, but made them somewhat
+ unnatural. The surveyor and frontier soldier wrote very
+ differently from the general of the army and the President of the
+ United States, and the improvements of Mr. Sparks only served to
+ hide the real man.<a id="footnotetag1-22" name=
+ "footnotetag1-22"></a><a href=
+ "#footnote1-22"><sup>1</sup></a></p>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote1-22" name="footnote1-22"></a>[<b>Footnote
+ 1:</b> <a href="#footnotetag1-22">(return)</a> These facts in
+ regard to Washington's early letters, and to his correspondence
+ generally, were first brought to public attention by the Reed
+ letters, and by the controversy between Mr. Sparks and Lord
+ Mahon. They have, of course, been long familiar to students of
+ the original manuscripts. The full extent, however, of the
+ changes made by Mr. Sparks, and of the mischief he wrought, and
+ of the injustice thus done both to his hero and to posterity,
+ has but lately been made known generally by the new edition of
+ Washington's papers which have been published, under the
+ supervision of Mr. W.C. Ford. Washington himself, when he
+ undertook to arrange his military and state papers after his
+ retirement from the presidency, began to correct the style of
+ some of his earlier letters. This was natural enough, and he
+ had a right to do what he pleased with his own, even if he
+ thereby injured the material of the future historian and
+ biographer. But he did not proceed far in his work, and the
+ fact that he corrected a few of his own letters gave Mr. Sparks
+ no right whatever to enter upon a wholesale revision.]
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <p>If Washington had been of coarse fibre and heavy mind, this
+ lack of education would have troubled him but little. His great
+ success in that case would have served only to convince him of
+ the uselessness of education except for inferior persons, who
+ could not get along in the world without artificial aids. As it
+ was, he never ceased to regret his deficiency in this respect,
+ and when Humphreys urged him to prepare a history or memoirs of
+ the war, he replied: "In a former letter I informed you, my dear
+ Humphreys, that if I had talent for it, I have not leisure to
+ turn my thoughts to commentaries. A consciousness of a defective
+ education and a certainty of a want of time unfit me for such an
+ undertaking." He was misled by his own modesty as to his
+ capacity, but his strong feeling as to his lack of schooling
+ haunted and troubled him always, although it did not make him
+ either indifferent or bitter. He only admired more that which he
+ himself had missed. He regarded education, and especially the
+ higher forms, with an almost pathetic reverence, and its
+ advancement was never absent from his thoughts. When he was made
+ chancellor of the college of William and Mary, he was more deeply
+ pleased than by any honor ever conferred upon him, and he
+ accepted the position with a diffidence and a seriousness which
+ were touching in such a man. In the same spirit he gave money to
+ the Alexandria Academy, and every scheme to promote public
+ education in Virginia had his eager support. His interest was not
+ confined by state lines, for there was nothing so near his heart
+ as the foundation of a national university. He urged its
+ establishment upon Congress over and over again, and, as has been
+ seen, left money in his will for its endowment.</p>
+
+ <p>All his sympathies and tastes were those of a man of refined
+ mind, and of a lover of scholarship and sound learning. Naturally
+ a very modest man, and utterly devoid of any pretense, he
+ underrated, as a matter of fact, his own accomplishments. He
+ distrusted himself so much that he always turned to Hamilton,
+ both during the Revolution and afterwards, as well as in the
+ preparation of the farewell address, to aid him in clothing his
+ thoughts in a proper dress, which he felt himself unable to give
+ them. His tendency was to be too diffuse and too involved, but as
+ a rule his style was sufficiently clear, and he could express
+ himself with nervous force when the occasion demanded, and with a
+ genuine and stately eloquence when he was deeply moved, as in the
+ farewell to Congress at the close of the war. It is not a little
+ remarkable that in his letters after the first years there is
+ nothing to betray any lack of early training. They are the
+ letters, not of a scholar or a literary man, but of an educated
+ gentleman; and although he seldom indulged in similes or
+ allusions, when he did so they were apt and correct. This was due
+ to his perfect sanity of mind, and to his aversion to all display
+ or to any attempt to shine in borrowed plumage. He never
+ undertook to speak or write on any subject, or to make any
+ reference, which he did not understand. He was a lover of books,
+ collected a library, and read always as much as his crowded life
+ would permit. When he was at Newburgh, at the close of the war,
+ he wrote to Colonel Smith in New York to send him the following
+ books:&mdash;</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>"Charles the XIIth of Sweden.</p>
+
+ <p>Lewis the XVth, 2 vols.</p>
+
+ <p>History of the Life and Reign of the Czar Peter the
+ Great.</p>
+
+ <p>Campaigns of Marshal Turenne.</p>
+
+ <p>Locke on the Human Understanding.</p>
+
+ <p>Robertson's History of America, 2 vols.</p>
+
+ <p>Robertson's History of Charles V.</p>
+
+ <p>Voltaire's Letters.</p>
+
+ <p>Life of Gustavus Adolphus.</p>
+
+ <p>Sully's Memoirs.</p>
+
+ <p>Goldsmith's Natural History.</p>
+
+ <p>Mildman on Trees.</p>
+
+ <p>Vertot's Revolution of Rome, 3 vols.</p>
+
+ <p>Vertot's Revolution of Portugal, 3 vols.</p>
+
+ <p>{The Vertot's if they are in estimation.}</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>If there is a good Bookseller's shop in the City, I would
+ thank you for sending me a catalogue of the Books and their
+ prices that I may choose such as I want."</p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <p>His tastes ran to history and to works treating of war or
+ agriculture, as is indicated both by this list and some earlier
+ ones. It is not probable that he gave so much attention to
+ lighter literature, although he wrote verses in his youth, and by
+ an occasional allusion in his letters he seems to have been
+ familiar with some of the great works of the imagination, like
+ "Don Quixote."<a id="footnotetag1-23" name=
+ "footnotetag1-23"></a><a href=
+ "#footnote1-23"><sup>1</sup></a></p>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote1-23" name="footnote1-23"></a>[<b>Footnote
+ 1:</b> <a href="#footnotetag1-23">(return)</a> At his death the
+ appraisers of the estate found 863 volumes in his library,
+ besides a great number of pamphlets, magazines, and maps. This
+ was a large collection of books for those days, and showed that
+ the possessor, although purely a man of affairs, loved reading
+ and had literary tastes.]
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <p>He never freed himself from the self-distrust caused by his
+ profound sense of his own deficiencies in education, on the one
+ hand, and his deep reverence for learning, on the other. He had
+ fought the Revolution, which opened the way for a new nation, and
+ was at the height of his fame when he wrote to the French
+ officers, who begged him to visit France, that he was "too old to
+ learn French or to talk with ladies;" and it was this feeling in
+ a large measure which kept him from ever being a maker of phrases
+ or a sayer of brilliant things. In other words, the fact that he
+ was modest and sensitive has been the chief cause of his being
+ thought dull and cold. This idea, moreover, is wholly that of
+ posterity, for there is not the slightest indication on the part
+ of any contemporary that Washington could not talk well and did
+ not appear to great advantage in society. It is posterity,
+ looking with natural weariness at endless volumes of official
+ letters with all the angles smoothed off by the editorial plane,
+ that has come to suspect him of being dull in mind and heavy in
+ wit. His contemporaries knew him to be dignified and often found
+ him stern, but they never for a moment considered him stupid, or
+ thought him a man at whom the shafts of wit could be shot with
+ impunity. They were fully conscious that he was as able to hold
+ his own in conversation as he was in the cabinet or in the field;
+ and we can easily see the justice of contemporary opinion if we
+ take the trouble to break through the official bark and get at
+ the real man who wrote the letters. In many cases we find that he
+ could employ irony and sarcasm with real force, and his powers of
+ description, even if stilted at times, were vigorous and
+ effective. All these qualities come out strongly in his letters,
+ if carefully read, and his private correspondence in particular
+ shows a keenness and point which the formalities of public
+ intercourse veiled generally from view. We are fortunate in
+ having the account of a disinterested and acute observer of the
+ manner in which Washington impressed a casual acquaintance in
+ conversation. The actor Bernard, whom we have already quoted, and
+ whom we left with Washington at the gates of Mount Vernon, gives
+ us the following vivid picture of what ensued:&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>"In conversation his face had not much variety of expression.
+ A look of thoughtfulness was given by the compression of the
+ mouth and the indentations of the brow (suggesting an habitual
+ conflict with, and mastery over, passion), which did not seem so
+ much to disdain a sympathy with trivialities as to be incapable
+ of denoting them. Nor had his voice, so far as I could discover
+ in our quiet talk, much change or richness of intonation, but he
+ always spoke with earnestness, and his eyes (glorious conductors
+ of the light within) burned with a steady fire which no one could
+ mistake for mere affability; they were one grand expression of
+ the well-known line: 'I am a man, and interested in all that
+ concerns humanity.' In one hour and a half's conversation he
+ touched on every topic that I brought before him with an even
+ current of good sense, if he embellished it with little wit or
+ verbal elegance. He spoke like a man who had felt as much as he
+ had reflected, and reflected more than he had spoken; like one
+ who had looked upon society rather in the mass than in detail,
+ and who regarded the happiness of America but as the first link
+ in a series of universal victories; for his full faith in the
+ power of those results of civil liberty which he saw all around
+ him led him to foresee that it would, erelong, prevail in other
+ countries, and that the social millennium of Europe would usher
+ in the political. When I mentioned to him the difference I
+ perceived between the inhabitants of New England and of the
+ Southern States, he remarked: 'I esteem those people greatly;
+ they are the stamina of the Union and its greatest benefactors.
+ They are continually spreading themselves too, to settle and
+ enlighten less favored quarters. Dr. Franklin is a New
+ Englander.' When I remarked that his observations were flattering
+ to my country, he replied, with great good-humor, 'Yes, yes, Mr.
+ Bernard, but I consider your country the cradle of free
+ principles, not their armchair. Liberty in England is a sort of
+ idol; people are bred up in the belief and love of it, but see
+ little of its doings. They walk about freely, but then it is
+ between high walls; and the error of its government was in
+ supposing that after a portion of their subjects had crossed the
+ sea to live upon a common, they would permit their friends at
+ home to build up those walls about them.' A black coming in at
+ this moment with a jug of spring water, I could not repress a
+ smile, which the general at once interpreted. 'This may seem a
+ contradiction,' he continued, 'but I think you must perceive that
+ it is neither a crime nor an absurdity. When we profess, as our
+ fundamental principle, that liberty is the inalienable right of
+ every man, we do not include madmen or idiots; liberty in their
+ hands would become a scourge. Till the mind of the slave has been
+ educated to perceive what are the obligations of a state of
+ freedom, and not confound a man's with a brute's, the gift would
+ insure its abuse. We might as well be asked to pull down our old
+ warehouses before trade has increased to demand enlarged new
+ ones. Both houses and slaves were bequeathed to us by Europeans,
+ and time alone can change them; an event, sir, which, you may
+ believe me, no man desires more heartily than I do. Not only do I
+ pray for it, on the score of human dignity, but I can already
+ foresee that nothing but the rooting out of slavery can
+ perpetuate the existence of our Union, by consolidating it in a
+ common bond of principle.'</p>
+
+ <p>"I now referred to the pleasant hours I had passed in
+ Philadelphia, and my agreeable surprise at finding there so many
+ men of talent, at which his face lit up vividly. 'I am glad to
+ hear you, sir, who are an Englishman, say so, because you must
+ now perceive how ungenerous are the assertions people are always
+ making on your side of the water. One gentleman, of high literary
+ standing,&mdash;I allude to the Abb&eacute; Raynal,&mdash;has
+ demanded whether America has yet produced one great poet,
+ statesman, or philosopher. The question shows anything but
+ observation, because it is easy to perceive the causes which have
+ combined to render the genius of this country scientific rather
+ than imaginative. And, in this respect, America has surely
+ furnished her quota. Franklin, Rittenhouse, and Rush are no mean
+ names, to which, without shame, I may append those of Jefferson
+ and Adams, as politicians; while I am told that the works of
+ President Edwards of Rhode Island are a text-book in polemics in
+ many European colleges.'</p>
+
+ <p>"Of the replies which I made to his inquiries respecting
+ England, he listened to none with so much interest as to those
+ which described the character of my royal patron, the Prince of
+ Wales. 'He holds out every promise,' remarked the general, 'of a
+ brilliant career. He has been well educated by <i>events</i>, and
+ I doubt not that, in his time, England will receive the benefit
+ of her child's emancipation. She is at present bent double, and
+ has to walk with crutches; but her offspring may teach her the
+ secret of regaining strength, erectness, and independence.' In
+ reference to my own pursuits he repeated the sentiments of
+ Franklin. He feared the country was too poor to be a patron of
+ the drama, and that only arts of a practical nature would for
+ some time be esteemed. The stage he considered to be an
+ indispensable resource for settled society, and a chief refiner;
+ not merely interesting as a comment on the history of social
+ happiness by its exhibition of manners, but an agent of good as a
+ school for poetry, in holding up to honor the noblest principles.
+ 'I am too old and too far removed,' he added, 'to seek for or
+ require this pleasure myself, but the cause is not to droop on my
+ account. There's my friend Mr. Jefferson has time and taste; he
+ goes always to the play, and I'll introduce you to him,' a
+ promise which he kept, and which proved to me the source of the
+ greatest benefit and pleasure."</p>
+
+ <p>This is by far the best account of Washington in the ordinary
+ converse of daily life that has come down to us. The narrator
+ belonged to the race who live by amusing their fellow-beings, and
+ are in consequence quick to notice peculiarities and highly
+ susceptible to being bored. Bernard, after the first interest of
+ seeing a very eminent man had worn off, would never have lingered
+ for an hour and a half of chat and then gone away reluctantly if
+ his host had been either dull of speech or cold and forbidding of
+ manner. It is evident that Washington talked well, easily, and
+ simply, ranging widely over varied topics with a sure touch, and
+ that he drew from the ample resources of a well-stored and
+ reflective mind. The scraps of conversation which Bernard
+ preserves are interesting and above the average of ordinary talk,
+ without manifesting any attempt to be either brilliant or
+ striking, and it is also apparent that Washington had the art of
+ putting his guest entirely at his ease by his own pleasant and
+ friendly manner. He had picked up the English actor on the road,
+ liked his readiness to be helpful (always an attraction to him in
+ any one), found him well-mannered and intelligent, and brought
+ him home to rest and chat in the pleasant summer afternoon. To
+ Bernard he was simply the plain Virginia gentleman, with a
+ liberal and cultivated interest in men and things, and not a
+ trace of oppressive and conscious greatness about him. It is to
+ be suspected that he was by no means equally genial to the herd
+ of sight-seers who pursued him in his retirement, but in this
+ meeting he appeared as he must always have appeared to his family
+ and friends.</p>
+
+ <p>We get the same idea from the scattered allusions that we have
+ to Washington in private life. Although silent and reserved as to
+ himself, he was by no means averse to society, and in his own
+ house all his guests, both great and small, felt at their ease
+ with him, although with no temptation to be familiar. We know
+ from more than one account that the dinners at the presidential
+ house, as well as at Mount Vernon, were always agreeable. It was
+ his wont to sit at table after the cloth was removed sipping a
+ glass of wine and eating nuts, of which he was very fond, while
+ he listened to the conversation and caused it to flow easily, not
+ so much by what he said as by the kindly smile and ready sympathy
+ which made all feel at home. We can gather an idea also of the
+ charm which he had in the informal intercourse of daily life from
+ some of his letters on trifling matters. Here is a little note
+ written to Mrs. Stockton in acknowledgment of a pastoral poem
+ which she had sent him:&mdash;</p>
+
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>"MOUNT VERNON, February 18, 1784.</p>
+
+ <p>"Dear Madam: The intemperate weather and very great care
+ which the post riders take of themselves prevented your letter
+ of the 4th of last month from reaching my hands till the 10th
+ of this. I was then in the very act of setting off on a visit
+ to my aged mother, from whence I am just returned. These
+ reasons I beg leave to offer as an apology for my silence until
+ now.</p>
+
+ <p>"It would be a pity indeed, my dear madam, if the muses
+ should be restrained in you; it is only to be regretted that
+ the hero of your poetical talents is not more deserving their
+ lays. I cannot, however, from motives of pure delicacy (because
+ I happen to be the principal character in your Pastoral)
+ withhold my encomiums on the performance; for I think the easy,
+ simple, and beautiful strain with which the dialogue is
+ supported does great justice to your genius; and will not only
+ secure Lucinda and Amista from wits and critics, but draw from
+ them, however unwillingly, their highest plaudits; if they can
+ relish the praises that are given, as they must admire the
+ manner of bestowing them.</p>
+
+ <p>"Mrs. Washington, equally sensible with myself of the honor
+ you have done her, joins me in most affectionate compliments to
+ yourself, and the young ladies and gentlemen of your
+ family.</p>
+
+ <p>"With sentiments of esteem, regard and respect, I have the
+ honor to be &mdash;&mdash; &mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <p>This is not a matter of "great pith or moment," but it shows
+ how pleasantly he could acknowledge a civility. The turn of the
+ sentences smacks of the formality of the time. They sound a
+ little labored, perhaps, to modern ears, but they were graceful
+ according to the standard of his day, and they have a gentle
+ courtesy which can never be out of fashion.</p>
+
+ <p>He had the power also of paying a compliment in an impressive
+ and really splendid manner whenever he felt it to be deserved.
+ When Charles Thomson, who for fifteen years had been the honored
+ secretary of the Continental Congress, wrote to announce his
+ retirement, Washington replied: "The present age does so much
+ justice to the unsullied reputation with which you have always
+ conducted yourself in the execution of the duties of your office,
+ and posterity will find your name so honorably connected with the
+ verification of such a multitude of astonishing facts, that my
+ single suffrage would add little to the illustration of your
+ merits. Yet I cannot withhold any just testimonial in favor of so
+ old, so faithful, and so able a public officer, which might tend
+ to soothe his mind in the shades of retirement. Accept, then,
+ this serious declaration, that your services have been important,
+ as your patriotism was distinguished; and enjoy that best of all
+ rewards, the consciousness of having done your duty well."</p>
+
+ <p>Dull men do not write in this fashion. It is one thing to pay
+ a handsome compliment, although even that is not by itself easy,
+ but to give it in addition the note of sincerity which alone
+ makes it of real value demands both art and good feeling. Let us
+ take one more example of this sort before we drop the subject.
+ When the French officers were leaving America Washington wrote to
+ De Chastellux to bid him farewell. "Our good friend, the Marquis
+ of Lafayette," he said, "prepared me, long before I had the honor
+ to see you, for those impressions of esteem which opportunities
+ and your own benevolent mind have since improved into a deep and
+ lasting friendship; a friendship which neither time nor distance
+ can eradicate. I can truly say that never in my life have I
+ parted with a man to whom my soul clave more sincerely than it
+ did to you. My warmest wishes will attend you in your voyage
+ across the Atlantic to the rewards of a generous prince, the arms
+ of affectionate friends; and be assured that it will be one of my
+ highest gratifications to keep up a regular intercourse with you
+ by letter."</p>
+
+ <p>These letters exhibit not only the grace and point born of
+ intelligence, but also the best of manners; by which I mean
+ private manners, not those of the public man, of which there will
+ be something to say hereafter. The attraction of Washington's
+ society as a private gentleman lay in his good sense, breadth of
+ knowledge, and good manners. Now the essence of good manners of
+ the highest and most genuine kind is good feeling, which is
+ thoughtful of others, and which is impossible to a cold, hard, or
+ insensible nature. Such manners as we see in Washington's private
+ letters and private life would have been strange offspring from
+ the cold heart attributed to him by Mr. McMaster. In justice to
+ Mr. McMaster, however, be it said, the charge is not a new one.
+ It has been hinted at and spoken of elsewhere, and many persons
+ have suspected that such was the case from the well-meant efforts
+ of what may be called the cherry-tree school to elevate
+ Washington's character by depicting him as a soulless, bloodless
+ prig. The blundering efforts of the latter need not be noticed,
+ but the reflections of serious critics cannot be passed by. The
+ theory of the cold heart and the unfeeling nature seems to
+ proceed in this wise. Washington was silent and reserved, he did
+ not wear his heart upon his sleeve for daws to peck at, therefore
+ he was cold; just as if mere noise and chatter had any relation
+ to warm affections. He would take no salary from Congress, says
+ Mr. McMaster, in fine antithesis, but he exacted his due from the
+ family of the poor mason. This has an unpleasant sound, and
+ suggests the man who is generous in public, and hard and grasping
+ in private. Mr. McMaster in this sentence, however, whether
+ intentionally or not, is not quite accurate in his facts, and
+ conveys by his mode of statement an entirely false impression.
+ The story to which he refers is given by Parkinson, who wrote a
+ book about his experiences in America in 1798-1800. Parkinson had
+ the story from one General Stone, and it was to this
+ effect:<a id="footnotetag1-24" name=
+ "footnotetag1-24"></a><a href="#footnote1-24"><sup>1</sup></a> A
+ room was plastered at Mount Vernon on one occasion, and was paid
+ for during the owner's absence. When Washington returned he
+ examined the work and had it measured, as was his habit. It then
+ appeared that an error had been made, and that fifteen shillings
+ too much had been paid. Meantime the plasterer had died. His
+ widow married again, and her second husband advertised in the
+ newspapers that he was prepared to pay the debts of his
+ predecessor and collect all moneys due him. Thereupon Washington
+ put in his claim, which was paid as a matter of course. He did
+ not extort the debt from the family of the poor mason, but
+ collected it from the second husband of the widow, in response to
+ a voluntary advertisement. It was very careful and even close
+ dealing, but it was neither harsh nor unjust, and the writer who
+ has preserved the story would be not a little surprised at the
+ interpretation that has been put upon it, for he cited it, as he
+ expressly says, merely to illustrate the extraordinary regularity
+ and method to which he attributed much of Washington's
+ success.</p>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote1-24" name="footnote1-24"></a>[<b>Footnote
+ 1:</b> <a href="#footnotetag1-24">(return)</a> Parkinson's
+ <i>Tour in America</i>, 1798-1800, 437 and ff.]
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <p>Parkinson, in this same connection, tells several other
+ stories, vague in origin, and sounding like mere gossip, but
+ still worthy of consideration. According to one of them,
+ Washington maintained a public ferry, which was customary among
+ the planters, and the public paid regular tolls for its use. On
+ one occasion General Stone, the authority for the previous
+ anecdote, crossed the ferry and offered a moidore in payment. The
+ ferryman objected to receiving it, on the ground that it was
+ short weight, but Stone insisted, and it was finally accepted. On
+ being given to Washington it was weighed, and being found three
+ half-pence short, the ferryman was ordered to collect the balance
+ due. On another occasion a tenant could not make the exact change
+ in paying his rent, and Washington would not accept the money
+ until the tenant went to Alexandria and brought back the precise
+ sum. There is, however, still another anecdote, which completes
+ this series, and which shows a different application of the same
+ rule. Washington, in traveling, was in the habit of paying at
+ inns the same for his servants as for himself. An innkeeper once
+ charged him three shillings and ninepence for himself, and three
+ shillings for his servant. Thereupon Washington sent for his
+ host, said that his servant ate as much as he, and insisted on
+ paying the additional ninepence.</p>
+
+ <p>This extreme exactness in money matters, down even to the most
+ trifling sums, was no doubt a foible, but it is well to observe
+ that it was not a foible which sought only a selfish advantage,
+ for the rule which he applied to others he applied also to
+ himself. He meant to have his due, no matter how trivial, and he
+ meant also that others should have theirs. In trifles, as in
+ greater things, he was scrupulously just, and although he was
+ always generous and ready to give, he insisted rigidly on what
+ was justly his. A gift was one thing, a business transaction was
+ another. The man himself who told these very stories was a good
+ example of the kindliness which went hand in hand with this
+ exactness in business affairs. Parkinson was an Englishman, of
+ great narrowness of mind, who came out here to be a farmer,
+ failed, and went home to write a book in denunciation of the
+ country. America never had a more hostile critic. According to
+ this profound observer, there was no good land in America, and no
+ possibility of successful agriculture. The horses were bad, the
+ cattle were bad, and sheep-raising was impossible. There was no
+ game, the fish and oysters were poor and watery, and no one could
+ ever hope in this wretchedly barren land for either wealth or
+ comfort. It was a country fit only for the reception of convicts,
+ and the cast-off mistress of an Englishman made a good wife for
+ an American. A person who held such views as these was not likely
+ to be biased in favor of anything American, and his evidence as
+ to Washington may be safely trusted as not likely to be unduly
+ favorable. He tells us that on his arrival at Mount Vernon, with
+ letters of introduction, he was kindly received; that this
+ hospitality was never relaxed; and that the general lent him
+ money. He was at least grateful, and these are his last words as
+ to Washington:&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>"To me he appeared a mild, friendly man, in company rather
+ reserved, in private speaking with candor. His behavior to me was
+ such that I shall ever revere his name.</p>
+
+ <p>"General Washington lived a great man, and died the same.</p>
+
+ <p>"I am of opinion that the general never knowingly did anything
+ wrong, but did to all men as he would they should do to him."</p>
+
+ <p>Evidently he appeared to Mr. Parkinson kindly and generous, as
+ well as exactly just. It is well to have the truth about
+ Washington, and nothing but the truth. Yet in escaping from the
+ falsehoods of the eulogist and the myth-maker, let us beware of
+ those which spring from the reaction against the current and
+ accepted views. I have quoted the Parkinson stories at length,
+ because they enforce this point admirably. No <i>a priori</i>
+ theory is safe, and to assume that Washington must have committed
+ grave errors and been guilty of mean actions because they are
+ common to humanity, and have not been admitted in his case, is
+ just as misleading as to assume, as is usually done, that he was
+ absolutely perfect and without fault.</p>
+
+ <p>Let it be admitted that Washington, ever ready to pay his own
+ dues, was strict, and sometimes severe, in demanding them of
+ others; but let it be also remembered, this is the worst that can
+ be said. He was always ready to overlook faults of omission or
+ commission; he would pardon easily mismanagement or extravagance
+ on his estate or in his household; but he had no mercy for
+ anything that savored of ingratitude, treachery, or dishonesty,
+ and he carried this same feeling into public as well as private
+ affairs. No officer who had bravely done his best had anything to
+ fear in defeat from Washington's anger. He was never unjust, and
+ he was always kind to misfortune or mistake, but to the coward or
+ the traitor he was entirely unforgiving. This it was which made
+ Arnold's treason so bitter to him. Not only had he been deceived,
+ but the country as well as himself had been most basely betrayed;
+ and for this reason he was relentless to Andr&eacute;, whom it is
+ said he never saw, living or dead. The young Englishman had taken
+ part in a wretched piece of treachery, and for the sake of the
+ country, and as a warning to traitors, Washington would not spare
+ him. He would never have ordered a political prisoner to be taken
+ out and shot in a ditch, after the fashion of Napoleon; nor would
+ he have dealt with any people as the Duke of Cumberland dealt
+ with the clansmen after Culloden. Such performances would have
+ seemed to him wanton as well as cruel, and he was too wise and
+ too humane a man to be either. Indian atrocities, for instance,
+ with which he was familiar, never led him to retaliate in kind.
+ But he was perfectly prepared to exact the extremest penalty by
+ just and recognized methods; and had it not been for the urgent
+ entreaties of his friends, he would have sent Asgill to the
+ scaffold, repugnant as it was to his feelings, because he felt
+ that the murder of Huddy was a crime for which the English army
+ was responsible, and which demanded a just and striking
+ vengeance. He was, it may be freely confessed, of anything but a
+ tame nature. There was a good deal of Berserker in his make-up,
+ and he was fierce in his anger when he believed that a great
+ wrong had been done. But because he was stern and unrelenting
+ when he felt that justice and his duty required him to be so, no
+ more proves that he had a cold heart than does the fact that he
+ was silent, dignified, and reserved. Cold-blooded men are not
+ fierce in seeking to redress the wrongs of others, nor are the
+ fluent of speech the only kind and generous members of the human
+ family.</p>
+
+ <p>Washington's whole life, indeed, contradicts the charge that
+ he was cold of heart and sluggish of feeling. The man who wrote
+ as he did in his extreme youth, when Indians were harrying the
+ frontier where he commanded, was not lacking in humanity or
+ sympathy; and such as he then was he remained to the end of his
+ life. A soldier by instinct and experience, he never grew
+ indifferent to the miseries of war. Human suffering always
+ appealed to him and moved him deeply, and when it was wantonly
+ inflicted stirred him to anger and to the desire for the wild
+ justice of revenge.</p>
+
+ <p>The goodness and kindness of man's heart, however, are much
+ more truly shown in the little details of life than in the great
+ matters which affect classes or communities. Washington was
+ considerate and helpful to all men, and if he was ever cold and
+ distant in his manner, it was to the great, and not to the poor
+ or humble. As has been indicated by his recognition of the actor
+ Bernard, he had in high degree the royal gift of remembering
+ names and faces. When he was at Senator Dalton's house in
+ Newburyport, on his New England tour of 1789, he met an old
+ servant whom he had not seen since the French war, thirty years
+ before. He knew the man at once, spoke to him, and welcomed him.
+ So it was with the old soldiers of the Revolution, who were
+ always sure of a welcome, and, if he had ever seen them, of a
+ recognition. No man ever turned from his presence wounded by a
+ cold forgetfulness. When he was at Ipswich, on this same journey,
+ Mr. Cleaveland, the minister of the town, was presented to him.
+ As he approached, hat in hand, Washington said, "Put on your hat,
+ parson, and I will shake hands with you." "I cannot wear my hat
+ in your presence, general," was the reply, "when I think of what
+ you have done for this country." "You did as much as I." "No,
+ no," protested the parson. "Yes," said Washington, "you did what
+ you could, and I've done no more." What a gracious, kindly
+ courtesy is this, and not without the salt of wit! Does it not
+ show the perfection of good manners which deals with all men for
+ what they are, and is full of a warm sympathy born of a good
+ heart? He was criticised for coldness and accused of monarchical
+ leanings, because, at Mrs. Washington's receptions and his own
+ public levees, he stood, dressed in black velvet, with one hand
+ on the hilt of his sword and the other behind his back, and shook
+ hands with no one, although he talked with all. He did this
+ because he thought it became the President of the United States
+ upon state occasions, and his sense of the dignity of his office
+ was always paramount. But away from forms and ceremonies, with
+ the old servant or the old soldier, or the country parson, his
+ hand was never behind his back, and his manners were those of a
+ great but simple gentleman, and came straight from a kind heart,
+ full of sympathy and good feeling.</p>
+
+ <p>He was, too, the most hospitable of men in the best sense, and
+ his house was always open to all who came. When he was away
+ during the war or the presidency, his instructions to his agents
+ were to keep up the hospitality of Mount Vernon, just as if he
+ had been there himself; and he was especially careful in
+ directing that, if there were general distress, poor persons of
+ the neighborhood should have help from his kitchen or his
+ granaries.</p>
+
+ <p>His own more immediate hospitality was of the same kind. He
+ always entertained in the most liberal manner, both as general
+ and President, and in a style which he thought befitted the
+ station he occupied. But apart from all this, his table, whether
+ at home or abroad, was never without its guest. "Dine with us,"
+ he wrote to Lear on July 31, 1797, "or we shall do what we have
+ not done for twenty years, dine alone." The real hospitality
+ which opens the door and spreads the board for the friend or
+ stranger, admitting them to the family without form or ceremony,
+ was his also. "My manner of living is plain," he wrote to a
+ friend after the Revolution; "I do not mean to be put out of it.
+ A glass of wine and a bit of mutton are always ready; and such as
+ will be content to partake of them are always welcome. Those who
+ expect more will be disappointed, but no change will be effected
+ by it." Genuine hospitality as unstinted as it was sincere was
+ not characteristic of a cold man, or of one who sought to avoid
+ his fellows. It is one of the lighter graces of life, perhaps,
+ but when it comes freely and simply, and not as a vehicle for the
+ display or the aggrandizement of its dispenser, it is not without
+ a meaning to the student of character.</p>
+
+ <p>Washington was not much given to professions of friendship,
+ nor was he one of the great men who keep a circle of intimates
+ and sometimes of flatterers about them. He was extremely
+ independent of the world and perfectly self-sufficing, but it is
+ a mistake to suppose that because he unbosomed himself to
+ scarcely any one, and had the loneliness of greatness and of high
+ responsibilities, he was therefore without friends. He had as
+ many friends as usually fall to the lot of any man; and although
+ he laid bare his inmost heart to none, some were very close and
+ all were very dear to him. In war and politics, as has already
+ been said, the two men who came nearest to him were Hamilton and
+ Knox, and his diary shows that when he was President he consulted
+ with them nearly every day wholly apart from the regular cabinet
+ meetings. They were the two advisers who were friends as well as
+ secretaries, and who followed and sustained him as a matter of
+ affection as much as politics. At home his neighbor, George
+ Mason, although they came to differ, was a strong friend whom he
+ liked and respected, and whose opinion, whether favorable or
+ adverse, he always sought. His feeling to Patrick Henry was much
+ deeper than mere political or official acquaintance, and the
+ lovable qualities of the brilliant orator, clear even now across
+ the gulf of a century, were evidently strongly felt by
+ Washington. They differed about the Constitution, but Washington
+ was eager at a later day to have Henry by his side in the
+ cabinet, and in the last years they stood shoulder to shoulder in
+ defense of the Union with a personal sympathy deeper than any
+ born of a mere similarity of opinion. Henry Lee, the son of his
+ old sweetheart, he loved with a tender and peculiar affection. He
+ watched over him and helped him, rejoiced in the dashing
+ gallantry which made him famous as Light-horse Harry, and, when
+ he had won civil as well as military distinction, trusted him and
+ counseled with him. Dr. Craik, the companion of his youth and his
+ life-long physician, was always a dear and close friend, and the
+ regard between the two is very pleasant to look at, as we see it
+ glancing out here and there in the midst of state papers and
+ official cases. For the officers of the army he had a peculiarly
+ warm feeling, and he had among them many close friends, like
+ Carrington of Virginia, and Charles Cotesworth Pinckney of South
+ Carolina. His immediate staff he regarded with especial
+ affection, and it is worthy of notice that they all not only
+ admired their great chief, but followed him with a personal
+ devotion which is not a little curious if Washington was cold of
+ heart and distant of manner in the intimate association of a
+ military family.</p>
+
+ <p>This feeling for his soldiers and his officers extended also
+ to those civilians who had stood by him and the army, and who had
+ labored for victory in all those trying years. Such a one was old
+ Governor Trumbull, "Brother Jonathan," who never failed to
+ respond when a call was made for men and money, and upon whose
+ friendship and advice Washington always leaned. Such, too, were
+ Robert and Gouverneur Morris. The sacrifices and energy of the
+ one and the zeal and brilliant abilities of the other endeared
+ both to him, and his friendship for them never wavered when
+ misfortune overtook the elder, and when the younger was driven by
+ malice, both foreign and domestic, from the place he had filled
+ so well. Another, again, of this kind was Franklin. In the dark
+ days of the old French war, Washington had seen displayed for the
+ first time the force and tact of Franklin, which alone obtained
+ the necessary wagons and enabled Braddock's army to move. The
+ early impression thus obtained was never lost, and Franklin's
+ patriotism, his sympathy for the general and the army in the
+ Revolution, as well as the stanch support he gave them, aroused
+ in Washington a sense of obligation and friendship of the
+ sincerest kind. In proportion as he loathed ingratitude was he
+ grateful himself. He loved Franklin for his friendship and
+ support, he admired him for his successful diplomacy, and he
+ reverenced him for his scientific attainments. The only American
+ whose fame could for a moment come in competition with his own,
+ he regarded the old philosopher with affectionate veneration, and
+ when, after his own fashion, and not at all after the fashion of
+ the time, he arrived in Philadelphia on the exact day set for the
+ Constitutional Convention, his first act was to call upon Dr.
+ Franklin and pay his respects to him. The courtesy and kindliness
+ of this little act on the part of a man who had come to the town
+ in the midst of shouting crowds, with joy bells ringing above his
+ head, speak well for the simple, honest heart that dictated
+ it.</p>
+
+ <p>After all, it may be said that a passing civility of this sort
+ involved but little trouble, and was more a matter of
+ good-breeding than anything else. Let us look, then, at another
+ and widely different case. Of all the men whom the fortunes of
+ war brought across Washington's path there was none who became
+ dearer to him than Lafayette, for the generous, high-spirited
+ young Frenchman, full of fresh enthusiasm and brave as a lion,
+ appealed at once to Washington's heart. He quickly admitted him
+ to his confidence, and the excellent service of Lafayette in the
+ field, together with his invaluable help in securing the French
+ alliance, deepened and strengthened the sympathy and affection
+ which were entirely reciprocal. After Lafayette departed, a
+ constant correspondence was maintained; and when the Bastille
+ fell, it was to Washington that Lafayette sent its key, which
+ still hangs on the wall of Mt. Vernon. As Lafayette rose rapidly
+ to the dangerous heights of revolutionary leadership, he had at
+ every step Washington's advice and sympathy. Then the tide
+ turned; he fell headlong from power, and brought up in an
+ Austrian prison. From that moment Washington spared no pains to
+ help his unhappy friend, although his own position was one of
+ extreme difficulty. Lafayette was not only the proscribed exile
+ of one country, but also the political prisoner of another, and
+ the President could not compromise the United States at that
+ critical moment by showing too much interest in the fate of his
+ unhappy friend. He nevertheless went to the very edge of prudence
+ in trying to save him, and the ministers of the United States
+ were instructed to use every private effort to secure Lafayette's
+ release, or at least the mitigation of his confinement. All these
+ attempts failed, but Washington was more successful in other
+ directions. He sent money to Madame de Lafayette, who was
+ absolutely beggared at the moment, and represented to her that it
+ was in settlement of an account which he owed the marquis. When
+ Lafayette's son and his own namesake came to this country for an
+ asylum, he had him cared for in Boston and New York by his
+ personal friends; George Cabot in the one case, and Hamilton in
+ the other. As soon as public affairs made it proper for him to do
+ it, he took the lad into his own household, treated him like a
+ son, and kept him near him until events permitted the boy to
+ return to Europe and rejoin his father. The sufferings and
+ dangers of Lafayette and his family were indeed a source of great
+ unhappiness to Washington, and we have the authority of Bradford,
+ his attorney-general, that when the President attempted to talk
+ about Lafayette he was so much affected that he shed
+ tears,&mdash;a very rare exhibition of emotion in a man so
+ intensely reserved.</p>
+
+ <p>Absence had as little effect upon his memory of old friends as
+ misfortune. The latter stimulated recollection, and the former
+ could not dim it. He found time, in the very heat and fire of war
+ and revolution, to write to Bryan Fairfax lamenting the death of
+ "the good old lord" whose house had been open to him, and whose
+ hand had ever helped him when he was a young and unknown man just
+ beginning his career. When he returned to Mount Vernon after the
+ presidency, full of years and honors, one of his first acts was
+ to write to Mrs. Fairfax in England to assure her of his lasting
+ remembrance, and to breathe a sigh over the changes time had
+ brought, and over the by-gone years when they had been young
+ together.</p>
+
+ <p>The loyalty of nature which made his remembrance of old
+ friends so real and lasting found expression also in the
+ thoughtfulness which he showed toward casual acquaintances, and
+ this was especially the case when he had received attention or
+ service at any one's hands, or when he felt that he was able to
+ give pleasure by a slight effort on his own part. A little
+ incident which occurred during the first year of his presidency
+ illustrates this trait in his character very well. Uxbridge was
+ one among the many places where he stopped on his New England
+ tour, and when he got to Hartford he wrote to Mr. Taft, who had
+ been his host in the former town, and who evidently cherished for
+ him a very keen admiration, the following note:&mdash;</p>
+
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>"November 8, 1789.</p>
+
+ <p>"Sir: Being informed that you have given my name to one of
+ your sons, and called another after Mrs. Washington's family,
+ and being moreover very much pleased with the modest and
+ innocent looks of your two daughters, Patty and Polly, I do for
+ these reasons send each of these girls a piece of chintz; and
+ to Patty, who bears the name of Mrs. Washington, and who waited
+ more upon us than Polly did, I send five guineas, with which
+ she may buy herself any little ornament she may want, or she
+ may dispose of them in any other manner more agreeable to
+ herself. As I do not give these things with a view to having it
+ talked of, or even to its being known, the less there is said
+ about the matter the better you will please me; but, that I may
+ be sure the chintz and money have got safe to hand, let Patty,
+ who I dare say is equal to it, write me a line informing me
+ thereof, directed to 'The President of the United States at New
+ York.' I wish you and your family well, and am," etc.</p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <p>Let us turn now from friendship to nearer and closer
+ relations. Washington was not only too reserved, but he had too
+ much true sentiment, to leave his correspondence with Mrs.
+ Washington behind him; for he knew that his vast collection of
+ papers would become the material of history, and he had no mind
+ that strangers should look into the sacred recesses of his
+ private life. Only one letter to Mrs. Washington apparently has
+ survived. It is simple and full of affection, as one would
+ expect, and tells, as well as many volumes could, of the happy
+ relations between husband and wife. Washington had many love
+ affairs in his youth, but he proved in the end a constant lover.
+ His wife was a high-bred, intelligent woman, simple and dignified
+ in her manners, efficient in all ways to be the helpmate of her
+ husband in the high places to which he was called. No shadow ever
+ rested on their married life, and when the end came Mrs.
+ Washington only said, "All is over now. I shall soon follow him."
+ She could not conceive of life without the presence of the
+ unchanging love and noble character which had been by her side so
+ long.</p>
+
+ <p>Children were denied to Washington, but although this was a
+ disappointment it did not chill him nor narrow his sympathies, as
+ is so often the case. He took to his heart his wife's children as
+ if they were his own. He watched over them and cared for them,
+ and their deaths caused him the deepest sorrow. He afterwards
+ adopted his wife's two grandchildren, and watched over them, too,
+ in the same way. In the midst of all the cares of the presidency,
+ Washington found time always to write to George Custis, a boy at
+ school or at college; while Nellie Custis was as dear to him as
+ his own daughter, and her marriage a source of the most
+ affectionate interest. Indeed, it is evident from various little
+ anecdotes that he was much less strict with these children than
+ was Mrs. Washington, and much more disposed to condone faults.
+ Certain it is that they loved him tenderly, and in a way that
+ only long years of loving-kindness could have made possible.</p>
+
+ <p>He showed the same feeling to all his own kindred. His mother
+ was ever the object of the most loyal affection, and even at the
+ head of the armies he would turn aside to visit her with the same
+ respect and devotion as when he was a mere boy. He was ever
+ mindful of his brothers and sisters, and their fortunes. None of
+ them were ever forgotten, and he was especially kind to the
+ children of those who had been least fortunate and most needed
+ his help. He educated and counseled his favorite nephew Bushrod,
+ and did the same for the sons of George Steptoe Washington.
+ Nothing is pleasanter than to read in the midst of official
+ papers the long letters in which he gave these boys great store
+ of wise and kindly advice, guided their education, strove to form
+ their characters, and traced for them the honorable careers which
+ he wished them to pursue. Very few men who had risen to the
+ heights reached by Washington would have found time, in the midst
+ of engrossing cares, to write such letters as he wrote to friends
+ and kinsmen. A kind heart prompted them, but they were much more
+ than merely kind, for when Washington undertook to do anything he
+ did it thoroughly. Whether it was a treaty with England, the
+ education of a boy, or the service of a friend, he gave it his
+ best thought and his utmost care. Where those he loved were
+ concerned, he was never too busy to think of them, and he spared
+ no pains to help them; censuring faults where they existed, and
+ giving praise in generous manner where praise was due.</p>
+
+ <p>To any one who carefully studies his life, it is evident that
+ Washington was as warm-hearted and affectionate as he was great
+ in character and ability, and that he was so without noise or
+ pretense. This really only amounts to saying that he was a
+ well-balanced man, and yet even this cannot be said without
+ admitting still another quality. The sanest of all senses is the
+ sense of humor, and the nature in which it is wholly lacking
+ cannot be thoroughly rounded and complete. Humor is not the most
+ lofty of qualities, but it is one of the most essential, and it
+ is generally assumed that Washington was very deficient in humor.
+ This idea has arisen from a hasty consideration of the subject,
+ and from a superficial conception of humor itself. To utter
+ jests, or to say or write witty, brilliant, or amusing things, no
+ doubt implies the possession of humor, but they are not the whole
+ of it, for a man may have a fine sense of humor, and yet never
+ make a joke nor utter a sarcasm. The distinction between humor
+ and the want of it lies much deeper than word of mouth. The man
+ without a sense of humor is sure to make a certain number of
+ solemn blunders. They may be in matters of importance or in the
+ merest trifles, but they are blunders none the less, and come
+ from insensibility to the incongruous, the ludicrous, or the
+ impossible. It may be said that common sense suffices to avoid
+ these pitfalls, but this is really begging the question, inasmuch
+ as common sense of a high order amounting almost to genius cannot
+ exist without humor, for humor is the root and foundation of
+ common sense. Let us apply this test to Washington and we shall
+ find that there never was a man who made fewer mistakes than he,
+ down even to matters of the smallest detail. Search his career
+ from beginning to end, and there is not a solemn blunder to be
+ found in it. He was attacked and assailed both as general and
+ President, but he was never laughed at. In other words, he had a
+ sense of humor which made it impossible for him to blunder
+ solemnly, or to do or say anything which ridicule could
+ touch.</p>
+
+ <p>It is not, however, necessary to leave his possession of a
+ sense of humor to inference from his career and his freedom from
+ blunders. That he had humor strong, sane, and abundant is
+ susceptible of much more direct proof; and the idea that he was
+ lacking in this respect arose undoubtedly from the gravity of
+ demeanor which was characteristic of the man. He had assumed the
+ heavy responsibilities of an important military command in the
+ French war at an age when most men are just leaving college and
+ beginning to study a profession. This of itself sobered him, and
+ added to his natural quiet and reserve, so that in estimating him
+ in after-life this early and severe discipline at a most
+ impressionable age ought never to be overlooked, for it had a
+ very marked effect upon his character.</p>
+
+ <p>He was not perhaps exactly joyous or gay of nature, but he had
+ a contented and happy disposition, and, like all robust,
+ well-balanced men, he possessed strong animal spirits and a keen
+ sense of enjoyment. He loved a wild, open-air life, and was
+ devoted to rough out-door sports. He liked to wrestle and run, to
+ shoot, ride or dance, and to engage in all trials of skill and
+ strength, for which his great muscular development suited him
+ admirably. With such tastes, it followed almost as a matter of
+ course that he loved laughter and fun. Good, hearty, country fun,
+ a ludicrous mishap, a practical joke, all merriment of a simple,
+ honest kind, were highly congenial to him, especially in his
+ youth and early manhood. Here is the way, for example, in which
+ he described in his diary a ball he attended in 1760: "In a
+ convenient room, detached for the purpose, abounded great plenty
+ of bread and butter, some biscuits, with tea and coffee which the
+ drinkers of could not distinguish from hot water sweetened. Be it
+ remembered that pocket handkerchiefs served the purposes of
+ tablecloths, and that no apologies were made for them. I shall
+ therefore distinguish this ball by the style and title of the
+ bread-and-butter ball." The wit is not brilliant, but there was a
+ good hearty laugh in the young man who jots down this little
+ memorandum in his diary.</p>
+
+ <p>The years after the French war were happy years, free from
+ care and full of simple pleasures. Then came the Revolution,
+ bringing with it a burden such as has seldom been laid upon any
+ man, and the seriousness bred by earlier experiences, came back
+ with tenfold force. The popular saying was that Washington never
+ smiled during the war, and, roughly speaking, this was quite
+ true. In all those years of danger and trial, inasmuch as he was
+ a man big of heart and brain, he had the gravity and the sadness
+ born of responsibility, and the suffering sure to come to an
+ unselfish mind. It was at this time that he began to be most
+ closely observed of men, and hence came the idea that he never
+ laughed, and therefore was a being devoid of humor, the most
+ sympathetic of gifts. But as a matter of fact, the old sense of
+ fun never left him. It would come to his aid at the most serious
+ moments, just as an endless flow of stories brought relief to
+ Lincoln and carried him round many jagged corners. With
+ Washington it was hearty, laughing mirth at some ludicrous
+ incident. Putnam riding into Cambridge with an old woman clinging
+ behind him; Greene searching for his wig while it was on his
+ head; a young braggart flung over the head of an unbroken colt;
+ or a good, rollicking story from Colonel Seammel or Major
+ Fairlie,&mdash;all these would delight Washington, and send him
+ off into peals of inextinguishable laughter. It was ever the old,
+ hearty love of fun born of animal spirits, which never left him,
+ and which would always break out on sufficient provocation. Mr.
+ Parton would have us believe that this was all, and that the
+ common-place hero whom he describes never rose above the level of
+ the humor conveyed by grinning through a horse-collar. Even
+ admitting the truth of this, a real love of honest fun and of a
+ hearty laugh is a kindly quality that all men like.</p>
+
+ <p>But was this all? Is it quite true that Washington had only a
+ love of boisterous fun, and nothing else? It is worth looking a
+ little deeper than the current stories of the camp to find out,
+ and yet one of these very camp-stories raises at once a strong
+ suspicion that Mr. Parton's conclusion in this regard, like so
+ many conclusions about Washington, is unfounded. When General Lee
+ took the oath of allegiance to the United States, he remarked, in
+ making abjuration of his former allegiance, that he was perfectly
+ ready to abjure the king, but could not bring himself to abjure
+ the Prince of Wales, at which bit of irony Washington was greatly
+ amused. The wit of the remark is a little cold to-day, but at the
+ moment, accompanying as it did a solemn act of abjuration, it was
+ keen enough. Washington himself, moreover, was perfectly capable
+ of good-natured banter. Colonel Humphreys challenged him one day
+ to jump over a hedge. Washington, always ready to accept a
+ challenge where riding was concerned, told the colonel to go on.
+ Humphreys put his horse at the hedge, cleared it, and landed in a
+ quagmire on the other side up to his horse's girths; whereupon
+ Washington rode up, stopped, and looking blandly at his
+ struggling friend, remarked, "Ah, colonel, you are too deep for
+ me." "Take care," he wrote to young Custis, when he sent him
+ money for his college gown, "not to buy without advice; otherwise
+ you may be more distinguished by your folly than your dress."</p>
+
+ <p>We find in his letters here and there a good-natured raillery,
+ and jesting, which show a sense of humor that goes beyond the
+ limits of mere fun and horse-play. Here is a letter he wrote
+ toward the close of the war, asking some ladies to dine with him
+ in his quarters at West Point:&mdash;</p>
+
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>"WEST POINT, August 16, 1779.</p>
+
+ <p>"Dear Doctor: I have asked Mrs. Cochran and Mrs. Livingston
+ to dine with me to-morrow; but ought I not to apprise you of
+ their fare? As I hate deception, even where imagination is
+ concerned, I will.</p>
+
+ <p>"It is needless to premise that my table is large enough to
+ hold the ladies: of this they had ocular demonstration
+ yesterday. To say how it is usually covered is rather more
+ essential, and this shall be the purport of my letter.</p>
+
+ <p>"Since my arrival at this happy spot, we have had a ham,
+ sometimes a shoulder of bacon, to grace the head of the table.
+ A piece of roast beef adorns the foot, and a small dish of
+ green beans&mdash;almost imperceptible&mdash;decorates the
+ centre. When the cook has a mind to cut a figure,&mdash;and
+ this I presume he will attempt to-morrow,&mdash;we have two
+ beefsteak pies, or dishes of crabs, in addition, one on each
+ side of the centre dish, dividing the space, and reducing the
+ distance between dish and dish to about six feet, which without
+ them would be nearly twelve feet apart. Of late he has had the
+ surprising luck to discover that apples will make pies; and it
+ is a question if, amidst the violence of his efforts, we do not
+ get one of apples instead of having both of beef.</p>
+
+ <p>"If the ladies can put up with such entertainment, and
+ submit to partake of it on plates once tin, but now iron, not
+ become so by the labor of hard scouring, I shall be happy to
+ see them."</p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <p>We may be sure that the ladies found their dinner a pleasant
+ one, and that the writer of the note was neither a stiff nor
+ unsocial host. A much more charming letter is one to Nellie
+ Custis, on the occasion of her first ball. It is too long for
+ quotation, but it is a model of affectionate wisdom tinged with a
+ gentle humor, and designed to guide a young girl just beginning
+ the world of society.</p>
+
+ <p>Here, however, is another extract from a letter to Madame de
+ Lafayette, of rather more serious purport, but in the same
+ strain, and full of a simple and, as we should call it, an
+ old-fashioned grace. He was replying to an invitation to visit
+ France, which he felt obliged to decline. After giving his
+ reasons, he said: "This, my dear Marchioness (indulge the
+ freedom), is not the case with you. You have youth (and, if you
+ should incline to leave your children, you can leave them with
+ all the advantages of education), and must have a curiosity to
+ see the country, young, rude, and uncultivated as it is, for the
+ liberties of which your husband has fought, bled, and acquired
+ much glory, where everybody admires, everybody loves him. Come,
+ then, let me entreat you, and call my cottage your home; for your
+ own doors do not open to you with more readiness than mine would.
+ You will see the plain manner in which we live, and meet with
+ rustic civility; and you shall taste the simplicity of rural
+ life. It will diversify the scene, and may give you a higher
+ relish for the gayeties of the court when you return to
+ Versailles."</p>
+
+ <p>There is also apparent in many of his letters a vein of
+ worldly wisdom, shrewd but kindly, too gentle to be called
+ cynical, and yet touched with the humor which reads and
+ appreciates the foibles of humanity. Of an officer who grumbled
+ at disappointments during the war he wrote: "General McIntosh is
+ only experiencing upon a small scale what I have had an ample
+ share of upon a large one; and must, as I have been obliged to do
+ in a variety of instances, yield to necessity; that is, to use a
+ vulgar phrase, 'shape his coat according to his cloth,' or in
+ other words, if he cannot do as he wishes, he must do what he
+ can." The philosophy is homely and common enough, but the manner
+ in which the reproof was administered shows kindly tact, one of
+ the most difficult of arts. Here is another passage, touching on
+ something outside the range of war and politics. He was writing
+ to Lund Washington in regard to Mrs. Washington's
+ daughter-in-law, Mrs. Custis, who was contemplating a second
+ marriage. "For my own part," he said, "I never did, nor do I
+ believe I ever shall, give advice to a woman who is setting out
+ on a matrimonial voyage: first, because I never could advise one
+ to marry without her own consent; and secondly, because I know it
+ is to no purpose to advise her to refrain when she has obtained
+ it. A woman very rarely asks an opinion or requires advice on
+ such an occasion till her resolution is formed; and then it is
+ with the hope and expectation of obtaining a sanction, not that
+ she means to be governed by your disapprobation, that she
+ applies. In a word, the plain English of the application may be
+ summed up in these words: 'I wish you to think as I do; but if
+ unhappily you differ from me in opinion, my heart, I must
+ confess, is fixed, and I have gone too far <i>now</i> to
+ retract.'"</p>
+
+ <p>In the same spirit, but this time with a lurking smile at
+ himself, did he write to the secretary of Congress for his
+ commission: "If my commission is not necessary for the files of
+ Congress, I should be glad to have it deposited among my own
+ papers. It may serve <i>my grandchildren</i>, some fifty or a
+ hundred years hence, for a theme to ruminate upon, if <i>they</i>
+ should be contemplatively disposed."</p>
+
+ <p>He knew human nature well, and had a smile for its little
+ weaknesses when they came to his mind. It was this same human
+ sympathy which made him also love amusements of all sorts; but he
+ was as little their slave as their enemy. No man ever carried
+ great burdens with a higher or more serious spirit, but his cares
+ never made him forbidding, nor rendered him impatient of the
+ pleasure of others. He liked to amuse himself, and knew the value
+ of a change of thought and scene, and he was always ready, when
+ duty permitted, for a chat. He liked to take a comfortable seat
+ and have his talk out, and he had the talent so rare in great men
+ of being a good and appreciative listener. We hear of him playing
+ cards at Tappan during the war, and he was always fond of a game
+ in the evening, realizing the force of Talleyrand's remark to the
+ despiser of cards: "Quelle triste vieillesse vous vous
+ pr&eacute;parez." In 1779 it is recorded that at a party he
+ danced for three hours with Mrs. Greene without sitting down or
+ resting, which speaks well for the health and spirits both of the
+ lady and the gentleman. Even after Yorktown, he was ready to walk
+ a minuet at a ball, and to the end he liked to see young people
+ dance, as he had danced himself in his youth. As has been seen
+ from his treatment of Bernard, he liked the theatre and the
+ actors, and when he was in Philadelphia he was a constant
+ attendant at the play, as he had been ever since he went to see
+ "George Barnwell" in the Barbadoes. His love of horses stayed
+ with him to the last. He not only rode and drove and trained
+ horses,<a id="footnotetag1-25" name=
+ "footnotetag1-25"></a><a href="#footnote1-25"><sup>1</sup></a>
+ but he enjoyed the sport of the race-course. He was probably
+ aware, like the Shah of Persia who declined to go to the Derby,
+ that one horse could run faster than another, but nevertheless he
+ liked to see them run, and we hear of him, after he had reached
+ the presidency, acting as judge at a race, and seeing his own
+ colt Magnolia beaten, which he no doubt considered the next best
+ thing to winning.</p>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote1-25" name="footnote1-25"></a>[<b>Footnote
+ 1:</b> <a href="#footnotetag1-25">(return)</a> The Marquis de
+ Chastelleux speaks of the perfect training of Washington's
+ saddle horses, and says the general broke them himself. He adds
+ "He (the general) is an excellent and bold horseman, leaping
+ the highest fences and going extremely quick, without standing
+ upon his stirrups, bearing on the bridle or letting his horse
+ run wild; circumstances which our young men look upon as so
+ essential a part of English horsemanship, that they would
+ rather break a leg or an arm than renounce them."]
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <p>He had, indeed, in all ways a thoroughly well-balanced mind
+ and temper. In great affairs he knew how to spare himself the
+ details to which others could attend as well as he, and yet he
+ was in no wise a despiser of small things. Before the Revolution,
+ there was a warm discussion in the Truro parish as to the proper
+ site for the Pohick Church. Washington and George Mason led
+ respectively the opposing forces, and each confidently asserted
+ that the site he preferred was the most convenient for the
+ largest number of parishioners. Finally, after much debate and no
+ conclusion, Washington appeared at a vestry meeting with a
+ collection of statistics. He had measured the distance from each
+ proposed site to the house of each parishioner, and found, as he
+ declared, that his site was nearer to more people than the other.
+ It is needless to add that he carried his point, and that the
+ spot he desired for the church was the one chosen.</p>
+
+ <p>The fact was that, if he confided a task of any sort to
+ another, he let it go on without meddling; but if he undertook
+ anything himself, he did it with the utmost thoroughness, and
+ there is much success in this capacity to take pains even in
+ small things. He managed his plantations entirely himself when he
+ was at home, and did it well. He knew the qualities of each
+ field, and the rotation of its crops. No improvement in
+ agriculture and no ingenious invention escaped his attention,
+ although he was not to be carried away by mere novelty, which had
+ such a fascination for his ex-secretary at Monticello. Every
+ resource of his estate was turned to good use, and his flour and
+ tobacco commanded absolute confidence with his brand upon them.
+ He followed in the same painstaking way all his business affairs,
+ and his accounts, all in his own hand, are wonderfully minute and
+ accurate. He was very exact in all business as well as very
+ shrewd at a bargain, and the tradition is that his neighbors
+ considered the general a formidable man in a horse-trade, that
+ most difficult of transactions. Parkinson mentions that
+ everything purchased or brought to the house was weighed,
+ measured, or counted, generally in the presence of the master
+ himself. Some of his letters to Lear, his private secretary, show
+ that he looked after his china and servants, the packing and
+ removal of his furniture with great minuteness. To some persons
+ this appears evidence of a petty mind in a great man, but to
+ those who reflect a little more deeply it will occur that this
+ accuracy and care in trifles were the same qualities which kept
+ the American army together, and enabled their owner to arrive on
+ time and in full preparation at Yorktown and Trenton. The worst
+ that can be said is that from his love of perfection and
+ completeness he may in this respect have wasted time and
+ strength, but his untiring industry and his capacity for work
+ were so great that he accomplished so far as we can see all this
+ drudgery without ever neglecting in the least more important
+ duties. It was a satisfaction to him to do it; for he was
+ methodical and exact to the last degree, and he was never happy
+ unless he held everything in which he was concerned easily within
+ his grasp.</p>
+
+ <p>He had the same attention to details in external things, and
+ he wished everything about him to be of the best, if not
+ "express'd in fancy." He had the handsomest carriages and the
+ finest horses always in his stables. It was necessary that the
+ furniture of his house should be as good as could be procured,
+ and he was most particular in regard to it. When he was preparing
+ as President to move to Philadelphia, he made the most searching
+ inquiries as to horses, stables, servants, schools for young
+ Custis, and everything affecting the household. He sent at the
+ same time most minute directions to his agents as to the
+ furniture of his house, touching upon everything, down to the
+ color of the curtains and the form of his wine-coolers. He had a
+ like feeling in regard to dress. His fancy for handsome and
+ appropriate dress in his youth has already been alluded to, but
+ he never ceased to take an interest in it; and in a letter to
+ McHenry, written in the last year of his life, he discusses with
+ great care the details of the uniform to be prescribed for
+ himself as commander-in-chief of the new army. It would be a
+ mistake, of course, to infer that he was a dandy, or that he gave
+ to dress and furniture the importance set upon them by shallow
+ minds. He simply valued them rightly, and enjoyed the good things
+ of this world. He had the best possible taste and the keenest
+ sense of what was appropriate, and it was this good taste and
+ sense of fitness which saved him from blundering in trifles, as
+ much as his ability and his sense of humor preserved him from
+ error in the conduct of great affairs.</p>
+
+ <p>The value of all this to the country he served cannot be too
+ often reiterated, for ridicule was a real danger to the
+ Revolutionary cause when it started. The raw levies, headed by
+ volunteer officers from the shop, the plough, the work-bench, or
+ the trading vessel, despite their patriotism and the nobility of
+ their cause, could easily have been made subjects of derision, a
+ perilous enemy to all new undertakings. Men prefer to be shot at,
+ if they are taken seriously, rather than to be laughed at and
+ made objects of contempt. The same principle holds true of a
+ revolution seeking the sympathy of a hostile world. When
+ Washington drew his sword beneath the Cambridge elm and put
+ himself at the head of the American army, effective ridicule
+ became impossible, for the dignity of the cause was seen in that
+ of its leader. The British generals soon found that they not only
+ had a dangerous enemy to encounter, but that they were dealing
+ with a man whose pride in his country and whose own sense of
+ self-respect reduced any assumption of personal superiority on
+ their part to speedy contempt. In the same way he brought dignity
+ to the new government of the Constitution when he was placed at
+ its head. The confederation had excited the just contempt of the
+ world, and Washington as President, by the force of his own
+ character and reputation, gave the United States at once the
+ respect not only of the American people, but of those of Europe
+ as well. Men felt instinctively that no government over which he
+ presided could ever fall into feebleness or disrepute.</p>
+
+ <p>In addition to the effect on the popular mind of his character
+ and services was that of his personal presence. If contemporary
+ testimony can be believed, few men have ever lived who had the
+ power to impress those who looked upon them so profoundly as
+ Washington. He was richly endowed by nature in all physical
+ attributes. Well over six feet high,<a id="footnotetag1-26" name=
+ "footnotetag1-26"></a><a href="#footnote1-26"><sup>1</sup></a>
+ large, powerfully built, and of uncommon muscular strength, he
+ had the force that always comes from great physical power. He had
+ a fine head, a strong face, with blue eyes set wide apart in deep
+ orbits, and beneath, a square jaw and firm-set mouth which told
+ of a relentless will. Houdon the sculptor, no bad judge, said he
+ had no conception of the majesty and grandeur of Washington's
+ form and features until he studied him as a subject for a statue.
+ Pages might be filled with extracts from the descriptions of
+ Washington given by French officers, by all sorts of strangers,
+ and by his own countrymen, but they all repeat the same story.
+ Every one who met him told of the commanding presence, and noble
+ person, the ineffable dignity, and the calm, simple, and stately
+ manners. No man ever left Washington's presence without a feeling
+ of reverence and respect amounting almost to awe.</p>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote1-26" name="footnote1-26"></a>[<b>Footnote
+ 1:</b> <a href="#footnotetag1-26">(return)</a> Lear in his
+ memoranda published recently in full in McClure's Magazine for
+ February, 1898, states that Washington measured after death six
+ feet three and one half inches in height, a foot and nine
+ inches across the shoulders, two feet across the elbows;
+ evidently a spare man with muscular arms, which we know to have
+ been also of unusual length.]
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <p>I will quote only a single one of the numerous descriptions of
+ Washington, and I select it because, although it is the least
+ favorable of the many I have seen, and is written in homely
+ phrase, it displays the most evident and entire sincerity. The
+ extract is from a letter written by David Ackerson of Alexandria,
+ Va., in 1811, in answer to an inquiry by his son. Mr. Ackerson
+ commanded a company in the Revolutionary war.</p>
+
+ <p>"Washington was not," he wrote, "what ladies would call a
+ pretty man, but in military costume a heroic figure, such as
+ would impress the memory ever afterward."</p>
+
+ <p>The writer had a good view of Washington three days before the
+ crossing of the Delaware.</p>
+
+ <p>"Washington," he says, "had a large thick nose, and it was
+ very red that day, giving me the impression that he was not so
+ moderate in the use of liquors as he was supposed to be. I found
+ afterward that this was a peculiarity. His nose was apt to turn
+ scarlet in a cold wind. He was standing near a small camp-fire,
+ evidently lost in thought and making no effort to keep warm. He
+ seemed six feet and a half in height, was as erect as an Indian,
+ and did not for a moment relax from a military attitude.
+ Washington's exact height was six feet two inches in his boots.
+ He was then a little lame from striking his knee against a tree.
+ His eye was so gray that it looked almost white, and he had a
+ troubled look on his colorless face. He had a piece of woolen
+ tied around his throat and was quite hoarse. Perhaps the throat
+ trouble from which he finally died had its origin about then.
+ Washington's boots were enormous. They were number 13. His
+ ordinary walking-shoes were number 11. His hands were large in
+ proportion, and he could not buy a glove to fit him and had to
+ have his gloves made to order. His mouth was his strong feature,
+ the lips being always tightly compressed. That day they were
+ compressed so tightly as to be painful to look at. At that time
+ he weighed two hundred pounds, and there was no surplus flesh
+ about him. He was tremendously muscled, and the fame of his great
+ strength was everywhere. His large tent when wrapped up with the
+ poles was so heavy that it required two men to place it in the
+ camp-wagon. Washington would lift it with one hand and throw it
+ in the wagon as easily as if it were a pair of saddle-bags. He
+ could hold a musket with one hand and shoot with precision as
+ easily as other men did with a horse-pistol. His lungs were his
+ weak point, and his voice was never strong. He was at that time
+ in the prime of life. His hair was a chestnut brown, his cheeks
+ were prominent, and his head was not large in contrast to every
+ other part of his body, which seemed large and bony at all
+ points. His finger-joints and wrists were so large as to be
+ genuine curiosities. As to his habits at that period I found out
+ much that might be interesting. He was an enormous eater, but was
+ content with bread and meat, if he had plenty of it. But hunger
+ seemed to put him in a rage. It was his custom to take a drink of
+ rum or whiskey on awakening in the morning. Of course all this
+ was changed when he grew old. I saw him at Alexandria a year
+ before he died. His hair was very gray, and his form was slightly
+ bent. His chest was very thin. He had false teeth, which did not
+ fit and pushed his under lip outward."<a id="footnotetag1-27"
+ name="footnotetag1-27"></a><a href=
+ "#footnote1-27"><sup>1</sup></a></p>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote1-27" name="footnote1-27"></a>[<b>Footnote
+ 1:</b> <a href="#footnotetag1-27">(return)</a> This letter,
+ recently printed, is in the collection of Dr. Toner, at
+ Washington. It contains some obvious errors, as in regard to
+ the color of the eyes, but it is nevertheless very interesting
+ and valuable.]
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <p>This description is certainly not a flattering one, and all
+ other accounts as well as the best portraits prove that
+ Washington was a much handsomer man than this letter would
+ indicate. Yet the writer, despite his freedom from all illusions
+ and his readiness to state frankly all defects, was profoundly
+ impressed by Washington's appearance as he watched him meditating
+ by the camp-fire at the crisis of the country's fate, and herein
+ lies the principal interest of his description.</p>
+
+ <p>This personal impressiveness, however, affected every one upon
+ all occasions.</p>
+
+ <p>Mr. Rush, for instance, saw Washington go on one occasion to
+ open Congress. He drove to the hall in a handsome carriage of his
+ own, with his servants dressed in white liveries. When he had
+ alighted he stopped on the step, and pausing faced round to wait
+ for his secretary. The vast crowd looked at him in dead silence,
+ and then, when he turned away, broke into wild cheering. At his
+ second inauguration he was dressed in deep mourning for the death
+ of his nephew. He took the oath of office in the Senate Chamber,
+ and Major Forman, who was present, wrote in his diary: "Every eye
+ was on him. When he said, 'I, George Washington,' my blood seemed
+ to run cold and every one seemed to start." At the inauguration
+ of Adams, another eye-witness wrote that Washington, dressed in
+ black velvet, with a military hat and black cockade, was the
+ central figure in the scene, and when he left the chamber the
+ crowds followed him, cheering and shouting to the door of his own
+ house.</p>
+
+ <p>There must have been something very impressive about a man
+ who, with no pretensions to the art of the orator and with no
+ touch of the charlatan, could so move and affect vast bodies of
+ men by his presence alone. But the people, with the keen eye of
+ affection, looked beyond the mere outward nobility of form. They
+ saw the soldier who had given them victory, the great statesman
+ who had led them out of confusion and faction to order and good
+ government. Party newspapers might rave, but the instinct of the
+ people was never at fault. They loved, trusted and well-nigh
+ worshiped Washington living, and they have honored and reverenced
+ him with an unchanging fidelity since his death, nearly a century
+ ago.</p>
+
+ <p>But little more remains to be said. Washington had his faults,
+ for he was human; but they are not easy to point out, so perfect
+ was his mastery of himself. He was intensely reserved and very
+ silent, and these are the qualities which gave him the reputation
+ in history of being distant and unsympathetic. In truth, he had
+ not only warm affections and a generous heart, but there was a
+ strong vein of sentiment in his composition. At the same time he
+ was in no wise romantic, and the ruling element in his make-up
+ was prose, good solid prose, and not poetry. He did not have the
+ poetical and imaginative quality so strongly developed in
+ Lincoln. Yet he was not devoid of imagination, although it was
+ here that he was lacking, if anywhere. He saw facts, knew them,
+ mastered and used them, and never gave much play to fancy; but as
+ his business in life was with men and facts, this deficiency, if
+ it was one, was of little moment. He was also a man of the
+ strongest passions in every way, but he dominated them; they
+ never ruled him. Vigorous animal passions were inevitable, of
+ course, in a man of such a physical make-up as his. How far he
+ gave way to them in his youth no one knows, but the scandals
+ which many persons now desire to have printed, ostensibly for the
+ sake of truth, are, so far as I have been able to learn, with one
+ or two dubious exceptions, of entirely modern parentage. I have
+ run many of them to earth; nearly all are destitute of
+ contemporary authority, and they may be relegated to the
+ dust-heaps.<a id="footnotetag1-28" name=
+ "footnotetag1-28"></a><a href="#footnote1-28"><sup>1</sup></a> If
+ he gave way to these propensities in his youth, the only
+ conclusion that I have been able to come to is that he mastered
+ them when he reached man's estate.</p>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote1-28" name="footnote1-28"></a>[<b>Footnote
+ 1:</b> <a href="#footnotetag1-28">(return)</a> The charge in
+ the pamphlet purporting to give an account of the trial of the
+ New York conspirators in 1776 is of such doubtful origin and
+ character that it hardly merits consideration, and the only
+ other allusion is in the well-known intercepted letter of
+ Harrison, which is of doubtful authenticity in certain
+ passages, open to suspicion from having been intercepted and
+ published by the enemy and quite likely to have been at best
+ merely a coarse jest of a character very common at that period
+ and entirely in keeping with the notorious habits of life and
+ speech peculiar to the writer. (See Life of John Adams, iii.
+ 35.)]
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <p>He had, too, a fierce temper, and although he gradually
+ subdued it, he would sometimes lose control of himself and burst
+ out into a tempest of rage. When he did so he would use strong
+ and even violent language, as he did at Kip's Landing and at
+ Monmouth. Well-intentioned persons in their desire to make him a
+ faultless being have argued at great length that Washington never
+ swore, and but for their argument the matter would never have
+ attracted much attention. He was anything but a profane man, but
+ the evidence is beyond question that if deeply angered he would
+ use a hearty English oath; and not seldom the action accompanied
+ the word, as when he rode among the fleeing soldiers at Kip's
+ Landing, striking them with his sword, and almost beside himself
+ at their cowardice. Judge Marshall used to tell also of an
+ occasion when Washington sent out an officer to cross a river and
+ bring back some information about the enemy, on which the action
+ of the morrow would depend. The officer was gone some time, came
+ back, and found the general impatiently pacing his tent. On being
+ asked what he had learned, he replied that the night was dark and
+ stormy, the river full of ice, and that he had not been able to
+ cross. Washington glared at him a moment, seized a large leaden
+ inkstand from the table, hurled it at the offender's head, and
+ said with a fierce oath, "Be off, and send me a <i>man</i>!" The
+ officer went, crossed the river, and brought back the
+ information.</p>
+
+ <p>But although he would now and then give way to these
+ tremendous bursts of anger, Washington was never unjust. As he
+ said to one officer, "I never judge the propriety of actions by
+ after events;" and in that sound philosophy is found the secret
+ not only of much of his own success, but of the devotion of his
+ officers and men. He might be angry with them, but he was never
+ unfair. In truth, he was too generous to be unjust or even
+ over-severe to any one, and there is not a line in all his
+ writings which even suggests that he ever envied any man. So long
+ as the work in hand was done, he cared not who had the glory, and
+ he was perfectly magnanimous and perfectly at ease about his own
+ reputation. He never showed the slightest anxiety to write his
+ own memoirs, and he was not in the least alarmed when it was
+ proposed to publish the memoirs of other people, like General
+ Charles Lee, which would probably reflect upon him.</p>
+
+ <p>He had the same confidence in the judgment of posterity that
+ he had in the future beyond the grave. He regarded death with
+ entire calmness and even indifference not only when it came to
+ him, but when in previous years it had threatened him. He loved
+ life and tasted of it deeply, but the courage which never forsook
+ him made him ready to face the inevitable at any moment with an
+ unruffled spirit. In this he was helped by his religious faith,
+ which was as simple as it was profound. He had been brought up in
+ the Protestant Episcopal Church, and to that church he always
+ adhered; for its splendid liturgy and stately forms appealed to
+ him and satisfied him. He loved it too as the church of his home
+ and his childhood. Yet he was as far as possible from being
+ sectarian, and there is not a word of his which shows anything
+ but the most entire liberality and toleration. He made no parade
+ of his religion, for in this as in other things he was perfectly
+ simple and sincere. He was tortured by no doubts or questionings,
+ but believed always in an overruling Providence and in a merciful
+ God, to whom he knelt and prayed in the day of darkness or in the
+ hour of triumph with a supreme and childlike confidence.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <p>As I bring these volumes to a close I am conscious that they
+ speak, so far as they speak at all, in a tone of almost unbroken
+ praise of the great man they attempt to portray. If this be so,
+ it is because I could come to no other conclusions. For many
+ years I have studied minutely the career of Washington, and with
+ every step the greatness of the man has grown upon me, for
+ analysis has failed to discover the act of his life which, under
+ the conditions of the time, I could unhesitatingly pronounce to
+ have been an error. Such has been my experience, and although my
+ deductions may be wrong, they at least have been carefully and
+ slowly made. I see in Washington a great soldier who fought a
+ trying war to a successful end impossible without him; a great
+ statesman who did more than all other men to lay the foundations
+ of a republic which has endured in prosperity for more than a
+ century. I find in him a marvelous judgment which was never at
+ fault, a penetrating vision which beheld the future of America
+ when it was dim to other eyes, a great intellectual force, a will
+ of iron, an unyielding grasp of facts, and an unequaled strength
+ of patriotic purpose. I see in him too a pure and high-minded
+ gentleman of dauntless courage and stainless honor, simple and
+ stately of manner, kind and generous of heart. Such he was in
+ truth. The historian and the biographer may fail to do him
+ justice, but the instinct of mankind will not fail. The real hero
+ needs not books to give him worshipers. George Washington will
+ always hold the love and reverence of men because they see
+ embodied in him the noblest possibilities of humanity.</p>
+
+ <p>&nbsp;</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h2><a name="INDEX" id="INDEX"></a>INDEX for Volumes I &amp;
+ II</h2>
+
+ <div class="index">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">ACKERSON, DAVID,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">describes Washington's personal appearance, ii.
+ 386-388.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Adams, Abigail,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">on Washington's appearance in 1775, i. 137.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Adams, John,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">moves appointment of Washington as
+ commander-in-chief, i. 134;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">on political necessity for his appointment,
+ 135;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">and objections to it, 135;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">statement as to Washington's difficulties,
+ 163;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">over-sanguine as to American prospects,
+ 171;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">finds fault with Washington, 214, 215;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">one of few national statesmen, 252;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">on Washington's opinion of titles, ii. 52;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">advocates ceremony, 54;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">returns to United States, 137;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">attacked by Jefferson as a monarchist, 226;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">praised by Democrats as superior to Washington,
+ 251;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his administration upheld by Washington,
+ 259;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">advised by Washington, 260;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his inauguration, 276;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">sends special mission to France, 284;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">urges Washington to take command of provisional
+ army, 285;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">wishes to make Knox senior to Hamilton,
+ 286;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">censured by Washington, gives way, 287;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">lack of sympathy with Washington, 287;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his nomination of Murray disapproved by
+ Washington, 292, 293;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">letter of Washington to, on immigration,
+ 326.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Adams, J.Q.,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">on weights and measures, ii. 81.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Adams, Samuel,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">not sympathized with by Washington in working
+ for independence, i. 131;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his inability to sympathize with Washington,
+ 204;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">an enemy of Constitution, ii. 71;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">a genuine American, 309.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Alcudia, Duke de,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">interviews with Pinckney, ii. 166.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Alexander, Philip,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">hunts with Washington, i. 115.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Alien and Sedition Laws,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">approved by Washington and Federalists, ii.
+ 290, 297.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Ames, Fisher,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">speech on behalf of administration in Jay
+ treaty affair, ii. 210.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Andr&eacute;, Major,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">meets Arnold, i. 282;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">announces capture to Arnold, 284;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">confesses, 284;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">condemned and executed, 287;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">justice of the sentence, 287, 288;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Washington's opinion of, 288, ii. 357.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Armstrong, John, Major,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">writes Newburg address, i. 335.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Army of the Revolution,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">at Boston, adopted by Congress, i. 134;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">its organization and character, 136-143;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">sectional jealousies in, at New York, 162;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">goes to pieces after defeat, 167, 175, 176;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">condition in winter of 1777, 186;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">difficulties between officers, 189;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">with foreign officers, 190-192;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">improvement as shown by condition after
+ Brandywine and Germantown, 200, 201;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">hard winter at Valley Forge, 228;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">maintained alive only by Washington, 227, 228,
+ 232;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">improved morale at Monmouth, 239;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">mutinies for lack of pay, 258;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">suffers during 1779, 270;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">bad condition in 1780, 279;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">again mutinies for pay, 291, 292, 295;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">conduct of troops, 292, 293;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">jealousy of people towards, 332;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">badly treated by States and by Congress,
+ 333;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">grows mutinous, 334;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">adopts Newburg addresses, 335, 336;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">ready for a military dictatorship, 338,
+ 340;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">farewell of Washington to, 345.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Arnold, Benedict,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">sent by Washington to attack Quebec, i.
+ 144;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">sent against Burgoyne, 210;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">plans treason, 281;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">shows loyalist letter to Washington, 282;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">meets Andr&eacute;, 282;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">receives news of Andr&eacute;'s capture,
+ 284;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">escapes, 284, 285;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">previous benefits from Washington, 286;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Washington's opinion of, 288;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">ravages Virginia, 303;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">sent back to New York, 303;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">one of the few men who deceived Washington, ii.
+ 336.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Arnold, Mrs.,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">entertains Washington at time of her husband's
+ treachery, i. 284, 285.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Articles of Confederation,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">their inadequacy early seen by Washington, i.
+ 297, 298; ii. 17.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Asgill, Capt.,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">selected for retaliation for murder of Huddy,
+ i. 328;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">efforts for his release, 329;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">release ordered by Congress, 330.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza"></div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">BACHE, B.F.,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">publishes Jay treaty in "Aurora," ii. 185;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">joins in attack on Washington, 238, 244;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">rejoices over his retirement, 256.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Baker,&mdash;&mdash;,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">works out a pedigree for Washington, i. 31.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Ball, Joseph,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">advises against sending Washington to sea, i.
+ 49, 50.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Barbadoes,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Washington's description of, i. 64.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Beckley, John,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">accuses Washington of embezzling, ii. 245.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Bernard, John,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his conversation with Washington referred to,
+ i. 58, 107;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">describes encounter with Washington, ii.
+ 281-283;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his description of Washington's conversation,
+ 343-348.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Blackwell, Rev. Dr.,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">calls on Washington with Dr. Logan, ii.
+ 264.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Blair, John,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">appointed to Supreme Court, ii. 73.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Bland, Mary,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">"Lowland Beauty," admired by Washington, i. 95,
+ 96.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Blount, Governor,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">pacifies Cherokees, ii. 94.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Boston,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">visit of Washington to, i. 97, 99;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">political troubles in, 120;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">British measures against condemned by Virginia,
+ 122, 123;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">appeals to colonies, 124;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">protests against Jay treaty, ii. 186;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">answered by Washington, 190.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Botetourt, Lord, Governor of Virginia,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">quarrels with Assembly, i. 121;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">manages to calm dissension, 122;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">on friendly terms with Washington, 122.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Braddock, General Edward,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">arrives in Virginia, i. 82;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">invites Washington to serve on his staff,
+ 82;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">respects him, 83;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his character and unfitness for his position,
+ 83;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">despises provincials, 83;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">accepts Washington's advice as to dividing
+ force, 84;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">rebukes Washington for warning against ambush,
+ 85;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">insists on fighting by rule, 85;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">defeated and mortally wounded, 85;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">death and burial, 87.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Bradford, William,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">succeeds Randolph, ii. 246.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Brandywine,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">battle of, i. 196-198.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Bunker Hill,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">question of Washington regarding battle of, i.
+ 136.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Burgoyne, General John,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">junction of Howe with, feared by Washington, i.
+ 194, 195, 205, 206;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">significance of his defeat, 202;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">danger of his invasion foreseen by Washington,
+ 203-206;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">captures Ticonderoga, 207;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">outnumbered and defeated, 210;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">surrenders, 211.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Burke, Edmund,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">understands significance of Washington's
+ leadership, i. 202;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">unsettled by French Revolution, ii. 294.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza"></div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">CABOT, GEORGE,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">entertains Lafayette's son, ii. 366.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Cadwalader, General,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">fails to cross Delaware to help Washington, i.
+ 180;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">duel with Conway, 226.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Calvert, Eleanor,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">misgivings of Washington over her marriage to
+ John Custis, i. 111.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Camden, battle of, i. 281.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Canada,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">captured by Wolfe, i. 94;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">expedition of Montgomery against, 143, 144;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">project of Conway cabal against, 222; 253;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">project of Lafayette to attack, 254;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">plan considered dangerous by Washington, 254,
+ 255;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">not undertaken by France, 256.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Carleton, Sir Guy,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">informs Washington of address of Commons for
+ peace, i. 324;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">suspected by Washington, 325;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">remonstrates against retaliation by Washington
+ for murder of</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Huddy, 328;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">disavows Lippencott, 328;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">fears plunder of New York city, 345;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">urges Indians to attack the United States, ii.
+ 102, 175.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Carlisle, Earl of,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">peace commissioner, i. 233.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Carlyle, Thomas,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">sneers at Washington, i. 4, 14;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">calls him "a bloodless Cromwell," i. 69, ii.
+ 332;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">fails to understand his reticence, i. 70;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">despises him for not seizing power, 341.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Carmichael, William,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">minister at Madrid, ii. 165;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">on commission regarding the Mississippi,
+ 166.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Carrington, Paul,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">letter of Washington to, ii. 208;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Washington's friendship for, 363.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Cary, Mary,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">early love affair of Washington with, i.
+ 96.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Chamberlayne, Major,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">entertains Washington at Williams' Ferry, i.
+ 101.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Charleston,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">siege and capture of, i. 273, 274, 276.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Chastellux, Marquis de,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Washington's friendship for and letter to, ii.
+ 351;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">on Washington's training of horses, 380.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Cherokees,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">beaten by Sevier, ii. 89;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">pacified by Blount, 94,101.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Chester, Colonel,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">researches on Washington pedigree, i. 31.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Chickasaws,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">desert from St. Clair, ii. 96.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">China,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">honors Washington, i. 6.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Choctaws,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">peaceable in 1788, ii. 89.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Cincinnati, Society of the,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Washington's connection with, ii. 4.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Clarke, Governor,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">thinks Washington is invading popular rights,
+ i. 215.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Cleaveland, Rev.&mdash;&mdash;,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">complimented by Washington, ii. 359.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Clinton, George,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">appealed to by Washington to attack Burgoyne,
+ i. 210;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">journey with Washington to Ticonderoga,
+ 343;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">enters New York city, 345;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">letter of Washington to, ii. 1;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">meets Washington on journey to inauguration,
+ 45;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">opponent of the Constitution, 71;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">orders seizure of French privateers, 153.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Clinton, Sir Henry,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">fails to help Burgoyne, i. 210;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">replaces Howe at Philadelphia, his character,
+ 232;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">tries to cut off Lafayette, 233;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">leaves Philadelphia, 234;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">defeats Lee at Monmouth, 236;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">retreats to New York, 238;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">withdraws from Newport, 248;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">makes a raid, 265;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">fortifies Stony Point, 268;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his aimless warfare, 269, 270;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">after capturing Charleston returns to New York,
+ 276;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">tries to save Andr&eacute;, 287;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">alarmed at attacks on New York, 306;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">jealous of Cornwallis, refuses to send
+ reinforcements, 308;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">deceived by Washington, 311;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">sends Graves to relieve Cornwallis, 312.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Congress, Continental,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Washington's journey to, i. 128;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">its character and ability, 129;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">its state papers, 129;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">adjourns, 132;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">in second session, resolves to petition the
+ king, 133;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">adopts Massachusetts army and makes Washington
+ commander, 134;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">reasons for his choice, 135;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">adheres to short-term enlistments, 149;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">influenced to declare independence by
+ Washington, 160;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">hampers Washington in campaign of New York,
+ 167;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">letters of Washington to, 170, 179, 212, 225,
+ 229, 266, 278, 295, 321, 323, 333;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">takes steps to make army permanent, 171;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">its over-confidence, 171;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">insists on holding Forts Washington and Lee,
+ 174;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">dissatisfied with Washington's inactivity,
+ 187;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">criticises his proclamation requiring oath of
+ allegiance, 189;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">makes unwise appointments of officers, 189;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">especially of foreigners, 190-192; 248,
+ 249;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">applauds Washington's efforts at Germantown,
+ 200;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">deposes Schuyler and St. Clair, 208;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">appoints Gates, 210;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">irritation against Washington, 212-215;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">falls under guidance of Conway cabal, 221,
+ 222;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">discovers incompetence of cabal, 223;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">meddles with prisoners and officers, 231;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">rejects English peace offers, 233;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">makes alliance with France, 241;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">suppresses protests of officers against
+ D'Estaing, 244;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">decline in its character, 257;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">becomes feeble, 258;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">improvement urged by Washington, 259, 266;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">appoints Gates to command in South, 268;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">loses interest in war, 278;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">asks Washington to name general for the South,
+ 295;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">considers reduction of army, 313;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">elated by Yorktown, 323;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">its unfair treatment of army, 333, 335;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">driven from Philadelphia by Pennsylvania
+ troops, 340;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">passes half-pay act, 342;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">receives commission of Washington, 347-349;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">disbands army, ii. 6;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">indifferent to Western expansion, 15;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">continues to decline, 22;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">merit of its Indian policy, 88.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Congress, Federal,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">establishes departments, ii. 64;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">opened by Washington, 78, 79;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">ceremonial abolished by Jefferson, 79;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">recommendations made to by Washington,
+ 81-83;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">acts upon them, 81-83;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">creates commission to treat with Creeks,
+ 90;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">increases army, 94, 99;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">fails to solve financial problems, 106;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">debates Hamilton's report on credit, 107,
+ 108;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">establishes national bank, 109;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">establishes protective revenue duties, 113;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">imposes an excise tax, 123;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">prepares for retaliation on Great Britain,
+ 176;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Senate ratifies Jay treaty conditionally,
+ 184;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">House demands papers, 207;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">debates over its right to concur in treaty,
+ 208-210;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">refuses to adjourn on Washington's birthday,
+ 247;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">prepares for war with France, 285;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">passes Alien and Sedition Laws, 296.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Constitution, Federal,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">necessity of, foreseen by Washington, ii.
+ 17-18, 23, 24;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">the Annapolis Convention, 23-29;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">the Federal Convention, 30-36;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Washington's attitude in, 31,34;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his influence, 36;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">campaign for ratification, 38-41.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Contrecoeur, Captain,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">leader of French and Indians in Virginia, i.
+ 75.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">"Conway cabal,"</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">elements of in Congress, i. 214, 215;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">in the army, 215;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">organized by Conway, 217;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">discovered by Washington, 220;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">gets control of Board of War, 221;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">tries to make Washington resign, 222, 224;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">fails to invade Canada or provide supplies,
+ 222, 223;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">harassed by Washington's letters, 223,226;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">breaks down, 226.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Conway, Moncure D.,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his life of Randolph, ii. 65, note, 196;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his defense of Randolph in Fauchet letter
+ affair, 196;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">on Washington's motives, 200;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">on his unfair treatment of Randolph, 201,
+ 202.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Conway, Thomas,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">demand for higher rank refused by Washington,
+ i. 216;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">plots against him, 217;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his letter discovered by Washington, 221;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">made inspector-general, 221, 222;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">complains to Congress of his reception at camp,
+ 225;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">resigns, has duel with Cadwalader, 226;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">apologizes to Washington and leaves country,
+ 226.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Cooke, Governor,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">remonstrated with by Washington for raising
+ state troops, i. 186.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Cornwallis, Lord,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">pursues Washington in New Jersey, i. 175;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">repulsed at Assunpink, 181;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">outgeneraled by Washington, 182;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">surprises Sullivan at Brandywine, 197;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">defeats Lee at Monmouth, 236;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">pursues Greene in vain, 302;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">wins battle of Guilford Court House, 302;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">retreats into Virginia, 302;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">joins British troops in Virginia, 303;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his dangerous position, 304;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">urged by Clinton to return troops to New York,
+ 306;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">plunders Virginia, 307;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">defeats Lafayette and Wayne, 307;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">wishes to retreat South, 307;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">ordered by ministry to stay on the Chesapeake,
+ 307;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">abandoned by Clinton, 308;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">establishes himself at Yorktown, 308;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">withdraws into town, 315;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">besieged, 316, 317;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">surrenders, 317;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">outgeneraled by Washington, 319, 320.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Cowpens,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">battle of, i. 301.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Craik, Dr.,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">attends Washington in last illness, ii.
+ 300-302;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Washington's friendship with, 363.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Creeks,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">their relations with Spaniards, ii. 89, 90;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">quarrel with Georgia, 90;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">agree to treaty with United States, 91;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">stirred up by Spain, 101.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Curwen, Samuel,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">on Washington's appearance, i. 137.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Cushing, Caleb,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">appointed to Supreme Court, ii. 72.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Custis, Daniel Parke,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">first husband of Martha Washington, i. 101.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Custis, G.W.P.,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">tells mythical story of Washington and the
+ colt, i. 45;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Washington's care for, ii. 369.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Custis, John,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Washington's tenderness toward, i. 111;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">care for his education and marriage, 111;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">hunts with Washington, 141;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">death of, 322.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Custis, Nellie,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">marriage with Washington's nephew, ii. 281,
+ 369;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">letter of Washington to, 377.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza"></div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">DAGWORTHY, CAPTAIN,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">claims to outrank Washington in Virginia army,
+ i. 91, 97.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Dallas, Alexander,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">protests to Genet against sailing of Little
+ Sarah, ii. 155.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Dalton, Senator,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">entertains Washington at Newburyport, ii.
+ 359.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Deane, Silas,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">promises commissions to foreign military
+ adventurers, i. 190.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">De Barras,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">jealous of De Grasse, decides not to aid him,
+ i. 310;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">persuaded to do so by Washington and
+ Rochambeau, 311;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">reaches Chesapeake, 312.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">De Grasse, Comte,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">announces intention of coming to Washington, i.
+ 305;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">warned by Washington not to come to New York,
+ 305;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">sails to Chesapeake, 306;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">asked to meet Washington there, 308;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">reaches Chesapeake, 312;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">repulses British fleet, 312;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">wishes to return to West Indies, 315;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">persuaded to remain by Washington, 315;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">refuses to join Washington in attack on
+ Charleston, 322;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">returns to West Indies, 322.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">De Guichen,&mdash;&mdash;,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">commander of French fleet in West Indies, i.
+ 280;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">appealed to for aid by Washington, 281;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">returns home, 282.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Delancey, Oliver,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">escapes American attack, i. 306.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Democratic party,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">its formation as a French party, ii. 225;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">furnished with catch-words by Jefferson,
+ 226;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">with a newspaper organ, 227;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">not ready to oppose Washington for president in
+ 1792, 235;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">organized against treasury measure, 236;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">stimulated by French Revolution, 238;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">supports Genet, 237;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">begins to attack Washington, 238;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his opinion of it, 239, 240, 258, 261, 267,
+ 268;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">forms clubs on French model, 241;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Washington's opinion of, 242, 243;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">continues to abuse him, 244, 245, 250, 252;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">exults at his retirement, 256;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">prints slanders, 257.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Demont, William,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">betrays plans of Fort Washington to Howe, i.
+ 175.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">D'Estaing, Admiral,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">reaches America, i. 242;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">welcomed by Washington, 243;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">fails to cut off Howe and goes to Newport,
+ 243;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">after battle with Howe goes to Boston, 244;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">letter of Washington to, 246;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">sails to West Indies, 246;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">second letter of Washington to, 247;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">attacks Savannah, 248;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">withdraws, 248.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">De Rochambeau, Comte,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">arrives at Newport, i. 277;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">ordered to await second division of army,
+ 278;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">refuses to attack New York, 280;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">wishes a conference with Washington, 282;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">meets him at Hartford, 282;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">disapproves attacking Florida, 301;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">joins Washington before New York, 306;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">persuades De Barras to join De Grasse, 311;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">accompanies Washington to Yorktown, 314.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Dickinson, John,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">commands scouts at Monmouth, i. 326.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Digby, Admiral,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">bitter comments of Washington on, i. 325.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Dinwiddie, Governor,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">remonstrates against French encroachments, i.
+ 66;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">sends Washington on mission to French, 66;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">quarrels with the Virginia Assembly, 71;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">letter of Washington to, 73;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">wishes Washington to attack French, 79;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">tries to quiet discussions between regular and
+ provincial troops, 80;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">military schemes condemned by Washington,
+ 91;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">prevents his getting a royal commission,
+ 93.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Diplomatic History:</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">refusal by Washington of special privileges to
+ French minister, ii. 59-61;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">slow growth of idea of non-intervention, 132,
+ 133;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">difficulties owing to French Revolution,
+ 134;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">to English retention of frontier posts,
+ 135;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">attitude of Spain, 135;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">relations with Barbary States, 136;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">mission of Gouverneur Morris to sound English
+ feeling, 137;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">assertion by Washington of non-intervention
+ policy toward Europe, 145, 146;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">issue of neutrality proclamation, 147, 148;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">its importance, 148;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">mission of Genet, 148-162;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">guarded attitude of Washington toward
+ &eacute;migr&eacute;s, 151;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">excesses of Genet, 151;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">neutrality enforced, 153, 154;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">the Little Sarah episode, 154-157;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">recall of Genet demanded, 158;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">futile missions of Carmichael and Short to
+ Spain, 165, 166;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">successful treaty of Thomas Pinckney,
+ 166-168;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">question as to binding nature of French treaty
+ of commerce, 169-171;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">irritating relations with England, 173-176;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Jay's mission, 177-184;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">the questions at issue, 180, 181;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">terms of the treaty agreed upon, 182;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">good and bad points, 183;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">ratified by Senate, 184;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">signing delayed by renewal of provision order,
+ 185;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">war with England prevented by signing, 205;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">difficulties with France over Morris and
+ Monroe, 211-214;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">doings of Monroe, 212, 213;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">United States compromised by him, 213, 214;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Monroe replaced by Pinckney, 214;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">review of Washington's foreign policy,
+ 216-219;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">mission of Pinckney, Marshall, and Gerry to
+ France, 284;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">the X.Y.Z. affair, 285.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Donop, Count,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">drives Griffin out of New Jersey, i. 180;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">killed at Fort Mercer, 217.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Dorchester, Lord.</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">See Carleton.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Duane, James,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">letters of Washington to, i. 294, 329.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Dumas, Comte,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">describes enthusiasm of people for Washington,
+ i. 288.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Dunbar, Colonel,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">connection with Braddock's expedition, i. 84,
+ 87.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Dunmore, Lord,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">arrives in Virginia as governor, i. 122;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">on friendly terms with Washington, 122,
+ 123;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">dissolves assembly, 123.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Duplaine, French consul,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">exequatur of revoked, ii. 159.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza"></div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">EDEN, WILLIAM,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">peace commissioner, i. 233.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Edwards, Jonathan,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">a typical New England American, ii. 309.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Emerson, Rev. Dr.,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">describes Washington's reforms in army before
+ Boston, i. 140.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Emigr&eacute;s,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Washington's treatment of, ii. 151, 253.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">England,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">honors Washington, i. 20;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">arrogant behavior toward colonists, 80, 81, 82,
+ 148;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">its policy towards Boston condemned by
+ Virginia, 119, 121, 123, 126;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">by Washington, 124, 125,126;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">sends incompetent officers to America, 155,
+ 201, 202, 233;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">stupidity of its operations, 203, 205, 206,
+ 265;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">sincerity of its desire for peace doubted by
+ Washington, 324, 325;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">arrogant conduct of toward the United States
+ after peace, ii. 24, 25;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">stirs up the Six Nations and Northwestern
+ Indians, 92, 94, 101;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">folly of her policy, 102;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">sends Hammond as minister, 169;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">its opportunity to win United States as ally
+ against France, 171, 172;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">adopts contrary policy of opposition, 172,
+ 173;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">adopts "provision order," 174;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">incites Indians against United States, 175;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">indignation of America against, 176;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">receives Jay well, but refuses to yield points
+ at issue, 180;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">insists on monopoly of West India trade,
+ 180;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">and on impressment, 181;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">later history of, 181;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">renews provision order, 185;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">danger of war with, 193;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">avoided by Jay treaty, 205;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Washington said to sympathize with England,
+ 252;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his real hostility toward, 254;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Washington's opinion of liberty in, 344.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Ewing, General James,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">fails to help Washington at Trenton, i.
+ 180.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza"></div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">FAIRFAX, BRYAN,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">hunts with Washington, i. 115;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">remonstrates with Washington against violence
+ of patriots, 124;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Washington's replies to, 124, 126, 127;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">letter of Washington to in Revolution, ii.
+ 366.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Fairfax, George,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">married to Miss Cary, i. 55;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">accompanies Washington on surveying expedition,
+ 58;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">letter of Washington to, 133.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Fairfax, Mrs.&mdash;&mdash;,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">letter of Washington to, ii. 367.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Fairfax, Thomas, Lord,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his career in England, i. 55;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">comes to his Virginia estates, 55;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his character, 55;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his friendship for Washington, 56;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">sends him to survey estates, 56;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">plans a manor across the Blue Ridge, 59;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">secures for Washington position as public
+ surveyor, 60;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">probably influential in securing his
+ appointment as envoy to</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">French, 66;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">hunts with Washington, 115;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his death remembered by Washington, ii.
+ 366.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Fairlie, Major,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">amuses Washington, ii. 374.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Farewell Address, ii. 248, 249.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Fauchet, M.,&mdash;&mdash;,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">letter of, incriminating Randolph, ii. 195,196,
+ 202.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Fauntleroy, Betsy,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">love affair of Washington with, i. 97.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Fauquier, Francis, Governor,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">at Washington's wedding, i. 101.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Federal courts,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">suggested by Washington, i. 150.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">"Federalist,"</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">circulated by Washington, ii. 40.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Federalist party,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">begun by Hamilton's controversy with Jefferson,
+ ii. 230;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">supports Washington for re&euml;lection,
+ 235;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">organized in support of financial measures,
+ 236;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Washington looked upon by Democrats as its
+ head, 244, 247;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">only its members trusted by Washington, 246,
+ 247, 259, 260, 261;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">becomes a British party, 255;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Washington considers himself a member of,
+ 269-274;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">the only American party until 1800, 273;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">strengthened by X, Y, Z affair, 285;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">dissensions in, over army appointments,
+ 286-290;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">its horror at French Revolution, 294, 295;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">attempts of Washington to heal divisions in,
+ 298.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Fenno's newspaper,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">used by Hamilton against the "National
+ Gazette," ii. 230.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Finances of the Revolution,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">effect of paper money on war, i. 258, 262;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">difficulties in paying troops, 258;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">labors of Robert Morris, 259, 264, 312;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">connection of Washington with, 263;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">continued collapse, 280, 290, 312.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Financial History,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">bad condition in 1789, ii. 105;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">decay of credit, paper, and revenue, 106;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">futile propositions, 106;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Hamilton's report on credit, 107;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">debate over assumption of state debt, 107;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">bargain between Hamilton and Jefferson,
+ 108;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">establishment of bank, 109;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">other measures adopted, 112;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">protection in the first Congress, 112-115;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">the excise tax imposed, 123;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">opposition to, 123-127;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">"Whiskey Rebellion," 127-128.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Fishbourn, Benjamin,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">nomination rejected by Senate, ii. 63.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Fontanes, M. de,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">delivers funeral oration on Washington, i.
+ 1.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Forbes, General,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">renews attack on French in Ohio, i. 93.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Forman, Major,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">describes impressiveness of Washington, ii.
+ 389.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Fox, Charles James,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">understands significance of Washington's
+ leadership, i. 202.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">France,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">pays honors to Washington, i. I, 6;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">war with England, see French and Indian
+ war;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">takes possession of Ohio, 65;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">considers Jumonville assassinated by
+ Washington, 74;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">importance of alliance with foreseen by
+ Washington, 191;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">impressed by battle of Germantown, 200;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">makes treaty of alliance with United States,
+ 241;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">sends D'Estaing, 243;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">declines to attack Canada, 256;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">sends army and fleet, 274, 277;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">relations of French to Washington, 318,
+ 319;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">absolute necessity of their naval aid, 318,
+ 319;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Revolution in, applauded by America, ii. 138,
+ 139, 142;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">real character understood by Washington and
+ others, 139-142, 295;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">debate over in America, 142;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">question of relations with United States, 143,
+ 144;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">warned by Washington, 144, 145;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">neutrality toward declared, 147;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">tries to drive United States into alliance,
+ 149;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">terms of the treaty with, 169;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">latter held to be no longer binding,
+ 169-171;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">abrogates it, 171;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">demands recall of Morris, 211;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">mission of Monroe to, 211-214;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">makes vague promises, 212, 213;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Washington's fairness toward, 253;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">tries to bully or corrupt American ministers,
+ 284;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">the X, Y, Z affair, 285;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">war with not expected by Washington, 291;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">danger of concession to, 292, 293;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">progress of Revolution in, 294.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Franklin, Benjamin,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">gets wagons for Braddock's expedition, i.
+ 84;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">remark on Howe in Philadelphia, 219;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">national, like Washington, 252, ii. 8;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">despairs of success of Constitutional
+ Convention, 35;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his unquestioned Americanism, 309;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">respect of Washington for, 344, 346, 364.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Frederick II., the Great,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his opinion of Trenton campaign, i. 183;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">of Monmouth campaign, 239.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">French and Indian war, i. 64-94;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">inevitable conflict, 65;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">efforts to negotiate, 66, 67;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">hostilities begun, 72;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">the Jumonville affair, 74;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">defeat of Washington, 76;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Braddock's campaign, 82-88;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">ravages in Virginia, 90;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">carried to a favorable conclusion by Pitt, 93,
+ 94.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Freneau, Philip,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">brought to Philadelphia and given clerkship by
+ Jefferson, ii. 227;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">attacks Adams, Hamilton, and Washington in
+ "National Gazette," 227;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">makes conflicting statements as to Jefferson's
+ share in the paper, 227, 228;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">the first to attack Washington, 238.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Fry, Colonel,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">commands a Virginia regiment against French and
+ Indians, i. 71;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">dies, leaving Washington in command, 75.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza"></div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">GAGE, GENERAL THOMAS,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">conduct at Boston condemned by Washington, i.
+ 126;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his treatment of prisoners protested against by
+ Washington, 145;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">sends an arrogant reply, 147;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">second letter of Washington to, 147, 156.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Gallatin, Albert,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">connection with Whiskey Rebellion, ii. 129.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Gates, Horatio,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">visits Mt. Vernon, his character, i. 132;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">refuses to cooperate with Washington at
+ Trenton, 180;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his appointment as commander against Burgoyne
+ urged, 208;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">chosen by Congress, 209;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his part in defeating Burgoyne, 210;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">neglects to inform Washington, 211;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">loses his head and wishes to supplant
+ Washington, 215;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">forced to send troops South, 216, 217;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his attitude discovered by Washington, 221;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">makes feeble efforts at opposition, 221,
+ 223;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">correspondence with Washington, 221, 223,
+ 226;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">becomes head of board of war, 221;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">quarrels with Wilkinson, 223;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">sent to his command, 226;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">fears attack of British on Boston, 265;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">sent by Congress to command in South, 268;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">defeated at Camden, 281, 294;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">loses support of Congress, 294.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Genet, Edmond Charles,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">arrives as French minister, ii. 148;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his character, 149;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">violates neutrality, 151;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his journey to Philadelphia, 151;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">reception by Washington, 152;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">complains of it, 153;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">makes demands upon State Department, 153;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">protests at seizure of privateers, 153;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">insists on sailing of Little Sarah, 155;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">succeeds in getting vessel away, 157;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his recall demanded, 158;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">reproaches Jefferson, 158;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">remains in America, 158;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">threatens to appeal from Washington to
+ Massachusetts, 159;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">demands denial from Washington of Jay's
+ statements, 159;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">loses popular support, 160;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">tries to raise a force to invade Southwest,
+ 161;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">prevented by state and federal authorities,
+ 162;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his arrival the signal for divisions of
+ parties, 237;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">hurts Democratic party by his excesses,
+ 241;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">suggests clubs, 241.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">George IV.,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Washington's opinion of, ii. 346.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Georgia,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">quarrels with Creeks, asks aid of United
+ States, ii. 90;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">becomes dissatisfied with treaty, 91;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">disregards treaties of the United States,
+ 103.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Gerard, M.,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">notifies Washington of return of D'Estaing, i.
+ 246.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Germantown,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">battle of, i. 199.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Gerry, Elbridge,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">on special mission to France, ii. 284;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">disliked by Washington, 292.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Giles, W.B.,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">attacks Washington in Congress, ii. 251,
+ 252.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Gist, Christopher,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">accompanies Washington on his mission to
+ French, i. 66;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">wishes to shoot French Indians, 68.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Gordon,&mdash;&mdash;,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">letter of Washington to, i. 227.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Graves, Admiral,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">sent to relieve Cornwallis, i. 312; defeated by
+ De Grasse, 312.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Grayson, William,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">hunts with Washington, i. 115; letter to, ii.
+ 22.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Green Springs,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">battle of, i. 307.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Greene, General Nathanael,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">commands at Long Island, ill with fever, i.
+ 164;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">wishes forts on Hudson held, 174;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">late in attacking at Germantown, 199;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">conducts retreat, 200;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">succeeds Mifflin as quartermaster-general,
+ 232;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">selected by Washington to command in South,
+ 268;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">commands army at New York in absence of
+ Washington, 282;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">appointed to command Southern army, 295;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">retreats from Cornwallis, 302;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">fights battle of Guilford Court House, 302;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">clears Southern States of enemy, 302;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">strong position, 304;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">reinforced by Washington, 322;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">letter to, 325;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his military capacity early recognized by
+ Washington, ii. 334;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">amuses Washington, 374.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Greene, Mrs.&mdash;&mdash;,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">dances three hours with Washington, ii.
+ 380.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Grenville, Lord,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">denies that ministry has incited Indians
+ against United States, ii. 175;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">receives Jay, 180;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">declines to grant United States trade with West
+ Indies, 181.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Griffin, David,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">commissioner to treat with Creeks, ii. 90.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Griffin,&mdash;&mdash;,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">fails to help Washington at Trenton, i.
+ 180.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Grymes, Lucy,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">the "Lowland Beauty," love affair of Washington
+ with, i. 95;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">marries Henry Lee, 96.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza"></div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">HALDIMAND, SIR FREDERICK,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">leads Indians against colonists, i. 325.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Hale, Nathan, compared with Andr&eacute;, i.
+ 288.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Half-King,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">kept to English alliance by Washington, i.
+ 68;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his criticism of Washington's first campaign,
+ 76.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Hamilton, Alexander,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">forces Gates to send back troops to Washington,
+ i. 216, 217;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">remark on councils of war before Monmouth,
+ 234;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">informs Washington of Arnold's treason,
+ 284;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">sent to intercept Arnold, 285;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">writes letters on government and finance,
+ 298;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">leads attack at Yorktown, i. 316;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">requests release of Asgill, 329;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">aids Washington in Congress, 333;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">only man beside Washington and Franklin to
+ realize American future, ii. 7;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">letters of Washington to on necessity of a
+ strong government, 17, 18;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">writes letters to Duane and Morris, 19;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">speech in Federal Convention and departure,
+ 35;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">counseled by Washington, 39;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">consulted by Washington as to etiquette,
+ 54;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">made secretary of treasury, 66;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his character, 67;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his report on the mint, 81;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">on the public credit, 107;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">upheld by Washington, 107, 108;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his arrangement with Jefferson, 108;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">argument on the bank, 110;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his success largely due to Washington, 112;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his report on manufactures, 112, 114, 116;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">advocates an excise, 122;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">fails to realize its unpopularity, 123;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">accompanies expedition to suppress Whiskey
+ Rebellion, 128;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">comprehends French Revolution, 139;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">frames questions to cabinet on neutrality,
+ 147;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">urges decisive measures against Genet, 154;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">argues against United States being bound by
+ French treaty, 169;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">selected for English mission, but withdraws,
+ 177;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">not likely to have done better than Jay,
+ 183;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">mobbed in defending Jay treaty, 187;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">writes Camillus letters in favor of Jay treaty,
+ 206;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">intrigued against by Monroe, 212;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">causes for his breach with Jefferson, 224;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his aristocratic tendencies, 225;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">attacked by Jefferson and his friends, 228,
+ 229;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">disposes of the charges, 229;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">retorts in newspapers with effect, 230;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">ceases at Washington's request, 230, 234;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">resigns from the cabinet, 234;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">desires Washington's re&euml;lection, 235;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">selected by Washing, ton as senior general,
+ 286;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">appeals to Washington against Adams's reversal
+ of rank, 286;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">fails to soothe Knox's anger, 288;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">report on army organization, 290;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">letter of Washington to, condemning Adams's
+ French mission, 293;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">fears anarchy from Democratic success, 295;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">approves Alien and Sedition Acts, 296;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his scheme of a military academy approved by
+ Washington, 299;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Washington's affection for, 317, 362;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his ability early recognized by Washington,
+ 334, 335;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">aids Washington in literary points, 340;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">takes care of Lafayette's son, 366.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Hammond, George,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">protests against violations of neutrality, ii.
+ 151;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his arrival as British minister, 169;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his offensive tone, 173;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">does not disavow Lord Dorchester's speech to
+ Indians, 176;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">gives Fauchet letters to Wolcott, 195;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">intrigues with American public men, 200.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Hampden, John,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">compared with Washington, ii. 312, 313.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Hancock, John,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">disappointed at Washington's receiving command
+ of army, i. 135;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his character, ii. 74;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">refuses to call first on Washington as
+ President, 75;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">apologizes and calls, 75, 76.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Hardin, Colonel,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">twice surprised and defeated by Indians, ii.
+ 93.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Harmar, Colonel,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">invades Indian country, ii. 92;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">attacks the Miamis, 93;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">sends out unsuccessful expeditions and
+ retreats, 93;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">court-martialed and resigns, 93.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Harrison, Benjamin,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">letters of Washington to, i. 259, 261; ii.
+ 10.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Hartley, Mrs.&mdash;&mdash;,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">admired by Washington, i. 95.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Heard, Sir Isaac,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Garter King at Arms, makes out a pedigree for
+ Washington, i. 30, 31.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Heath, General,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">checks Howe at Frog's Point, i. 173;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">left in command at New York, 311.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Henry, Patrick,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his resolutions supported by Washington, i.
+ 119;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">accompanies him to Philadelphia, 128;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his tribute to Washington's influence, 130;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">ready for war, 132;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">letters of Conway cabal to against Washington,
+ 222;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">letter of Washington to, 225;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">appealed to by Washington on behalf of
+ Constitution, ii. 38;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">an opponent of the Constitution, 71;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">urged by Washington to oppose Virginia
+ resolutions, 266-268, 293;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">a genuine American, 309;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">offered secretaryship of state, 324;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">friendship of Washington for, 362.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Hertburn, Sir William de,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">ancestor of Washington family, i. 31, 33.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Hessians,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">in Revolution, i. 194.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Hickey, Thomas,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">hanged for plotting to murder Washington, i.
+ 160.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Hobby,&mdash;&mdash;, a sexton,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Washington's earliest teacher, i. 48.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Hopkinson, Francis,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">letter of Washington to, ii. 3.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Houdon, J.A., sculptor,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">on Washington's appearance, ii. 386.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Howe, Lord,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">arrives at New York with power to negotiate and
+ pardon, i. 161;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">refuses to give Washington his title, 161;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">tries to negotiate with Congress, 167;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">escapes D'Estaing at Delaware, 244;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">attacks D'Estaing off Newport, 244.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Howe, Sir William,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">has controversy with Washington over treatment
+ of prisoners, i. 148;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">checked at Frog's Point, 173;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">attacks cautiously at Chatterton Hill, 173;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">retreats and attacks forts on Hudson, 174;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">takes Fort Washington, 175;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">goes into winter quarters in New York, 177,
+ 186;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">suspected of purpose to meet Burgoyne, 194,
+ 195;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">baffled in advance across New Jersey by
+ Washington, 194;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">goes by sea, 195;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">arrives at Head of Elk, 196;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">defeats Washington at Brandywine, 197;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">camps at Germantown, 199;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">withdraws after Germantown into Philadelphia,
+ 201;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">folly of his failure to meet Burgoyne, 205,
+ 206;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">offers battle in vain to Washington, 218;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">replaced by Clinton, 232;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">tries to cut off Lafayette, 233.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Huddy, Captain,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">captured by English, hanged by Tories, i.
+ 327.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Humphreys, Colonel,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">letters of Washington to, ii. 13, 339;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">at opening of Congress, 78;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">commissioner to treat with Creeks, 90;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">anecdote of, 375.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Huntington, Lady,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">asks Washington's aid in Christianizing
+ Indians, ii. 4.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza"></div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">IMPRESSMENT,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">right of, maintained by England, ii. 181.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Independence,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">not wished, but foreseen, by Washington, i.
+ 131, 156;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">declared by Congress, possibly through
+ Washington's influence, 160.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Indians,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">wars with in Virginia, i. 37, 38;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">in French and Indian war, 67,68;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">desert English, 76;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">in Braddock's defeat, 85, 86, 88;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">restless before Revolution, 122;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">in War of Revolution, 266, 270;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">punished by Sullivan, 269;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">policy toward, early suggested by Washington,
+ 344;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">recommendations relative to in Washington's
+ address to Congress, ii. 82;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">the "Indian problem" under Washington's
+ administration, 83-105;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">erroneous popular ideas of, 84, 85;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">real character and military ability, 85-87;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">understood by Washington, 87, 88;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">a real danger in 1788, 88;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">situation in the Northwest, 89;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">difficulties with Cherokees and Creeks, 89,
+ 90;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">influence of Spanish intrigue, 90;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">successful treaty with Creeks, 90, 91;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">wisdom of this policy, 92;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">warfare in the Northwest, 92;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">defeats of Harmar and Hardin, 93;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">causes for the failure, 93, 94;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">intrigues of England, 92, 94, 175, 178;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">expedition and defeat of St. Clair, 95-97;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">results, 99;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">expedition of Wayne, 100, 102;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his victory, 103;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">success of Washington's policy toward, 104,
+ 105.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Iredell, James,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">appointed to Supreme Court, ii. 73.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza"></div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">JACKSON, MAJOR,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">accompanies Washington to opening of Congress,
+ ii. 78.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Jameson, Colonel,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">forwards Andrews letter to Arnold, i. 284;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">receives orders from Washington, 285.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Jay, John,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">on opposition in Congress, to Washington, i.
+ 222;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">consulted by Washington as to etiquette, ii.
+ 54;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">appointed chief justice, 72;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">publishes card against Genet, 159;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">appointed on special mission to England,
+ 177;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his character, 177;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">instructions from Washington, 179;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his reception in England, 180;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">difficulties in negotiating, 181;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">concludes treaty, 182;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">burnt in effigy while absent, 186;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">execrated after news of treaty, 187;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">hampered by Monroe in France, 213.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Jay treaty, ii. 180-184;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">opposition to and debate over signing,
+ 184-201;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">reasons of Washington for signing, 205.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Jefferson, Thomas,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his flight from Cornwallis, i. 307;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">discusses with Washington needs of government,
+ ii. 9;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">adopts French democratic phraseology, 27;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">contrast with Washington, 27, 28, 69;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">criticises Washington's manners, 56;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">made secretary of state, 68;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his previous relations with Washington, 68;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his character, 69;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">supposed to be a friend of the Constitution,
+ 72;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his objections to President's opening Congress,
+ 79;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">on weights and measures, 81;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">letter of Washington to on assumption of state
+ debts, 107;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">makes bargain with Hamilton, 108;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">opposes a bank, 110;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">asked to prepare neutrality instructions,
+ 146;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">upholds Genet, 153;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">argues against him publicly, supports him
+ privately, 154;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">notified of French privateer Little Sarah,
+ 155;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">allows it to sail, 155;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">retires to country and is censured by
+ Washington, 156;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">assures Washington that vessel will wait his
+ decision, 156;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his un-American attitude, 157;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">wishes to make terms of note demanding Genet's
+ recall mild, 158;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">argues that United States is bound by French
+ treaty, 170, 171;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">begs Madison to answer Hamilton's "Camillus"
+ letters, 206;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his attitude upon first entering cabinet,
+ 223;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">causes for his breach with Hamilton, 224;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">jealousy, incompatibility of temper, 224;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his democratic opinions, 225;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">skill in creating party catch-words, 225;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">prints "Rights of Man" with note against Adams,
+ 226;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">attacks him further in letter to Washington,
+ 226;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">brings Freneau to Philadelphia and gives him an
+ office, 227;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">denies any connection with Freneau's newspaper,
+ 227;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his real responsibility, 228;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his purpose to undermine Hamilton, 228;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">causes his friends to attack him, 229;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">writes a letter to Washington attacking
+ Hamilton's treasury measures, 229;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">fails to produce any effect, 230;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">winces under Hamilton's counter attacks,
+ 230;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">reiterates charges and asserts devotion to
+ Constitution, 231;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">continues attacks and resigns, 234;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">wishes re&euml;lection of Washington, 235;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his charge of British sympathies resented by
+ Washington, 252;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">plain letter of Washington to, 259;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Washington's opinion of, 259;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">suggests Logan's mission to France, 262,
+ 265;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">takes oath as vice-president, 276;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">regarded as a Jacobin by Federalists, 294;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">jealous of Washington, 306;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">accuses him of senility, 307;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">a genuine American, 309.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Johnson, William,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Tory leader in New York, i. 143.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Johnstone, Governor,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">peace commissioner, i. 233.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Jumonville, De, French leader,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">declared to have been assassinated by
+ Washington, i. 74,79;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">really a scout and spy, 75.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza"></div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">KENTUCKY RESOLUTIONS,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">condemned by Washington, ii. 266-268.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">King, Clarence,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his opinion that Washington was not American,
+ ii. 308.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">King, Rufus,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">publishes card exposing Genet, ii. 159.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">King's Bridge,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">fight at, i. 170.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Kip's Landing,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">fight at, i. 168.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Kirkland, Rev. Samuel,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">negotiates with Six Nations, ii. 101.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Knox, Henry,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">brings artillery to Boston from Ticonderoga, i.
+ 152;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">accompanies Washington to meet De Rochambeau,
+ 283;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">at West Point, 285;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">sent by Washington to confer with governors of
+ States, 295;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">urged by Washington to establish Western posts,
+ ii. 7;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">letters of Washington to, 30, 39;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">made secretary of war, 65;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his character, 65;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">a Federalist, 71;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">deals with Creeks, 91;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">urges decisive measure against Genet, 154,
+ 155;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">letters of Washington to, 260;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">selected by Washington as third major-general,
+ 286;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">given first place by Adams, 286;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">angry at Hamilton's higher rank, 288;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">refuses the office, 289;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his offer to serve on Washington's staff
+ refused, 289;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Washington's affection for, 317, 362.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza"></div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">LAFAYETTE, Madame de,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">aided by Washington, ii. 366;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">letter of Washington to, 377.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Lafayette, Marquis de,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Washington's regard for, i. 192;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his opinion of Continental troops, 196;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">sent on fruitless journey to the lakes by
+ cabal, 222, 253;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">encouraged by Washington, 225;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">narrowly escapes being cut off by Clinton,
+ 233;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">appointed to attack British rear, 235;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">superseded by Lee, 235;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">urges Washington to come, 235;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">letter of Washington to, regarding quarrel
+ between D'Estaing and Sullivan, 245;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">regard of Washington for, 249;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">desires to conquer Canada, 254;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his plan not supported in France, 256;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">works to get a French army sent, 264;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">brings news of French army and fleet, 274;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">tries to get De Rochambeau to attack New York,
+ 280;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">accompanies Washington to meet De Rochambeau,
+ 283;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">told by Washington of Arnold's treachery,
+ 285;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">on court to try Andr&eacute;, 287;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">opinion of Continental soldiers, 293;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">harasses Cornwallis, 307;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">defeated at Green Springs, 307;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">watches Cornwallis at Yorktown, 308;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">reinforced by De Grasse, 312;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">persuades him to remain, 315;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">sends Washington French wolf-hounds, ii. 2;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">letters of Washington to, 23, 26, 118, 144,
+ 165, 222, 261;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his son not received by Washington, 253;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">later taken care of, 277, 281, 366;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his worth, early seen by Washington, 334;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Washington's affection for, 365;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">sends key of Bastile to Mt. Vernon, 365;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">helped by Washington, 365,366.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Laurens, Henry,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">letter of Conway cabal to, making attack on
+ Washington, i. 222;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">letters of Washington to, 254, 288;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">sent to Paris to get loans, 299.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Lauzun, Duc de,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">repulses Tarleton at Yorktown, i. 317.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Lear, Tobias,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Washington's secretary, ii. 263;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his account of Washington's last illness,
+ 299-303, 385;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">letters to, 361, 382.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Lee, Arthur,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">example of Virginia gentleman educated abroad,
+ i. 23.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Lee, Charles,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">visits Mt. Vernon, his character, i. 132;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">accompanies Washington to Boston, 136;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">aids Washington in organizing army, 140;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">disobeys orders and is captured, 175;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">objects to attacking Clinton, 234;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">first refuses, then claims command of van,
+ 235;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">disobeys orders and retreats, 236;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">rebuked by Washington, 236, 237;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">court martial of and dismissal from army,
+ 237;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his witty remark on taking oath of allegiance,
+ ii. 375.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Lee, Henry, marries Lucy Grymes,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Washington's "Lowland Beauty," i. 96.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Lee, Henry,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">son of Lucy Grymes, Washington's "Lowland
+ Beauty," i. 96; ii. 362;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">captures Paulus Hook, i. 269;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">letters of Washington to, ii. 23, 26, 149, 235,
+ 239, 242, 252;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">considered for command against Indians,
+ 100;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">commands troops to suppress Whiskey Rebellion,
+ 127;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Washington's affection for, 362.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Lee, Richard Henry,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">unfriendly to Washington, i. 214;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">letter of Washington to, ii. 160.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Lewis, Lawrence,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">at opening of Congress, ii. 78;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">takes social duties at Mt. Vernon, 280.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Liancourt, Duc de,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">refused reception by Washington, ii. 253.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Lincoln, Abraham,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">compared with Washington, i. 349; ii.
+ 308-313.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Lincoln, Benjamin,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">sent by Washington against Burgoyne, i.
+ 210;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">fails to understand Washington's policy and
+ tries to hold Charleston, 273, 274;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">captured, 276;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">commissioner to treat with Creeks, ii. 90.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Lippencott, Captain,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">orders hanging of Huddy, i. 327;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">acquitted by English court martial, 328.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Little Sarah,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">the affair of, 155-157.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Livingston, Chancellor,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">administers oath at Washington's inauguration,
+ ii. 46.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Livingston, Edward,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">moves call for papers relating to Jay treaty,
+ ii. 207.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Logan, Dr. George,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">goes on volunteer mission to France, ii.
+ 262;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">ridiculed by Federalists, publishes defense,
+ 263;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">calls upon Washington, 263;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">mercilessly snubbed, 263-265.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Long Island,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">battle of, i. 164,165.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">London, Lord,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">disappoints Washington by his inefficiency, i.
+ 91.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Lovell, James,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">follows the Adamses in opposing Washington, i.
+ 214;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">wishes to supplant him by Gates, 215;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">writes hostile letters, 222.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza"></div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">MACKENZIE, CAPTAIN,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">letter of Washington to, i. 130.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Madison, James,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">begins to desire a stronger government, ii. 19,
+ 29;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">letters of Washington to, 30, 39, 53;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">chosen for French mission, but does not go,
+ 211.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Magaw, Colonel,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">betrayed at Fort Washington, i. 175.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">"Magnolia,"</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Washington's pet colt, beaten in a race, i. 99,
+ 113; ii. 381.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Marshall, John,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Chief Justice, on special commission to France,
+ ii. 284;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">tells anecdote of Washington's anger at
+ cowardice, 392.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Maryland, the Washington family in, i.36.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Mason, George,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">discusses political outlook with Washington, i.
+ 119;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">letter of Washington to, 263;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">an opponent of the Constitution, ii. 71;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">friendship of Washington for, 362;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">debates with Washington the site of Pohick
+ Church, 381.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Mason, S.T.,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">communicates Jay treaty to Bache, ii. 185.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Massey, Rev. Lee,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">rector of Pohick Church, i. 44.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Mathews, George,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">letter of Washington to, i. 294.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Matthews, Edward,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">makes raids in Virginia, i. 269.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Mawhood, General,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">defeated at Princeton, i. 182.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">McGillivray, Alexander,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">chief of the Creeks, ii. 90;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his journey to New York and interview with
+ Washington, 91.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">McHenry, James,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">at West Point, i. 284;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">letters to, 325, ii. 22, 278, 287, 384;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">becomes secretary of war, 246;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">advised by Washington not to appoint Democrats,
+ 260, 261.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">McKean, Thomas, given letters to Dr. Logan, ii.
+ 265.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">McMaster, John B.,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">calls Washington "an unknown man," i. 7, ii.
+ 304;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">calls him cold, 332, 352;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">and avaricious in small ways, 352.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Meade, Colonel Richard,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Washington's opinion of, ii. 335.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Mercer, Hugh,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">killed at Princeton, i. 182.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Merlin,&mdash;&mdash;,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">president of Directory, interview with Dr.
+ Logan, ii. 265.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Mifflin, Thomas,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">wishes to supplant Washington by Gates, i.
+ 216;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">member of board of war, 221;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">put under Washington's orders, 226;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">replies to Washington's surrender of
+ commission, 349;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">meets Washington on journey to inauguration,
+ ii. 44;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">notified of the Little Sarah, French privateer,
+ 154;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">orders its seizure, 155.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Militia,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">abandon Continental army, i. 167;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">cowardice of, 168;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">despised by Washington, 169;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">leave army again, 175;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">assist in defeat of Burgoyne, 211.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Mischianza, i. 232.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Monmouth,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">battle of, i. 235-239.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Monroe, James,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">appointed minister to France, ii. 211;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his character, 212;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">intrigues against Hamilton, 212;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">effusively received in Paris, 212;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">acts foolishly, 213;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">tries to interfere with Jay, 213;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">upheld, then condemned and recalled by
+ Washington, 213, 214;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">writes a vindication, 215;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Washington's opinion of him, 215, 216;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his selection one of Washington's few mistakes,
+ 334.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Montgomery, General Richard,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">sent by Washington to invade Canada, i.
+ 143.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Morgan, Daniel,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">sent against Burgoyne by Washington, i.
+ 208;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">at Saratoga, 210;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">wins battle of Cowpens, joins Greene, 301.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Morris, Gouverneur,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">letters of Washington to, i. 248, 263;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">efforts towards financial reform, 264;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">quotes speech of Washington at Federal
+ convention in his eulogy, ii. 31;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">discussion as to his value as an authority, 32,
+ note;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">goes to England on unofficial mission, 137;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">balked by English insolence, 137;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">comprehends French Revolution, 139;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">letters of Washington to, on the Revolution,
+ 140,142,145;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">recall demanded by France, 211;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">letter of Washington to, 217,240, 254;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Washington's friendship for, 363.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Morris, Robert,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">letter of Washington to, i. 187;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">helps Washington to pay troops, 259;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">efforts towards financial reform, 264;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">difficulty in helping Washington in 1781, 309,
+ 312;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">considered for secretary of treasury, ii.
+ 66;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his bank policy approved by Washington,
+ 110;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Washington's friendship for, 363.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Moustier,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">demands private access to Washington, ii.
+ 59;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">refused, 59, 60.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Murray, Vans, minister in Holland,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">interview with Dr. Logan, ii. 264;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">nominated for French mission by Adams, 292;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">written to by Washington, 292.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Muse, Adjutant,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">trains Washington in tactics and art of war, i.
+ 65.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza"></div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">NAPOLEON,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">orders public mourning for Washington's death,
+ i. 1.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Nelson, General,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">letter of Washington to, i. 257.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Newburgh,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">addresses, ii. 335.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">New England,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">character of people, i. 138;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">attitude toward Washington, 138, 139;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">troops disliked by Washington, 152;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">later praised by him, 152, 317, 344;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">threatened by Burgoyne's invasion, 204;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">its delegates in Congress demand appointment of
+ Gates, 208;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">and oppose Washington, 214;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">welcomes Washington on tour as President, ii.
+ 74;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">more democratic than other colonies before
+ Revolution, 315;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">disliked by Washington for this reason,
+ 316.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Newenham, Sir Edward,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">letter of Washington to on American foreign
+ policy, ii. 133.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">New York,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Washington's first visit to, i. 99, 100;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">defense of, in Revolution, 159-169;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">abandoned by Washington, 169;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Howe establishes himself in, 177;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">reoccupied by Clinton, 264;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Washington's journey to, ii. 44;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">inauguration in, 46;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">rioting in, against Jay treaty, 187.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Nicholas, John,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">letter of Washington to, ii. 259.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Nicola, Col.,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">urges Washington to establish a despotism, i.
+ 337.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Noailles, Vicomte de, French
+ &eacute;migr&eacute;,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">referred to State Department, ii. 151, 253.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza"></div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">O'FLINN, CAPTAIN,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Washington's friendship with, ii. 318.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Organization of the national government,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">absence of materials to work with, ii. 51;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">debate over title of President, 52;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">over his communications with Senate, 53;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">over presidential etiquette, 53-56;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">appointment of officials to cabinet offices
+ established by Congress, 64-71;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">appointment of supreme court judges, 72.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Orme,&mdash;&mdash;,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">letter of Washington to, i. 84.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza"></div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">PAINE, THOMAS,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his "Rights of Man" reprinted by Jefferson, ii.
+ 226.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Parkinson, Richard,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">says Washington was harsh to slaves, i.
+ 105;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">contradicts statement elsewhere, 106;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">tells stories of Washington's pecuniary
+ exactness, ii. 353, 354, 382;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his character, 355;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his high opinion of Washington, 356.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Parton, James,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">considers Washington as good but commonplace,
+ ii. 330, 374.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Peachey, Captain,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">letter of Washington to, i. 92.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Pendleton, Edmund,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Virginia delegate to Continental Congress, i.
+ 128.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Pennsylvania,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">refuses to fight the French, i. 72,83;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">fails to help Washington, 225;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">remonstrates against his going into winter
+ quarters, 229;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">condemned by Washington, 229;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">compromises with mutineers, 292.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Philipse, Mary,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">brief love-affair of Washington with, i. 99,
+ 100.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Phillips, General,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">commands British troops in Virginia, i.
+ 303;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">death of, 303.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Pickering, Colonel, quiets Six Nations, ii.
+ 94.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Pickering, Timothy,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">letter of Washington to, on French Revolution,
+ ii. 140;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">on failure of Spanish negotiations, 166;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">recalls Washington to Philadelphia to receive
+ Fauchet letter, 195;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">succeeds Randolph, 246;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">letters of Washington to, on party government,
+ 247;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">appeals to Washington against Adams's reversal
+ of Hamilton's rank, 286;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">letters of Washington to, 292, 324;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">criticises Washington as a commonplace person,
+ 307.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Pinckney, Charles C.,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">letter of Washington to, ii. 90;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">appointed to succeed Monroe as minister to
+ France, 214;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">refused reception, 284;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">sent on special commission, 284;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">named by Washington as general, 286;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">accepts without complaint of Hamilton's higher
+ rank, 290;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Washington's friendship with, 363.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Pinckney, Thomas,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">sent on special mission to Spain, ii. 166;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">unsuccessful at first, 166;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">succeeds in making a good treaty, 167;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">credit of his exploit, 168;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">letter of Washington to, 325.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Pitt, William,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his conduct of French war, i. 93, 94.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Princeton,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">battle of, i. 181-3.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Privateers,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">sent out by Washington, i. 150.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">"Protection"</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">favored in the first Congress, ii. 113-115;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">arguments of Hamilton for, 114, 115;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">of Washington, 116-122.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Provincialism,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">of Americans, i. 193;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">with regard to foreign officers, 193, 234,
+ 250-252;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">with regard to foreign politics, ii. 131, 132,
+ 163, 237, 255.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Putnam, Israel,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">escapes with difficulty from New York, i.
+ 169;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">fails to help Washington at Trenton, 180;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">warned to defend the Hudson, 195;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">tells Washington of Burgoyne's surrender,
+ 211;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">rebuked by Washington, 217;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">amuses Washington, ii. 374.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza"></div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">RAHL, COLONEL,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">defeated and killed at Trenton, i. 181.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Randolph, Edmund,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">letter of Washington to, ii. 30, 39;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">relations with Washington, 64;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">appointed attorney-general, 64;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his character, 64, 65;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">a friend of the Constitution, 71;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">opposes a bank, 110;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">letter of Washington to, on protective
+ bounties, 118;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">drafts neutrality proclamation, 147;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">vacillates with regard to Genet, 154;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">argues that United States is bound by French
+ alliance, 170;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">succeeds Jefferson as secretary of state,
+ 184;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">directed to prepare a remonstrance against
+ English "provision order," 185;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">opposed to Jay treaty, 188;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">letter of Washington to, on conditional
+ ratification, 189, 191, 192, 194;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">guilty, apparently, from Fauchet letter, of
+ corrupt practices, 196;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his position not a cause for Washington's
+ signing treaty, 196-200;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">receives Fauchet letter, resigns, 201;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his personal honesty, 201;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his discreditable carelessness, 202;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">fairly treated by Washington, 203, 204;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his complaints against Washington, 203;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">letter of Washington to, concerning Monroe,
+ 213;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">at first a Federalist, 246.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Randolph, John,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">on early disappearance of Virginia colonial
+ society, i. 15.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Rawdon, Lord,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">commands British forces in South, too distant
+ to help Cornwallis, i. 304.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Reed, Joseph,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">letters of Washington to, i. 151, 260.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Revolution, War of,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">foreseen by Washington, i. 120, 122;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Lexington and Concord, 133;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Bunker Hill, 136;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">siege of Boston, 137-154;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">organization of army, 139-142;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">operations in New York, 143;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">invasion of Canada, 143, 144;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">question as to treatment of prisoners,
+ 145-148;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">causes of British defeat, 154, 155;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">campaign near New York, 161-177;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">causes for attempted defense of Brooklyn, 163,
+ 164;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">battle of Long Island, 164-165;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">escape of Americans, 166;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">affair at Kip's Bay, 168;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">at King's Bridge, 170;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">at Frog's Point, 173;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">battle of White Plains, 173;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">at Chatterton Hill, 174;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">capture of Forts Washington and Lee, 174,
+ 175;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">pursuit of Washington into New Jersey,
+ 175-177;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">retirement of Howe to New York, 177;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">battle of Trenton, 180, 181;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">campaign of Princeton, 181-183;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">its brilliancy, 183;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Philadelphia campaign, 194-202;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">British march across New Jersey prevented by
+ Washington, 194;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">sea voyage to Delaware, 195;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">battle of the Brandywine, 196-198;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">causes for defeat, 198;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">defeat of Wayne, 198;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Philadelphia taken by Howe, 199;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">battle of Germantown, 199;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">its significance, 200, 201;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Burgoyne's invasion, 203-211;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Washington's preparations for, 204-206;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Howe's error in neglecting to cooperate,
+ 205;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">capture of Ticonderoga, 207;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">battles of Bennington, Oriskany, Fort Schuyler,
+ 210;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">battle of Saratoga, 211;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">British repulse at Fort Mercer, 217;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">destruction of the forts, 217;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">fruitless skirmishing before Philadelphia,
+ 218;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Valley Forge, 228-232;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">evacuation of Philadelphia, 234;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">battle of Monmouth, 235-239;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">its effect, 239;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">cruise and failure of D'Estaing at Newport,
+ 243, 244;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">failure of D'Estaing at Savannah, 247, 248;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">storming of Stony Point, 268, 269;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Tory raids near New York, 269;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">standstill in 1780, 272;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">siege and capture of Charleston, 273, 274,
+ 276;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">operations of French and Americans near
+ Newport, 277, 278;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">battle of Camden, 281;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">treason of Arnold, 281-289;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">battle of Cowpens, 301;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">retreat of Greene before Cornwallis, 302;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">battle of Guilford Court House, 302;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">successful operations of Greene, 302, 303;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Southern campaign planned by Washington,
+ 304-311;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">feints against Clinton, 306;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">operations of Cornwallis and Lafayette in
+ Virginia, 307;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">naval supremacy secured by Washington, 310,
+ 311;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">battle of De Grasse and Graves off Chesapeake,
+ 312;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">transport of American army to Virginia,
+ 311-313;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">siege and capture of Yorktown, 315-318;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">masterly character of campaign, 318-320;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">petty operations before New York, 326;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">treaty of peace, 342.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Rives,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">on Washington's doubts of constitutionality of
+ Bank, ii. 110.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Robinson, Beverly,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">speaker of Virginia House of Burgesses, his
+ compliment to Washington, i. 102.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Robinson, Colonel,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">loyalist, i. 282.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Rumsey, James,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">the inventor, asks Washington's consideration
+ of his steamboat, ii. 4.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Rush, Benjamin,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">describes Washington's impressiveness, ii.
+ 389.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Rutledge, John,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">letter of Washington to, i. 281;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">nomination rejected by Senate, ii. 63;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">nominated to Supreme Court, 73.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza"></div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">ST. CLAIR, Arthur,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">removed after loss of Ticonderoga, i. 208;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">appointed to command against Indians, ii.
+ 94;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">receives instructions and begins expedition,
+ 95;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">defeated, 96;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his character, 99;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">fair treatment by Washington, 99;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">popular execration of, 105.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">St. Pierre, M. de,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">French governor in Ohio, i. 67.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">St. Simon, Count,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">reinforces Lafayette, i. 312.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Sandwich, Lord,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">calls all Yankees cowards, i. 155.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Saratoga,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">anecdote concerning, i. 202.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Savage, Edward,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">characteristics of his portrait of Washington,
+ i. 13.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Savannah,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">siege of, i. 247.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Scammel, Colonel,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">amuses Washington, ii. 374.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Schuyler, Philip,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">accompanies Washington to Boston, i. 136;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">appointed military head in New York, 136;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">directed by Washington how to meet Burgoyne,
+ 204;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">fails to carry out directions, 207;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">removed, 208;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">value of his preparations, 209.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Scott, Charles, commands expedition against
+ Indians, ii. 95.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Sea-power,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">its necessity seen by Washington, i. 283, 303,
+ 304, 306, 310, 318, 319.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Sectional feeling,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">deplored by Washington, ii. 222.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Sharpe, Governor,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">offers Washington a company, i. 80;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Washington's reply to, 81.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Shays's Rebellion,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">comments of Washington and Jefferson upon, ii.
+ 26, 27.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Sherman, Roger,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">makes sarcastic remark about Wilkinson, i.
+ 220.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Shirley, Governor William,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">adjusts matter of Washington's rank, i. 91,
+ 97.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Short, William, minister to Holland,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">on commission regarding opening of Mississippi,
+ ii. 166.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Six Nations,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">make satisfactory treaties, ii. 88;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">stirred up by English, 94;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">but pacified, 94, 101.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Slavery,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">in Virginia, i. 20;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">its evil effects, 104;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Washington's attitude toward slaves, 105;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his condemnation of the system, 106, 107;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">gradual emancipation favored, 107, 108.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Smith, Colonel,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">letter of Washington to, ii. 340.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Spain,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">instigates Indians to hostilities, ii. 89, 94,
+ 101;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">blocks Mississippi, 135;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">makes treaty with Pinckney opening Mississippi,
+ 167, 168;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">angered at Jay treaty, 210.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Sparks, Jared,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his alterations of Washington's letters, ii.
+ 337, 338.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Spotswood, Alexander,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">asks Washington's opinion of Alien and Sedition
+ Acts, ii. 297.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Stamp Act,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Washington's opinion of, i. 119, 120.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Stark, General,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">leads attack at Trenton, i. 181.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">States, in the Revolutionary war,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">appeals of Washington to, i. 142, 186, 204,
+ 259, 277, 295, 306, 323, 324, 326, 344;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">issue paper money, 258;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">grow tired of the war, 290;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">alarmed by mutinies, 294;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">try to appease soldiers, 295, 296;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">their selfishness condemned by Washington, 333;
+ ii. 21, 23;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">thwart Indian policy of Congress, 88.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Stephen, Adam,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">late in attacking at Germantown, i. 199.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Steuben, Baron,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Washington's appreciation of, i. 192, 249;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">drills the army at Valley Forge, 232;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">annoys Washington by wishing higher command,
+ 249;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">sent on mission to demand surrender of Western
+ posts, 343;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his worth recognized by Washington, ii.
+ 334.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Stirling, Lord,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">defeated and captured at Long Island, i.
+ 165.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Stockton, Mrs.,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">letter of Washington to, ii. 349.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Stone, General,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">tells stories of Washington's closeness, ii.
+ 353, 354.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Stuart, David,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">letters of Washington to, ii. 107, 221, 222,
+ 258.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Stuart, Gilbert,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his portrait of Washington contrasted with
+ Savage's, i. 13.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Sullivan, John, General,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">surprised at Long Island, i. 165;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">attacks at Trenton, 180;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">surprised and crushed at Brandywine, 197,
+ 198;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">unites with D'Estaing to attack Newport,
+ 243;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">angry at D'Estaing's desertion, 244;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">soothed by Washington, 244;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">sent against Indians, 266, 269.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Supreme Court,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">appointed by Washington, ii. 72.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza"></div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">TAFT,&mdash;&mdash;,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">kindness of Washington toward, ii. 367.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Talleyrand,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">eulogistic report to Napoleon on death of
+ Washington, i. 1, note;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">remark on Hamilton, ii. 139;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">refused reception by Washington, 253.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Tarleton, Sir Banastre,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">tries to escape at Yorktown, i. 317.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Thatcher, Dr.,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">on Washington's appearance when taking command
+ of army, i. 137.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Thomson, Charles,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">complimented by Washington on retiring from
+ secretary-ship of Continental Congress, ii. 350.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Tories,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">hated by Washington, i. 156;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his reasons, 157;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">active in New York, 158;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">suppressed by Washington, 159;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">in Philadelphia, impressed by Continental army,
+ 196;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">make raids on frontier, 266;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">strong in Southern States, 267;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">raids under Tryon, 269.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Trent, Captain,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his incompetence in dealing with Indians and
+ French, i. 72.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Trenton, campaign of, i. 180-183.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Trumbull, Governor,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">letter of Washington to, refusing to stand for
+ a third term, ii. 269-271;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">other letters, 298.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Trumbull, John,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">on New England army before Boston, i. 139.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Trumbull, Jonathan,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his message on better government praised by
+ Washington, ii. 21;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">letters to, 42;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Washington's friendship for, 363.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Tryon, Governor,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Tory leader in New York, i. 143;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his intrigues stopped by Washington, 158,
+ 159;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">conspires to murder Washington, 160;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">makes raids in Connecticut, 269.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza"></div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">VALLEY FORGE,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Continental Army at, i. 228-232.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Van Braam, Jacob,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">friend of Lawrence Washington, trains George in
+ fencing, i. 65;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">accompanies him on mission to French, 66.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Vergennes,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">requests release of Asgill, i. 329, 330;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">letter of Washington to, 330;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">proposes to submit disposition of a subsidy to
+ Washington, 332.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Virginia, society in,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">before the Revolution, i. 15-29;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">its entire change since then, 15, 16;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">population, distribution, and numbers, 17,
+ 18;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">absence of towns, 18;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">and town life, 19;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">trade and travel in, 19;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">social classes, 20-24;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">slaves and poor whites, 20;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">clergy, 21;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">planters and their estates, 22;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">their life, 22;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">education, 23;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">habits of governing, 24;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">luxury and extravagance, 25;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">apparent wealth, 26;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">agreeableness of life, 27;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">aristocratic ideals, 28;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">vigor of stock, 29;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">unwilling to fight French, 71;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">quarrels with Dinwiddie, 71;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">thanks Washington after his French campaign,
+ 79;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">terrified at Braddock's defeat, 88;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">gives Washington command, 89;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">fails to support him, 89, 90, 93;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">bad economic conditions in, 104,105;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">local government in, 117;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">condemns Stamp Act, 119;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">adopts non-importation, 121;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">condemns Boston Port Bill, 123;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">asks opinion of counties, 124;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">chooses delegates to a congress, 127;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">prepares for war, 132;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">British campaign in, 307, 315-318;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">ratifies Constitution, ii. 40;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">evil effect of free trade upon, 116, 117;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">nullification resolutions, 266;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">strength of its aristocracy, 315.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza"></div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">WADE, COLONEL,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">in command at West Point after Arnold's flight,
+ i. 285.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Walker, Benjamin,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">letter of Washington to, ii. 257.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Warren, James,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">letters of Washington to, i. 262, ii. 118.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Washington,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">ancestry, i. 30-40;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">early genealogical researches concerning,
+ 30-32;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">pedigree finally established, 32;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">origin of family, 33;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">various members during middle ages, 34;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">on royalist side in English civil war, 34,
+ 36;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">character of family, 35;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">emigration to Virginia, 35, 36;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">career of Washingtons in Maryland, 37;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">in Virginia history, 38;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">their estates, 39.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Washington, Augustine, father of George
+ Washington,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">birth, i. 35;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">death, 39;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">character, 39;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his estate, 41;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">ridiculous part played by in Weems's anecdotes,
+ 44, 47.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Washington, Augustine, half brother of George
+ Washington,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">keeps him after his father's death, i. 48.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Washington, Bushrod,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">refused appointment as attorney by Washington,
+ ii. 62;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">educated by him, 370.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Washington, George,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">honors to his memory in France, i. 1;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">in England, 2;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">grief in America, 3, 4;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">general admission of his greatness, 4;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">its significance, 5, 6;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">tributes from England, 6;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">from other countries, 6, 7;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">yet an "unknown" man, 7;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">minuteness of knowledge concerning, 8;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">has become subject of myths, 9;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">development of the Weems myth about, 10,
+ 11;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">necessity of a new treatment of, 12;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">significant difference of real and ideal
+ portraits of, 13;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his silence regarding himself, 14;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">underlying traits, 14.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2"><i>Early Life</i>.</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Ancestry, 30-41;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">birth, 39;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">origin of Weems's anecdotes about, 41-44;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">their absurdity and evil results, 45-48;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">early schooling, 48;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">plan to send him to sea, 49, 50;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">studies to be a surveyor, 51;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his rules of behavior, 52;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his family connections with Fairfaxes, 54,
+ 55;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his friendship with Lord Fairfax, 56;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">surveys Fairfax's estate, 57, 58, 59;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">made public surveyor, 60;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his life at the time, 60, 61;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">influenced by Fairfax's cultivation, 62;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">goes to West Indies with his brother, 62;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">has the small-pox, 63;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">observations on the voyage, 63, 64;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">returns to Virginia, 64;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">becomes guardian of his brother's daughter,
+ 64.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2"><i>Service against the French and
+ Indians</i>.</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Receives military training, 65;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">a military appointment, 66;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">goes on expedition to treat with French,
+ 66;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">meets Indians, 67;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">deals with French, 67;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">dangers of journey, 68;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his impersonal account, 69, 70;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">appointed to command force against French, 71,
+ 72;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his anger at neglect of Virginia Assembly,
+ 73;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">attacks and defeats force of Jumonville,
+ 74;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">called murderer by the French, 74;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">surrounded by French at Great Meadows, 76;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">surrenders, 76;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">recklessness of his expedition, 77, 78;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">effect of experience upon, 79;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">gains a European notoriety, 79;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">thanked by Virginia, 79;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">protests against Dinwiddie's organization of
+ soldiers, 80;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">refuses to serve when ranked by British
+ officers, 81;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">accepts position on Braddock's staff, 82;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his treatment there, 82;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">advises Braddock, 84;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">rebuked for warning against surprise, 85;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his bravery in the battle, 86;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">conducts retreat, 86, 87;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">effect of experience on him, 87;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">declines to solicit command of Virginia troops,
+ 88;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">accepts it when offered, 88;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his difficulties with Assembly, 89;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">and with troops, 90;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">settles question of rank, 91;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">writes freely in criticism of government, 91,
+ 92;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">retires for rest to Mt. Vernon, 93;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">offers services to General Forbes, 93;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">irritated at slowness of English, 93, 94;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his love affairs, 95, 96;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">journey to Boston, 97-101;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">at festivities in New York and Philadelphia,
+ 99;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">meets Martha Custis, 101;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his wedding, 101, 102;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">elected to House of Burgesses, 102;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">confused at being thanked by Assembly, 102;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his local position, 103;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">tries to farm his estate, 104;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his management of slaves, 105, 106, 108,
+ 109;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">cares for interests of old soldiers, 109;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">rebukes a coward, 110;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">cares for education of stepson, 111;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his furnishing of house, 112;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">hunting habits, 113-115;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">punishes a poacher, 116;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">participates in colonial and local government,
+ 117;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">enters into society, 117, 118.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2"><i>Congressional delegate from
+ Virginia</i>.</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">His influence in Assembly, 119;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">discusses Stamp Act with Mason, 119;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">foresees result to be independence, 119;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">rejoices at its repeal, but notes Declaratory
+ Act, 120;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">ready to use force to defend colonial rights,
+ 120;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">presents non-importation resolutions to
+ Burgesses, 121;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">abstains from English products, 121;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">notes ominous movements among Indians, 122;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">on good terms with royal governors, 122,
+ 123;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">observes fast on account of Boston Port Bill,
+ 123;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">has controversy with Bryan Fairfax over
+ Parliamentary policy, 124, 125, 126;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">presides at Fairfax County meeting, 126;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">declares himself ready for action, 126;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">at convention of counties, offers to march to
+ relief of Boston, 127;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">elected to Continental Congress, 127;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his journey, 128;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">silent in Congress, 129;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">writes to a British officer that independence
+ is not</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">desired, but war is certain, 130, 131;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">returns to Virginia, 132;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">aids in military preparations, 132;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his opinion after Concord, 133;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">at second Continental Congress, wears uniform,
+ 134;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">made commander-in-chief, 134;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his modesty and courage in accepting position,
+ 134, 135;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">political motives for his choice, 135;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his popularity, 136;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his journey to Boston, 136, 137;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">receives news of Bunker Hill, 136;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">is received by Massachusetts Provincial
+ Assembly, 137.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2"><i>Commander of the Army</i>.</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Takes command at Cambridge, 137;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his impression upon people, 137, 138, 139;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">begins reorganization of army, 139;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">secures number of troops, 140;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">enforces discipline, his difficulties, 140,
+ 141;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">forced to lead Congress, 142;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">to arrange rank of officers, 142;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">organizes privateers, 142;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">discovers lack of powder, 143;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">plans campaigns in Canada and elsewhere, 143,
+ 144;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his plans of attack on Boston overruled by
+ council of war, 144;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">writes to Gage urging that captives be treated
+ as prisoners of war, 145;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">skill of his letter, 146;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">retorts to Gage's reply, 147;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">continues dispute with Howe, 148;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">annoyed by insufficiency of provisions,
+ 149;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">and by desertions, 149;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">stops quarrel between Virginia and Marblehead
+ soldiers, 149;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">suggests admiralty committees, 150;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">annoyed by army contractors, 150;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">and criticism, 151;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">letter to Joseph Reed, 151;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">occupies Dorchester Heights, 152;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">begins to like New England men better, 152;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">rejoices at prospect of a fight, 153;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">departure of British due to his leadership,
+ 154;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">sends troops immediately to New York, 155;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">enters Boston, 156;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">expects a hard war, 156;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">urges upon Congress the necessity of preparing
+ for a long struggle, 156;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his growing hatred of Tories, 156, 157;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">goes to New York, 157, 158;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">difficulties of the situation, 158;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">suppresses Tories, 159;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">urges Congress to declare independence, 159,
+ 160;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">discovers and punishes a conspiracy to
+ assassinate, 160;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">insists on his title in correspondence with
+ Howe, 161;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">justice of his position, 162;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">quiets sectional jealousies in army, 162;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his military inferiority to British, 163;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">obliged by political considerations to attempt
+ defense of New York, 163, 164;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">assumes command on Long Island, 164;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">sees defeat of his troops, 165;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">sees plan of British fleet to cut off retreat,
+ 166;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">secures retreat of army, 167;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">explains his policy of avoiding a pitched
+ battle, 167;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">anger at flight of militia at Kip's Bay,
+ 168;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">again secures safe retreat, 169;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">secures slight advantage in a skirmish,
+ 170;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">continues to urge Congress to action, 170,
+ 171;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">success of his letters in securing a permanent
+ army, 171;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">surprised by advance of British fleet, 172;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">moves to White Plains, 173;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">blocks British advance, 174;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">advises abandonment of American forts, 174;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">blames himself for their capture, 175;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">leads diminishing army through New Jersey,
+ 175;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">makes vain appeals for aid, 176;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">resolves to take the offensive, 177;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">desperateness of his situation, 178;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">pledges his estate and private fortune to raise
+ men, 179;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">orders disregarded by officers, 180;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">crosses Delaware and captures Hessians, 180,
+ 181;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">has difficulty in retaining soldiers, 181;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">repulses Cornwallis at Assunpink, 181;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">outwits Cornwallis and wins battle at
+ Princeton, 182;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">excellence of his strategy, 183;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">effect of this campaign in saving Revolution,
+ 183, 184;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">withdraws to Morristown, 185;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">fluctuations in size of army, 186;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his determination to keep the field, 186,
+ 187;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">criticised by Congress for not fighting,
+ 187;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">hampered by Congressional interference,
+ 188;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">issues proclamation requiring oath of
+ allegiance, 188;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">attacked in Congress for so doing, 189;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">annoyed by Congressional alterations of rank,
+ 189;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">and by foreign military adventurers, 191;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">value of his services in suppressing them,
+ 192;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his American feelings, 191, 193;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">warns Congress in vain that Howe means to
+ attack Philadelphia, 193;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">baffles Howe's advance across New Jersey,
+ 195;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">learning of his sailing, marches to defend
+ Philadelphia, 195;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">offers battle at Brandywine, 196, 197;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">out-generaled and beaten, 197;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">rallies army and prepares to fight again,
+ 198;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">prevented by storm, 199;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">attacks British at Germantown, 199;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">defeated, 200;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">exposes himself in battle, 200;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">real success of his action, 201;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">despised by English, 202;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">foresees danger of Burgoyne's invasion,
+ 203;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">sends instructions to Schuyler, 204;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">urges use of New England and New York militia,
+ 304;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">dreads northern advance of Howe, 205;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">determines to hold him at all hazards, 206,
+ 207;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">not cast down by loss of Ticonderoga, 207;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">urges New England to rise, 208;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">sends all possible troops, 208;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">refuses to appoint a commander for Northern
+ army, 208;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his probable reasons, 209;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">continues to send suggestions, 210;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">slighted by Gates after Burgoyne's surrender,
+ 211;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">rise of opposition in Congress, 212;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">arouses ill-feeling by his frankness, 212,
+ 213;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">distrusted by Samuel and John Adams, 214;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">by others, 214, 215;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">formation of a plan to supplant him by Gates,
+ 215;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">opposed by Gates, Mifflin, and Conway, 215,
+ 216;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">angers Conway by preventing his increase in
+ rank, 216;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">is refused troops by Gates, 217;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">defends and loses Delaware forts, 217;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">refuses to attack Howe, 218;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">propriety of his action, 219;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">becomes aware of cabal, 220;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">alarms them by showing extent of his knowledge,
+ 221;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">attacked bitterly in Congress, 222;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">insulted by Gates, 223;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">refuses to resign, 224;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">refuses to notice cabal publicly, 224;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">complains privately of slight support from
+ Pennsylvania, 225;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">continues to push Gates for explanations,
+ 226;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">regains complete control after collapse of
+ cabal, 226, 227;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">withdraws to Valley Forge, 227;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">desperation of his situation, 228;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">criticised by Pennsylvania legislature for
+ going into winter quarters, 229;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his bitter reply, 229;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his unbending resolution, 230;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">continues to urge improvements in army
+ organization, 231;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">manages to hold army together, 232;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">sends Lafayette to watch Philadelphia, 233;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">determines to fight, 234;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">checked by Lee, 234;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">pursues Clinton, 235;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">orders Lee to attack British rearguard,
+ 235;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">discovers his force retreating, 236;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">rebukes Lee and punishes him, 236, 237;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">takes command and stops retreat, 237;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">repulses British and assumes offensive,
+ 238;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">success due to his work at Valley Forge,
+ 239;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">celebrates French alliance, 241;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">has to confront difficulty of managing allies,
+ 241, 242;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">welcomes D'Estaing, 243;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">obliged to quiet recrimination after Newport
+ failure, 244;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his letter to Sullivan, 244;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">to Lafayette, 245;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">to D'Estaing, 246;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">tact and good effect of his letters, 246;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">offers to cooperate in an attack on New York,
+ 247;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">furnishes admirable suggestions to D'Estaing,
+ 247;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">not dazzled by French, 248;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">objects to giving rank to foreign officers,
+ 248, 249;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">opposes transfer of Steuben from inspectorship
+ to the line, 249;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his thoroughly American position, 250;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">absence of provinciality, 251, 252;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">a national leader, 252;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">opposes invasion of Canada, 253;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">foresees danger of its recapture by France,
+ 254, 255;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his clear understanding of French motives, 255,
+ 256;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">rejoices in condition of patriot cause,
+ 257;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">foresees ruin to army in financial troubles,
+ 258;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">has to appease mutinies among unpaid troops,
+ 258;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">appeals to Congress, 259;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">urges election of better delegates to Congress,
+ 259;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">angry with speculators, 260, 261;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">futility of his efforts, 261, 262;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his increasing alarm at social demoralization,
+ 263;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">effect of his exertions, 264;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">conceals his doubts of the French, 264;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">watches New York, 264;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">keeps dreading an English campaign, 265;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">labors with Congress to form a navy, 266;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">plans expedition to chastise Indians, 266;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">realizes that things are at a standstill in the
+ North, 267;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">sees danger to lie in the South, but determines
+ to remain himself near New York, 267;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">not consulted by Congress in naming general for
+ Southern army, 268;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">plans attack on Stony Point, 268;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">hatred of ravaging methods of British warfare,
+ 270;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">again has great difficulties in winter
+ quarters, 270;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">unable to act on offensive in the spring, 270,
+ 272;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">unable to help South, 272;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">advises abandonment of Charleston, 273;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">learns of arrival of French army, 274;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">plans a number of enterprises with it, 275,
+ 276;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">refuses, even after loss of Charleston, to
+ abandon Hudson, 276;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">welcomes Rochambeau, 277;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">writes to Congress against too optimistic
+ feelings, 278, 279;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">has extreme difficulty in holding army
+ together, 280;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">urges French to attack New York, 280;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">sends Maryland troops South after Camden,
+ 281;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">arranges meeting with Rochambeau at Hartford,
+ 282;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">popular enthusiasm over him, 283;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">goes to West Point, 284;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">surprised at Arnold's absence, 284;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">learns of his treachery, 284, 285;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his cool behavior, 285;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his real feelings, 286;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his conduct toward Andr&eacute;, 287;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">its justice, 287, 288;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his opinion of Arnold, 288, 289;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his responsibility in the general breakdown of
+ the Congress and army, 290;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">obliged to quell food mutinies in army, 291,
+ 292;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">difficulty of situation, 292;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his influence the salvation of army, 293;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his greatness best shown in this way, 293;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">rebukes Congress, 294;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">appoints Greene to command Southern army,
+ 295;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">sends Knox to confer with state governors,
+ 296;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">secures temporary relief for army, 296;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">sees the real defect is in weak government,
+ 296;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">urges adoption of Articles of Confederation,
+ 297;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">works for improvements in executive,
+ 298,299;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">still keeps a Southern movement in mind,
+ 301;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">unable to do anything through lack of naval
+ power, 303;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">rebukes Lund Washington for entertaining
+ British at Mt. Vernon, 303;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">still unable to fight, 304;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">tries to frighten Clinton into remaining in New
+ York, 305;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">succeeds with aid of Rochambeau, 306;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">explains his plan to French and to Congress,
+ 306;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">learns of De Grasse's approach, prepares to
+ move South, 306;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">writes to De Grasse to meet him in Chesapeake,
+ 308;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">fears a premature peace, 308;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">pecuniary difficulties, 309;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">absolute need of command of sea, 310;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">persuades De Barras to join De Grasse, 311;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">starts on march for Chesapeake, 311;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">hampered by lack of supplies, 312;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">and by threat of Congress to reduce army,
+ 313;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">passes through Mt. Vernon, 314;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">succeeds in persuading De Grasse not to abandon
+ him, 315;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">besieges Cornwallis, 315;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">sees capture of redoubts, 316;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">receives surrender of Cornwallis, 317;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">admirable strategy and management of campaign,
+ 318;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his personal influence the cause of success,
+ 318;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">especially his use of the fleet, 319;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his management of Cornwallis through Lafayette,
+ 319;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his boldness in transferring army away from New
+ York, 320;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">does not lose his head over victory, 321;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">urges De Grasse to repeat success against
+ Charleston, 322;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">returns north, 322;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">saddened by death of Custis, 322;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">continues to urge Congress to action, 323;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">writes letters to the States, 323;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">does not expect English surrender, 324;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">urges renewed vigor, 324;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">points out that war actually continues,
+ 325;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">urges not to give up army until peace is
+ actually secured, 325;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">failure of his appeals, 326;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">reduced to inactivity, 326;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">angered at murder of Huddy, 327;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">threatens Carleton with retaliation, 328;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">releases Asgill at request of Vergennes and
+ order of Congress, 329, 330;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">disclaims credit, 330;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">justification of his behavior, 330;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his tenderness toward the soldiers, 331;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">jealousy of Congress toward him, 332;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">warns Congress of danger of further neglect of
+ army, 333, 334;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">takes control of mutinous movement, 335;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his address to the soldiers, 336;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">its effect, 336;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">movement among soldiers to make him dictator,
+ 337;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">replies to revolutionary proposals, 337;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">reality of the danger, 339;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">causes for his behaviour, 340, 341;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">a friend of strong government, but devoid of
+ personal ambition, 342;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">chafes under delay to disband army, 343;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">tries to secure Western posts, 343;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">makes a journey through New York, 343;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">gives Congress excellent but futile advice,
+ 344;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">issues circular letter to governors, 344;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">and farewell address to army, 345;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">enters New York after departure of British,
+ 345;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his farewell to his officers, 345;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">adjusts his accounts, 346;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">appears before Congress, 347;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">French account of his action, 347;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">makes speech resigning commission, 348,
+ 349.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2"><i>In Retirement</i>.</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Returns to Mt. Vernon, ii. I;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">tries to resume old life, 2;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">gives up hunting, 2;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">pursued by lion-hunters and artists, 3;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">overwhelmed with correspondence, 3;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">receives letters from Europe, 4;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">from cranks, 4;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">from officers, 4;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his share in Society of Cincinnati, 4;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">manages his estate, 5;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">visits Western lands, 5;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">family cares, 5, 6;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">continues to have interest in public affairs,
+ 6;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">advises Congress regarding peace establishment,
+ 6;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">urges acquisition of Western posts, 7;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his broad national views, 7;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">alone in realizing future greatness of country,
+ 7, 8;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">appreciates importance of the West, 8;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">urges development of inland navigation, 9;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">asks Jefferson's aid, 9, 10;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">lays canal scheme before Virginia legislature,
+ 10;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his arguments, 10;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">troubled by offer of stock, 11;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">uses it to endow two schools, 12;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">significance of his scheme, 12, 13;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his political purposes in binding West to East,
+ 13;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">willing to leave Mississippi closed for this
+ purpose, 14, 15, 16;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">feels need of firmer union during Revolution,
+ 17;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his arguments, 18, 19;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his influence starts movement for reform,
+ 20;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">continues to urge it during retirement, 21;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">foresees disasters of confederation, 21;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">urges impost scheme, 22;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">condemns action of States, 22, 23, 25;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">favours commercial agreement between Maryland
+ and Virginia, 23;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">stung by contempt of foreign powers, 24;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his arguments for a national government,
+ 24;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">points out designs of England, 25;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">works against paper money craze in States,
+ 26;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his opinion of Shays's rebellion, 26;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his position contrasted with Jefferson's,
+ 27;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">influence of his letters, 28, 29;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">shrinks from participating in Federal
+ convention, 29;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">elected unanimously, 30;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">refuses to go to a feeble convention, 30,
+ 31;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">finally makes up his mind, 31.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2"><i>In the Federal Convention</i>.</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Speech attributed to Washington by Morris on
+ duties of delegates, 31, 32;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">chosen to preside, 33;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">takes no part in debate, 34;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his influence in convention, 34, 35;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">despairs of success, 35;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">signs the Constitution, 36;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">words attributed to him, 36;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">silent as to his thoughts, 36, 37;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">sees clearly danger of failure to ratify,
+ 37;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">tries at first to act indifferently, 38;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">begins to work for ratification, 38;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">writes letters to various people, 38, 39;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">circulates copies of "Federalist," 40;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">saves ratification in Virginia, 40;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">urges election of Federalists to Congress,
+ 41;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">receives general request to accept presidency,
+ 41;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his objections, 41, 42;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">dreads failure and responsibility, 42;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">elected, 42;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his journey to New York, 42-46;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">speech at Alexandria, 43;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">popular reception at all points, 44, 45;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his feelings, 46;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his inauguration, 46.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2"><i>President</i>.</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">His speech to Congress, 48;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">urges no specific policy, 48, 49;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his solemn feelings, 49;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his sober view of necessities of situation,
+ 50;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">question of his title, 52;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">arranges to communicate with Senate by writing,
+ 52, 53;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">discusses social etiquette, 53;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">takes middle ground, 54;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">wisdom of his action, 55;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">criticisms by Democrats, 55, 56;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">accused of monarchical leanings, 56, 57;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">familiarizes himself with work already
+ accomplished under Confederation, 58;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his business habits, 58;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">refuses special privileges to French minister,
+ 59, 60;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">skill of his reply, 60, 61;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">solicited for office, 61;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his views on appointment, 62;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">favors friends of Constitution and old
+ soldiers, 62;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">success of his appointments, 63;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">selects a cabinet, 64;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his regard for Knox 65;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">for Morris, 66;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his skill in choosing, 66;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his appreciation of Hamilton, 67;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his grounds for choosing Jefferson, 68;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his contrast with Jefferson, 69;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his choice a mistake in policy, 70;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his partisan characteristics, 70, 71;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">excludes anti-Federalists, 71;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">nominates justices of Supreme Court, 72;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">their party character, 73;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">illness, 73;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">visits the Eastern States, 73;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his reasons, 74;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">stirs popular enthusiasm, 74;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">snubbed by Hancock in Massachusetts, 75;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">accepts Hancock's apology, 75;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">importance of his action, 76;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">success of journey, 76;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">opens Congress, 78, 79;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his speech and its recommendations, 81;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">how far carried out, 81-83;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">national character of the speech, 83;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his fitness to deal with Indians, 87;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his policy, 88;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">appoints commission to treat with Creeks,
+ 90;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">ascribes its failure to Spanish intrigue,
+ 90;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">succeeds by a personal interview in making
+ treaty, 91;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">wisdom of his policy, 92;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">orders an expedition against Western Indians,
+ 93;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">angered at its failure, 94;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">and at conduct of frontiersmen, 94;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">prepares St. Clair's expedition, 95;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">warns against ambush, 95;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">hopes for decisive results, 97;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">learns of St. Clair's defeat, 97;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his self-control, 97;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his outburst of anger against St. Clair, 97,
+ 98;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">masters his feelings, 98;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">treats St. Clair kindly, 99;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">determines on a second campaign, 100;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">selects Wayne and other officers, 100;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">tries to secure peace with tribes, 101;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">efforts prevented by English influence, 101,
+ 102;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">and in South by conduct of Georgia, 103;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">general results of his Indian policy, 104;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">popular misunderstandings and criticism, 104,
+ 105;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">favors assumption of state debts by the
+ government, 107, 108;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">satisfied with bargain between Hamilton and
+ Jefferson, 108;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his respectful attitude toward Constitution,
+ 109;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">asks opinions of cabinet on constitutionality
+ of bank, 110;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">signs bill creating it, 110;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">reasons for his decision, 111;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">supports Hamilton's financial policy, 112;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">supports Hamilton's views on protection, 115,
+ 116;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">appreciates evil economic condition of
+ Virginia, 116, 117;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">sees necessity for self-sufficient industries
+ in war time, 117;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">urges protection, 118, 119, 120;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his purpose to build up national feeling,
+ 121;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">approves national excise tax, 122, 123;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">does not realize unpopularity of method,
+ 123;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">ready to modify but insists on obedience, 124,
+ 125;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">issues proclamation against rioters, 125;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">since Pennsylvania frontier continues
+ rebellious, issues second proclamation threatening to use
+ force, 127;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">calls out the militia, 127;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his advice to leaders and troops, 128;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">importance of Washington's firmness, 129;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his good judgment and patience, 130;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">decides success of the central authority,
+ 130;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">early advocacy of separation of United States
+ from European politics, 133;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">studies situation, 134, 135;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">sees importance of binding West with Eastern
+ States, 135;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">sees necessity of good relations with England,
+ 137;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">authorizes Morris to sound England as to
+ exchange of ministers and a commercial treaty, 137;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">not disturbed by British bad manners, 138;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">succeeds in establishing diplomatic relations,
+ 138;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">early foresees danger of excess in French
+ Revolution, 139, 140;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">states a policy of strict neutrality, 140, 142,
+ 143;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">difficulties of his situation, 142;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">objects to action of National Assembly on
+ tobacco and oil, 144;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">denies reported request by United States that
+ England mediate with Indians, 145;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">announces neutrality in case of a European war,
+ 146;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">instructs cabinet to prepare a neutrality
+ proclamation, 147;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">importance of this step not understood at time,
+ 148, 149;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">foresees coming difficulties, 149, 150;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">acts cautiously toward
+ <i>&eacute;migr&eacute;s</i>, 151;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">contrast with Genet, 152;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">greets him coldly, 152;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">orders steps taken to prevent violations of
+ neutrality, 153, 154;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">retires to Mt. Vernon for rest, 154;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">on returning finds Jefferson has allowed Little
+ Sarah to escape, 156;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">writes a sharp note to Jefferson, 156;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">anger at escape, 157;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">takes matters out of Jefferson's hands,
+ 157;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">determines on asking recall of Genet, 158;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">revokes exequatur of Duplaine, French consul,
+ 159;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">insulted by Genet, 159, 160;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">refuses to deny Jay's card, 160;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">upheld by popular feeling, 160;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his annoyance at the episode, 160;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">obliged to teach American people self-respect,
+ 162, 163;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">deals with troubles incited by Genet in the
+ West, 162, 163;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">sympathizes with frontiersmen, 163;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">comprehends value of Mississippi, 164, 165;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">sends a commission to Madrid to negotiate about
+ free navigation, 166;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">later sends Thomas Pinckney, 166;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">despairs of success, 166;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">apparent conflict between French treaties and
+ neutrality, 169, 170;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">value of Washington's policy to England,
+ 171;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">in spite of England's attitude, intends to keep
+ peace, 177;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">wishes to send Hamilton as envoy, 177;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">after his refusal appoints Jay, 177;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">fears that England intends war, 178;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">determines to be prepared, 178;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">urges upon Jay the absolute necessity of
+ England's giving up Western posts, 179;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">dissatisfied with Jay treaty but willing to
+ sign it, 184;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">in doubt as to meaning of conditional
+ ratification, 184;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">protests against English "provision order" and
+ refuses signature, 185;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">meets uproar against treaty alone, 188;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">determines to sign, 189;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">answers resolutions of Boston town meeting,
+ 190;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">refuses to abandon his judgment to popular
+ outcry, 190;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">distinguishes temporary from permanent feeling,
+ 191;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">fears effect of excitement upon French
+ government, 192;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his view of dangers of situation, 193, 194;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">recalled to Philadelphia by cabinet, 195;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">receives intercepted correspondence of Fauchet,
+ 195, 196;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his course of action already determined, 197,
+ 198;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">not influenced by the Fauchet letter, 198;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">evidence of this, 199, 200;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">reasons for ratifying before showing letter to
+ Randolph, 199, 200;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">signs treaty, 201;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">evidence that he did not sacrifice Randolph,
+ 201, 202;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">fairness of his action, 203;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">refuses to reply to Randolph's attack, 204;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">reasons for signing treaty, 205;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">justified in course of time, 206;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">refuses on constitutional grounds the call of
+ representatives for documents, 208;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">insists on independence of treaty-making by
+ executive and Senate, 209;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">overcomes hostile majority in House, 210;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">wishes Madison to succeed Morris at Paris,
+ 211;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">appoints Monroe, 216;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his mistake in not appointing a political
+ supporter, 212;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">disgusted at Monroe's behavior, 213, 214;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">recalls Monroe and appoints C.C. Pinckney,
+ 214;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">angered at French policy, 214;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his contempt for Monroe's self-justification,
+ 215, 216;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">review of foreign policy, 216-219;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his guiding principle national independence,
+ 216;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">and abstention from European politics, 217;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">desires peace and time for growth, 217,
+ 218;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">wishes development of the West, 218, 219;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">wisdom of his policy, 219;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">considers parties dangerous, 220;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">but chooses cabinet from Federalists, 220;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">prepared to undergo criticism, 221;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">willingness to bear it, 221;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">desires to learn public feeling, by travels,
+ 221, 222;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">feels that body of people will support national
+ government, 222;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">sees and deplores sectional feelings in the
+ South, 222, 223;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">objects to utterances of newspapers, 223;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">attacked by "National Gazette," 227;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">receives attacks on Hamilton from Jefferson and
+ his friends, 228, 229;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">sends charges to Hamilton, 229;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">made anxious by signs of party division,
+ 229;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">urges both Hamilton and Jefferson to cease
+ quarrel, 230, 231;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">dreads an open division in cabinet, 232;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">desirous to rule without party, 233;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">accomplishes feat of keeping both secretaries
+ in cabinet, 233;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">keeps confidence in Hamilton, 234;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">urged by all parties to accept presidency
+ again, 235;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">willing to be reelected, 235;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">pleased at unanimous vote, 235;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his early immunity from attacks, 237;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">later attacked by Freneau and Bache, 238;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">regards opposition as dangerous to country,
+ 239;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">asserts his intention to disregard them,
+ 240;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his success in Genet affair, 241;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">disgusted at "democratic" societies, 242;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">thinks they fomented Whiskey Rebellion,
+ 242;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">denounces them to Congress, 243;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">effect of his remarks, 244;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">accused of tyranny after Jay treaty, 244;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">of embezzlement, 245;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">of aristocracy, 245;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">realizes that he must compose cabinet of
+ sympathizers, 246;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">reconstructs it, 246;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">states determination to govern by party,
+ 247;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">slighted by House, 247;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">refuses a third term, 248;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">publishes Farewell Address, 248;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his justification for so doing, 248;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his wise advice, 249;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">address Attacked by Democrats, 250, 251;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">assailed in Congress by Giles, 251;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">resents charge of being a British sympathizer,
+ 252;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his scrupulously fair conduct toward France,
+ 253;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his resentment at English policy, 254;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his retirement celebrated by the opposition,
+ 255;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">remarks of the "Aurora," 256;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">forged letters of British circulated, 257;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">he repudiates them, 257;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his view of opposition, 259.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2"><i>In Retirement</i>.</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Regards Adams's administration as continuation
+ of his own, 259;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">understands Jefferson's attitude, 259;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">wishes generals of provisional army to be
+ Federalist, 260;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">doubts fidelity of opposition as soldiers,
+ 260;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">dreads their poisoning mind of army, 261;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his condemnation of Democrats, 261, 262;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">snubs Dr. Logan for assuming an unofficial
+ mission to France, 263-265;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">alarmed at Virginia and Kentucky resolutions,
+ 266;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">urges Henry to oppose Virginia resolutions,
+ 267;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">condemns the French party as unpatriotic,
+ 267;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">refuses request to stand again for presidency,
+ 269;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">comments on partisanship of Democrats, 269;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">believes that he would be no better candidate
+ than any other Federalist, 270, 271;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">error of statement that Washington was not a
+ party man, 271, 272;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">slow to relinquish non-partisan position,
+ 272;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">not the man to shrink from declaring his
+ position, 273;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">becomes a member of Federalist party, 273,
+ 274;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">eager for end of term of office, 275;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his farewell dinner, 275;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">at Adams's inauguration, 276;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">popular enthusiasm at Philadelphia, 276;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">at Baltimore, 277;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">returns to Mt. Vernon, 279;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">describes his farm life, 278, 279;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">burdened by necessities of hospitality,
+ 280;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">account of his meeting with Bernard,
+ 281-283;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">continued interest in politics, 284;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">accepts command of provisional army, 285;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">selects Hamilton, Pinckney, and Knox as
+ major-generals, 286;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">surprised at Adams's objection to Hamilton,
+ 286;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">rebukes Adams for altering order of rank of
+ generals, 286, 287;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">not influenced by intrigue, 287;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">annoyed by Adams's conduct, 288;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">tries to soothe Knox's irritation, 289;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">fails to pacify him, 289;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">carries out organization of army, 290;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">does not expect actual war, 291;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">disapproves of Gerry's conduct, 292;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">disapproves of Adams's nomination of Vans
+ Murray, 292;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his dread of French Revolution, 295;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">distrusts Adams's attempts at peace, 296;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">approves Alien and Sedition laws, 296;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his defense of them, 297;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">distressed by dissensions among Federalists,
+ 298;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">predicts their defeat, 298;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his sudden illness, 299-302;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">death, 303.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2"><i>Character</i>.</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">misunderstood, 304;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">extravagantly praised, 304;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">disliked on account of being called faultless,
+ 305;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">bitterly attacked in lifetime, 306;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">sneered at by Jefferson, 306;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">by Pickering, 307;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">called an Englishman, not an American, 307,
+ 308;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">difference of his type from that of Lincoln,
+ 310;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">none the less American, 311, 312;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">compared with Hampden, 312;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his manners those of the times elsewhere in
+ America, 314;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">aristocratic, but of a non-English type,
+ 314-316;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">less affected by Southern limitations than his
+ neighbors, 316;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">early dislike of New England changed to
+ respect, 316, 317;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">friendly with people of humble origin, 317,
+ 318;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">never an enemy of democracy, 318;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">but opposes French excesses, 318;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his self-directed and American training, 319,
+ 320;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">early conception of a nation, 321;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">works toward national government during
+ Revolution, 321;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his interest in Western expansion, 321,
+ 322;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">national character of his Indian policy,
+ 322;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">of his desire to secure free Mississippi
+ navigation, 322;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">of his opposition to war as a danger to Union,
+ 323;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his anger at accusation of foreign
+ subservience, 323;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">continually asserts necessity for independent
+ American policy, 324, 325;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">opposes foreign educational influences, 325,
+ 326;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">favors foundation of a national university,
+ 326;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">breadth and strength of his national feeling,
+ 327;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">absence of boastfulness about country, 328;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">faith in it, 328;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">charge that he was merely a figure-head,
+ 329;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">its injustice, 330;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">charged with commonplaceness of intellect,
+ 330;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">incident of the deathbed explained, 330,
+ 331;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">falsity of the charge, 331;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">inability of mere moral qualities to achieve
+ what he did, 331;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">charged with dullness and coldness, 332;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his seriousness, 333;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">responsibility from early youth, 333;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his habits of keen observation, 333;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">power of judging men, 334;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">ability to use them for what they were worth,
+ 335;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">anecdote of advice to Hamilton and Meade,
+ 335;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">deceived only by Arnold, 336;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">imperfect education, 337;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">continual efforts to improve it, 337, 338;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">modest regarding his literary ability, 339,
+ 340;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">interested in education, 339;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">character of his writing, 340;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">tastes in reading, 341;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">modest but effective in conversation, 342;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his manner and interest described by Bernard,
+ 343-347;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">attractiveness of the picture, 347, 348;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his pleasure in society, 348;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">power of paying compliments, letter to Mrs.
+ Stockton, 349;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">to Charles Thompson, 350;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">to De Chastellux, 351;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his warmth of heart, 352;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">extreme exactness in pecuniary matters,
+ 352;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">illustrative anecdotes, 353,354;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">favorable opinion of teller of anecdotes,
+ 356;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">stern towards dishonesty or cowardice, 357;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">treatment of Andr&eacute; and Asgill, 357,
+ 358;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">sensitive to human suffering, 357, 358;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">kind and courteous to poor, 359;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">conversation with Cleaveland, 359;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">sense of dignity in public office, 360;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">hospitality at Mt. Vernon, 360, 361;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his intimate friendships, 361,362;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">relations with Hamilton, Knox, Mason, Henry
+ Lee, Craik, 362, 363;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">the officers of the army, 363;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Trumbull, Robert and Gouverneur Morris,
+ 363;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">regard for and courtesy toward Franklin,
+ 364;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">love for Lafayette, 365;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">care for his family, 366;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">lasting regard for Fairfaxes, 366, 367;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">kindness to Taft family, 367, 368;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">destroys correspondence with his wife, 368;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">their devoted relationship, 368;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">care for his step-children and relatives, 369,
+ 370;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">charged with lack of humor, 371;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">but never made himself ridiculous, 372;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">not joyous in temperament, 372;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">but had keen pleasure in sport, 373;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">enjoyed a joke, even during Revolution,
+ 374;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">appreciates wit, 375;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">writes a humorous letter, 376-378;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">not devoid of worldly wisdom, 378, 379;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">enjoys cards, dancing, the theatre, 380;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">loves horses, 380;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">thorough in small affairs as well as great,
+ 381;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">controversy over site of church, 381;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his careful domestic economy, 382;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">love of method, 383;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">of excellence in dress and furniture, 383,
+ 384;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">gives dignity to American cause, 385;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his personal appearance, 385;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">statements of Houdon, 386;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">of Ackerson, 386, 387;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his tremendous muscular strength, 388;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">great personal impressiveness, 389, 390;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">lacking in imagination, 391;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">strong passions, 391;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">fierce temper, 392;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">anecdotes of outbreaks, 392;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his absence of self-love, 393;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">confident in judgment of posterity, 393;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">religious faith, 394;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">summary and conclusion, 394, 395.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2"><i>Characteristics of</i>.</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">General view, ii. 304-395;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">general admiration for, i. 1-7;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">myths about, i. 9-12, ii. 307 ff.;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">comparisons with Jefferson, ii. 69;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">with Lincoln, ii. 310-312;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">with Hampden, ii. 312, 313;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">absence of self-seeking, i. 341;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">affectionateness, i. 111, 285,331,345, ii. 332,
+ 362-371;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">agreeableness, ii. 344-347, 377;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Americanism, ii. 307-328;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">aristocratic habits, ii. 314, 316;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">business ability, i. 105, 109, ii. 5, 352,
+ 382;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">coldness on occasion, i. 223, 224, 263, ii.
+ 318;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">courage, i. 77, 78, 86, 127, 168, 292;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">dignity, i. 81,161, ii. 52-57, 76;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">hospitality, ii. 360;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">impressiveness, i. 56, 83, 130, 138, 319, ii.
+ 385;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">indomitableness, i. 177, 181, 227;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">judgments of men, i. 295, ii. 64, 86, 334,
+ 335;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">justice and sternness, i. 287, 330, ii. 203,
+ 352-358, 389;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">kindliness, ii. 349-356, 359;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">lack of education, i. 62, ii. 337;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">love of reading, i. 62, ii. 341, 342;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">love of sport, i. 56, 98, 113-116, 118, ii.
+ 380;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">manners, ii. 282-283, 314;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">military ability, i. 154, 166, 174, 183, 197,
+ 204, 207, 239, 247, 265, 267, 305-320, ii. 331;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">modesty, i. 102, 134;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">not a figure-head, ii. 329, 330;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">not a prig, i. 10-12, 41-47;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">not cold and inhuman, ii. 332, 342;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">not dull or commonplace, ii. 330, 332;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">not superhuman and distant, i. 9, 10, 12, ii.
+ 304, 305;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">open-mindedness, ii. 317;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">passionateness, i. 58, 73, 90;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">personal appearance, i. 57, 136, 137, ii. 282,
+ 343, 385-389;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">religious views, i. 321, ii. 393;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">romantic traits, i. 95-97;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">sense of humor, ii. 371-377;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">silence regarding self, i. 14, 69, 70, 116,
+ 129, 285; ii. 37, 336;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">simplicity, i. 59, 69, 348; ii. 50, 340;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">sobriety, i. 49, 52, 134; ii. 43, 45, 333,
+ 373;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">tact, i. 162, 243, 244-246;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">temper, i. 73, 92, 110, 168, 236, 237, 260; ii.
+ 98, 392;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">thoroughness, i. 112, 323, 341, ii. 381.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2"><i>Political Opinions</i>.</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">On Alien and Sedition Acts, ii. 196;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">American nationality, i. 191, 250, 251, 255,
+ 262, 279, ii. 7, 61, 133, 145, 324, 325, 327, 328;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Articles of Confederation, i. 297, ii. 17,
+ 24;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">bank, ii. 110, 111;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">colonial rights, i. 120, 124-126, 130;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Constitution, i. 38-41;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">democracy, ii. 317-319;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Democratic party, ii. 214, 239, 240, 258, 261,
+ 267, 268;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">disunion, ii. 22;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">duties of the executive, ii. 190;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">education, ii. 81, 326, 330;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Federalist party, ii. 71, 246, 247, 259, 260,
+ 261, 269-274, 298;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">finance, ii. 107, 108, 112, 122;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">foreign relations, ii. 25, 134, 142, 145, 147,
+ 179, 217-219, 323;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">French Revolution, ii. 139, 140, 295, 318;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">independence of colonies, i. 131, 159, 160;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Indian policy, ii. 82, 87, 88, 91, 92, 104,
+ 105;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Jay treaty, ii. 184-205;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">judiciary, i. 150;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">nominations to office, ii. 62;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">party, ii. 70, 222, 233, 249;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">protection, ii. 116-122;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">slavery, i. 106-108;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Stamp Act, i. 119;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">strong government, i. 298, ii. 18, 24, 129,
+ 130;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">treaty power, ii. 190, 207-210;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Virginia and Kentucky Resolutions, ii. 266,
+ 267;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Western expansion, ii. 6, 8-16, 135, 163-165,
+ 218, 322.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Washington, George Steptoe,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his sons educated by Washington, ii. 370.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Washington, John, brother of George,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">letter of Washington, to, i. 132.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Washington, Lawrence, brother of George
+ Washington,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">educated in England, i. 54;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">has military career, 54;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">returns to Virginia and builds Mt. Vernon,
+ 54;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">marries into Fairfax family, 54, 55;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">goes to West Indies for his health, 62;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">dies, leaving George guardian of his daughter,
+ 64;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">chief manager of Ohio Company, 65;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">gives George military education, 65.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Washington, Lund,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">letter of Washington to, i. 152;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">rebuked by Washington for entertaining British,
+ ii. 303.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Washington, Martha, widow of Daniel P.
+ Custis,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">meets Washington, i. 101;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">courtship of, and marriage, 101, 102;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">hunts with her husband, 114;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">joins him at Boston, 151;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">holds levees as wife of President, ii. 54;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">during his last illness, 300;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">her correspondence destroyed, 368;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">her relations with her husband, 368, 369.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Washington, Mary,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">married to Augustine Washington, i. 39;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">mother of George Washington, 39;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">limited education but strong character, 40,
+ 41;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">wishes George to earn a living, 49;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">opposes his going to sea, 49;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">letters to, 88;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">visited by her son, ii. 5.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Waters, Henry E.,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">establishes Washington pedigree, i. 32.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Wayne, Anthony,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">defeated after Brandywine, i. 198;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his opinion of Germantown, 199;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">at Monmouth urges Washington to come, 235;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">ready to attack Stony Point, 268;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his successful exploit, 269;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">joins Lafayette in Virginia, 307;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">appointed to command against Indians, ii.
+ 100;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his character, 100;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">organizes his force, 101;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his march, 102;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">defeats the Indians, 103.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Weems, Mason L.,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">influence of his life of Washington on popular
+ opinion, i. 10;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">originates idea of his priggishness, 11;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his character, 41, 43;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">character of his book, 42;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his mythical "rectorate" of Mt. Vernon, 43,
+ 44;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">invents anecdotes of Washington's childhood,
+ 44;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">folly of cherry-tree and other stories, 46;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">their evil influence, 47.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">West, the,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">its importance realized by Washington, ii.
+ 7-16;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">his influence counteracted by inertia of
+ Congress, 8;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">forwards inland navigation, 9;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">desires to bind East to West, 9-11, 14;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">formation of companies, 11-13;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">on Mississippi navigation, 14-16, 164;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">projects of Genet in, 162;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">its attitude understood by Washington, 163,
+ 164;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Washington wishes peace in order to develop it,
+ 218, 219, 321.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">"Whiskey Rebellion,"</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">passage of excise law, ii. 123;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">outbreaks of violence in Pennsylvania and North
+ Carolina, 124;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">proclamation issued warning rioters to desist,
+ 125;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">renewed outbreaks in Pennsylvania, 125,
+ 126;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">the militia called out, 127;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">suppression of the insurrection, 128;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">real danger of movement, 129;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">its suppression emphasizes national authority,
+ 129, 130;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">supposed by Washington to have been stirred up
+ by Democratic clubs, 242.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">White Plains,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">battle at, i. 173.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Wilkinson, James,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">brings Gates's message to Washington at
+ Trenton, i. 180;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">brings news of Saratoga to Congress, 220;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">nettled at Sherman's sarcasm, discloses Conway
+ cabal, 220;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">quarrels with Gates, 223;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">resigns from board of war, 223, 226;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">leads expedition against Indians, ii. 95.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Willett, Colonel,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">commissioner to Creeks, his success, ii.
+ 91.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">William and Mary College,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Washington Chancellor of, ii. 339.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Williams,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">Washington's teacher, i. 48, 51.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Willis, Lewis,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">story of Washington's school days, i. 95.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Wilson, James,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">appointed to Supreme Court, ii. 72.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Wilson, James, "of England,"</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">hunts with Washington, i. 115.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Wolcott, Oliver,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">receives Fauchet letter, ii. 195;</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">succeeds Hamilton as Secretary of Treasury,
+ 246.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">Wooster, Mrs.,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">letter of Washington to, ii. 61.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza"></div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">YORKTOWN,</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">siege of, i. 315-318.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">"Young Man's Companion,"</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">used by George Washington, origin of his rules
+ of conduct, i. 52.</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's George Washington, Vol. II, by Henry Cabot Lodge
+
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+</pre>
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+</body>
+</html>
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+Project Gutenberg's George Washington, Vol. II, by Henry Cabot Lodge
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: George Washington, Vol. II
+
+Author: Henry Cabot Lodge
+
+Release Date: June 19, 2004 [EBook #12653]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK GEORGE WASHINGTON, VOL. II ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Juliet Sutherland, Tim Koeller and PG Distributed
+Proofreaders
+
+
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: MARTHA WASHINGTON]
+
+American Statesmen
+
+STANDARD LIBRARY EDITION
+
+
+[Illustration: Mount Vernon]
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+GEORGE WASHINGTON
+
+ BY
+
+HENRY CABOT LODGE
+
+ IN TWO VOLUMES
+ VOL. II.
+
+ 1899
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+CHAPTER.
+
+ I. WORKING FOR UNION
+ II. STARTING THE GOVERNMENT
+ III. DOMESTIC AFFAIRS
+ IV. FOREIGN RELATIONS
+ V. WASHINGTON AS A PARTY MAN
+ VI. THE LAST YEARS
+ VII. GEORGE WASHINGTON
+
+ INDEX
+
+
+
+
+ILLUSTRATIONS
+
+
+MARTHA WASHINGTON
+
+From the painting by Gilbert Stuart in the Museum of Fine Arts,
+Boston. This painting is owned by the Boston Athenaeum and is known as
+the Athenaeum portrait.
+
+Autograph from letter written from Valley Forge, March 7, 1778, now in
+the possession of Hon. Winslow Warren.
+
+
+The vignette of Mount Vernon is from a photograph.
+
+
+WASHINGTON RESIGNING HIS COMMISSION AT ANNAPOLIS
+
+From the original painting by Trumbull in the Art Gallery of Yale
+University.
+
+
+LAFAYETTE
+
+From a contemporary French folio engraving in the Emmet collection,
+New York Public Library, Lenox Building.
+
+
+HENRY KNOX
+
+From the original portrait by Gilbert Stuart in the Museum of Fine
+Arts, Boston.
+
+Autograph from Winsor's "America."
+
+
+NATHANAEL GREENE
+
+From the original painting by C.W. Peale, by kind permission of its
+present owner, Mrs. Wm. Brenton Greene, Jr., Princeton, N.J.
+
+Autograph from Winsor's "America."
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+GEORGE WASHINGTON
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+WORKING FOR UNION
+
+
+Having resigned his commission, Washington stood not upon the order of
+his going, but went at once to Virginia, and reached Mount Vernon the
+next day, in season to enjoy the Christmas-tide at home. It was with
+a deep sigh of relief that he sat himself down again by his own
+fireside, for all through the war the one longing that never left his
+mind was for the banks of the Potomac. He loved home after the fashion
+of his race, but with more than common intensity, and the country life
+was dear to him in all its phases. He liked its quiet occupations and
+wholesome sports, and, like most strong and simple natures, he loved
+above all an open-air existence. He felt that he had earned his rest,
+with all the temperate pleasures and employments which came with it,
+and he fondly believed that he was about to renew the habits which he
+had abandoned for eight weary years. Four days after his return he
+wrote to Governor Clinton: "The scene is at last closed. I feel myself
+eased of a load of public care. I hope to spend the remainder of my
+days in cultivating the affections of good men and in the practice of
+the domestic virtues." That the hope was sincere we may well suppose,
+but that it was more than a hope may be doubted. It was a wish, not a
+belief, for Washington must have felt that there was still work which
+he would surely be called to do. Still for the present the old life
+was there, and he threw himself into it with eager zest, though age
+and care put some of the former habits aside. He resumed his hunting,
+and Lafayette sent him a pack of splendid French wolf-hounds. But they
+proved somewhat fierce and unmanageable, and were given up, and after
+that the following of the hounds was never resumed. In other respects
+there was little change. The work of the plantation and the affairs of
+the estate, much disordered by his absence, once more took shape and
+moved on successfully under the owner's eye. There were, as of old,
+the long days in the saddle, the open house and generous hospitality,
+the quiet evenings, and the thousand and one simple labors and
+enjoyments of rural life. But with all this were the newer and deeper
+cares, born of the change which had been wrought in the destiny of the
+country. The past broke in and could not be pushed aside, the future
+knocked at the door and demanded an answer to its questionings.
+
+He had left home a distinguished Virginian; he returned one of the
+most famous men in the world, and such celebrity brought its usual
+penalties. Every foreigner of any position who came to the country
+made a pilgrimage to Mount Vernon, and many Americans did the same.
+Their coming was not allowed to alter the mode of life, but they were
+all hospitably received, and they consumed many hours of their host's
+precious time. Then there were the artists and sculptors, who came
+to paint his portrait or model his bust. "_In for a penny, in for
+a pound_ is an old adage," he wrote to Hopkinson in 1785. "I am so
+hackneyed to the touches of painters' pencils that I am now altogether
+at their beck, and sit 'like patience on a monument,' whilst they are
+delineating the lines of my face. It is a proof, among many others, of
+what habit and custom can accomplish." Then there were the people who
+desired to write his memoirs, and the historians who wished to have
+his reminiscences, in their accounts of the Revolution. Some of these
+inquiring and admiring souls came in person, while others assailed him
+by letter and added to the vast flood of correspondence which poured
+in upon him by every post. His correspondence, in fact, in the
+needless part of it, was the most formidable waste of his time. He
+seems to have formed no correct idea of his own fame and what it
+meant, for he did not have a secretary until he found not only that he
+could not arrange his immense mass of papers, but that he could not
+even keep up with his daily letters. His correspondence came from all
+parts of his own country, and of Europe as well. The French officers
+who had been his companions in arms wrote him with affectionate
+interest, and he was urged by them, one and all, and even by the king
+and queen, to visit France. These were letters which he was only too
+happy to answer, and he would fain have crossed the water in response
+to their kindly invitation; but he professed himself too old, which
+was a mere excuse, and objected his ignorance of the language, which
+to a man of his temperament was a real obstacle. Besides these letters
+of friendship, there were the schemers everywhere who sought his
+counsel and assistance. The notorious Lady Huntington, for example,
+pursued him with her project of Christianizing the Indians by means of
+a missionary colony in our western region, and her persistent ladyship
+cost him a good deal of time and thought, and some long and careful
+letters. Then there was the inventor Kumsey, with his steamboat, to
+which he gave careful attention, as he did to everything that seemed
+to have merit. Another class of correspondents were his officers, who
+wanted his aid with Congress and in a thousand other ways, and to
+these old comrades he never turned a deaf ear. In this connection also
+came the affairs of the Society of the Cincinnati. He took an active
+part in the formation of the society, became its head, steered it
+through its early difficulties, and finally saved it from the wreck
+with which it was threatened by unreasoning popular prejudice. All
+these things were successfully managed, but at much expense of time
+and thought.
+
+[Illustration: WASHINGTON RESIGNING HIS COMMISSION AT ANNAPOLIS]
+
+Then again, apart from this mass of labor thrust upon him by
+outsiders, there were his own concerns. His personal affairs required
+looking after, and he regulated accounts, an elaborate business always
+with him, put his farms in order, corresponded with his merchants
+in England, and introduced agricultural improvements, which always
+interested him deeply. He had large investments in land, of which from
+boyhood he had been a bold and sagacious purchaser. These investments
+had been neglected and needed his personal inspection; so in
+September, 1784, he mounted his horse, and with a companion and a
+servant rode away to the western country to look after his property.
+He camped out, as in the early days, and heartily enjoyed it, although
+reports that the Indians were moving in a restless and menacing manner
+shortened his trip, and prevented his penetrating beyond his settled
+lands to the wild tracts which he owned to the westward. Still he
+managed to ride some six hundred and eighty miles and get a good taste
+of that wild life which he never ceased to love, besides gathering a
+stock of information on many points of deeper and wider interest than
+his own property.
+
+In the midst of all these employments, too, he attended closely to his
+domestic duties. At frequent intervals he journeyed to Fredericksburg
+to visit his mother, who still lived, and to whom he was always a
+dutiful and affectionate son. He watched over Mrs. Washington's
+grandchildren, and two or three nephews of his own, whose education
+he had undertaken, with all the solicitude of a father, and at the
+expense again of much thought and many wise letters of instruction and
+advice.
+
+Even from this brief list it is possible to gain some idea of the
+occupations which filled Washington's time, and the only wonder is
+that he dealt with them so easily and effectively. Yet the greatest
+and most important work, that which most deeply absorbed his mind, and
+which affected the whole country, still remains to be described. With
+all his longing for repose and privacy, Washington could not separate
+himself from the great problems which he had solved, or from the
+solution of the still greater problems which he had done more than any
+man to bring into existence. In reality, despite his reiterated wish
+for the quiet of home, he never ceased to labor at the new questions
+which confronted the country, and the old issues which were the legacy
+of the Revolution.
+
+In the latter class was the peace establishment, on which he advised
+Congress, much in vain; for their idea of a peace establishment was
+to get rid of the army as rapidly as possible, and retain only a
+corporal's guard in the service of the confederation. Another question
+was that concerning the western posts. As has been already pointed
+out, Washington's keen eye had at once detected that this was the
+perilous point in the treaty, and he made a prompt but unavailing
+effort to secure these posts in the first flush of good feeling when
+peace had just been made. After he had retired he observed with regret
+the feebleness of Congress in this matter, and he continued to write
+about it. He wrote especially to Knox, who was in charge of the war
+department, and advised him to establish posts on our side, since we
+could not obtain the withdrawal of the British. This deep anxiety as
+to the western posts was due not merely to his profound distrust of
+the intention of England, but to his extreme solicitude as to the
+unsettled regions of the West. He repeatedly referred to the United
+States, even before the close of the war, as an infant empire, and he
+saw before any one else the destined growth of the country.
+
+No man of that time, with the exception of Hamilton, ever grasped and
+realized as he did the imperial future which stretched before the
+United States. It was a difficult thing for men who had been born
+colonists to rise to a sense of national opportunities, but Washington
+passed at a single step from being a Virginian to being an American,
+and in so doing he stood alone. He was really and thoroughly national
+from the beginning of the war, at a time when, except for a few
+oratorical phrases, no one had ever thought of such a thing as a
+practical and living question. In the same way he had passed rapidly
+to an accurate conception of the probable growth and greatness of
+the country, and again he stood alone. Hamilton, born outside the
+colonies, unhampered by local prejudices and attachments, and living
+in Washington's family, as soon as he turned his mind to the subject,
+became, like his chief, entirely national and imperial in his views;
+but the other American statesmen of that day, with the exception
+of Franklin, only followed gradually and sometimes reluctantly in
+adopting their opinions. Some of them never adopted them at all, but
+remained imbedded in local ideas, and very few got beyond the region
+of words and actually grasped the facts with the absolutely clear
+perception which Washington had from the outset. Thus it was that when
+the war closed, one of the two ruling ideas in Washington's mind was
+to assure the future which he saw opening before the country. He
+perceived at a glance that the key and the guarantee of that future
+were in the wild regions of the West. Hence his constant anxiety as to
+the western posts, as to our Indian policy, and as to the maintenance
+of a sufficient armed force upon our borders to check the aggressions
+of Englishmen or of savages, and to secure free scope for settlement.
+In advancing these ideas on a national scale, however, he was rendered
+helpless by the utter weakness of Congress, which even his influence
+was powerless to overcome. He therefore began, immediately after his
+retreat to private life, to formulate and bring into existence such
+practical measures as were possible for the development of the West,
+believing that if Congress could not act, the people would, if any
+opportunity were given to their natural enterprise.
+
+The scheme which he proposed was to open the western country by means
+of inland navigation. The thought had long been in his mind. It had
+come to him before the Revolution, and can be traced back to the early
+days when he was making surveys, buying wild lands, and meditating
+very deeply, but very practically, on the possible commercial
+development of the colonies. Now the idea assumed much larger
+proportions and a much graver aspect. He perceived in it the first
+step toward the empire which he foresaw, and when he had laid down
+his sword and awoke in the peaceful morning at Mount Vernon, "with
+a strange sense of freedom from official cares," he directed his
+attention at once to this plan, in which he really could do something,
+despite an inert Congress and a dissolving confederation. His first
+letter on the subject was written in March, 1784, and addressed
+to Jefferson, who was then in Congress, and who sympathized with
+Washington's views without seeing how far they reached. He told
+Jefferson how he despaired of government aid, and how he therefore
+intended to revive the scheme of a company, which he had started in
+1775, and which had been abandoned on account of the war. He showed
+the varying interests which it was necessary to conciliate, asked
+Jefferson to see the governor of Maryland, so that that State might
+be brought into the undertaking, and referred to the danger of being
+anticipated and beaten by New York, a chord of local pride which he
+continued to touch most adroitly as the business proceeded. Very
+characteristically, too, he took pains to call attention to the fact
+that by his ownership of land he had a personal interest in the
+enterprise. He looked far beyond his own lands, but he was glad to
+have his property developed, and with his usual freedom from anything
+like pretense, he drew attention to the fact of his personal
+interests.
+
+On his return from his tour in the autumn, he proceeded to bring
+the matter to public attention and to the consideration of the
+legislature. With this end in view he addressed a long letter to
+Governor Harrison, in which he laid out his whole scheme. Detroit was
+to be the objective point, and he indicated the different routes by
+which inland navigation could thence be obtained, thus opening the
+Indian trade, and affording an outlet at the same time for the
+settlers who were sure to pour in when once the fear of British
+aggression was removed. He dwelt strongly upon the danger of Virginia
+losing these advantages by the action of other States, and yet at the
+same time he suggested the methods by which Maryland and Pennsylvania
+could be brought into the plan. Then he advanced a series of arguments
+which were purely national in their scope. He insisted on the
+necessity of binding to the old colonies by strong ties the Western
+States, which might easily be decoyed away if Spain or England had the
+sense to do it. This point he argued with great force, for it was now
+no longer a Virginian argument, but an argument for all the States.
+
+The practical result was that the legislature took the question up,
+more in deference to the writer's wishes and in gratitude for his
+services, than from any comprehension of what the scheme meant. The
+companies were duly organized, and the promoter was given a hundred
+and fifty shares, on the ground that the legislature wished to take
+every opportunity of testifying their sense of "the unexampled merits
+of George Washington towards his country." Washington was much touched
+and not a little troubled by this action. He had been willing, as he
+said, to give up his cherished privacy and repose in order to forward
+the enterprise. He had gone to Maryland even, and worked to engage
+that State in the scheme, but he could not bear the idea of taking
+money for what he regarded as part of a great public policy. "I would
+wish," he said, "that every individual who may hear that it was a
+favorite plan of mine may know also that I had no other motive for
+promoting it than the advantage of which I conceived it would be
+productive to the Union, and to this State in particular, by cementing
+the eastern and western territory together, at the same time that it
+will give vigor and increase to our commerce, and be a convenience to
+our citizens."
+
+"How would this matter be viewed, then, by the eye of the world, and
+what would be the opinion of it, when it comes to be related that
+George Washington has received twenty thousand dollars and five
+thousand pounds sterling of the public money as an interest therein?"
+He thought it would make him look like a "pensioner or dependent"
+to accept this gratuity, and he recoiled from the idea. There is
+something entirely frank and human in the way in which he says "George
+Washington," instead of using the first pronoun singular. He always
+saw facts as they were; he understood the fact called "George
+Washington" as perfectly as any other, and although he wanted
+retirement and privacy, he had no mock modesty in estimating his own
+place in the world. At the same time, while he wished to be rid of the
+kindly gift, he shrank from putting on what he called the appearance
+of "ostentatious disinterestedness" by refusing it. Finally he took
+the stock and endowed two charity schools with the dividends. The
+scheme turned out successfully, and the work still endures, like the
+early surveys and various other things of a very different kind to
+which Washington put his hand. In the greater forces which were
+presently set in motion for the preservation of the future empire,
+the inland navigation, started in Virginia, dropped out of sight, and
+became merely one of the rills which fed the mighty river. But it was
+the only really practical movement possible at the precise moment when
+it was begun, and it was characteristic of its author, who always
+found, even in the most discouraging conditions, something that could
+be done. It might be only a very little something, but still that was
+better than nothing to the strong man ever dealing with facts as they
+actually were on this confused earth, and not turning aside because
+things were not as they ought to be. Thus many a battle and campaign
+had been saved, and so inland navigation played its part now. It
+helped, among other things, to bring Maryland and Virginia together,
+and their combination was the first step toward the Constitution of
+the United States. There is nothing fanciful in all this. No one would
+pretend that the Constitution of the United States was descended from
+Washington's James River and Potomac River companies. But he worked at
+them with that end in view, and so did what was nearest to his hand
+and most practical toward union, empire, and the development of
+national sentiment.
+
+Ah, says some critic in critic's fashion, you are carried away by your
+subject; you see in a simple business enterprise, intended merely to
+open western lands, the far-reaching ideas of a statesman. Perhaps
+our critic is right, for as one goes on living with this Virginian
+soldier, studying his letters and his thoughts, one comes to believe
+many things of him, and to detect much meaning in his sayings and
+doings. Let us, however, show our evidence at least. Here is what he
+wrote to his friend Humphreys a year after his scheme was afoot: "My
+attention is more immediately engaged in a project which I think big
+with great political as well as commercial consequences to the
+States, especially the middle ones;" and then he went on to argue the
+necessity of fastening the Western States to the Atlantic seaboard
+and thus thwarting Spain and England. This looks like more than a
+money-making scheme; in fact, it justifies all that has been said,
+especially if read in connection with certain other letters of this
+period. Great political results, as well as lumber and peltry, were
+what Washington intended to float along his rivers and canals.
+
+In this same letter to Humphreys he touched also on another point
+in connection with the development of the West, which was of vast
+importance to the future of the country, and was even then agitating
+men's minds. He said: "I may be singular in my ideas, but they are
+these: that, to open a door to, and make easy the way for those
+settlers to the westward (who ought to advance regularly and
+compactly), before we make any stir about the navigation of the
+Mississippi, and before our settlements are far advanced towards that
+river, would be our true line of policy." Again he wrote: "However
+singular the opinion may be, I cannot divest myself of it, that the
+navigation of the Mississippi, _at this time_ [1785], ought to be no
+object with us. On the contrary, until we have a little time allowed
+to open and make easy the ways between the Atlantic States and the
+western territory, the obstructions had better remain." He was right
+in describing himself as "singular" in his views on this matter, which
+just then was exciting much attention.
+
+At that time indeed much feeling existed, and there were many sharp
+divisions about the Mississippi question. One party, for the sake of a
+commercial treaty with Spain, and to get a troublesome business out of
+the way, was ready to give up our claims to a free navigation of
+the great river; and this was probably the prevalent sentiment in
+Congress, for to most of the members the Mississippi seemed a very
+remote affair indeed. On the other side was a smaller and more violent
+party, which was for obtaining the free navigation immediately and
+at all hazards, and was furious at the proposition to make such a
+sacrifice as its opponents proposed. Finally, there was Spain herself
+intriguing to get possession of the West, holding out free navigation
+as a bait to the settlers of Kentucky, and keeping paid agents in that
+region to foster her schemes. Washington saw too far and too
+clearly to think for one moment of giving up the navigation of the
+Mississippi, but he also perceived what no one else seems to have
+thought of, that free navigation at that moment would give the western
+settlements "the habit of trade" with New Orleans before they had
+formed it with the Atlantic seaboard, and would thus detach them from
+the United States. He wished, therefore, to have the Mississippi
+question left open, and all our claims reserved, so that trade by
+the river should be obstructed until we had time to open our inland
+navigation and bind 'the western people to us by ties too strong to
+be broken. The fear that the river would be lost by waiting did not
+disturb him in the least, provided our claims were kept alive. He
+wrote to Lee in June, 1786: "Whenever the new States become so
+populous, and so extended to the westward, as really to need it,
+there will be no power which can deprive them of the use of the
+Mississippi." Again, a year later, while the convention was sitting in
+Philadelphia, he said: "My sentiments with respect to the navigation
+of the Mississippi have been long fixed, and are not dissimilar to
+those which are expressed in your letter. I have ever been of opinion
+that the true policy of the Atlantic States, instead of contending
+prematurely for the free navigation of that river (which eventually,
+and perhaps as soon as it will be our true interest to obtain it, must
+happen), would be to open and improve the natural communications
+with the western country." The event justified his sagacity in all
+respects, for the bickerings went on until the United States were able
+to compel Spain to give what was wanted to the western communities,
+which by that time had been firmly bound to those of the Atlantic
+coast.
+
+Much as Washington thought about holding fast the western country,
+there was yet one idea that overruled it as well as all others. There
+was one plan which he knew would be a quick solution of the dangers
+and difficulties for which inland navigation and trade connections
+were at best but palliatives. He had learned by bitter experience, as
+no other man had learned, the vital need and value of union. He felt
+it as soon as he took command of the army, and it rode like black care
+behind him from Cambridge to Yorktown. He had hoped something from the
+confederation, but he soon saw that it was as worthless as the utter
+lack of system which it replaced, and amounted merely to substituting
+one kind of impotence and confusion for another. Others might be
+deceived by phrases as to nationality and a general government, but
+he had dwelt among hard facts, and he knew that these things did not
+exist. He knew that what passed for them, stood in their place and
+wore their semblance, were merely temporary creations born of the
+common danger, and doomed, when the pressure of war was gone, to fall
+to pieces in imbecility and inertness. To the lack of a proper
+union, which meant to his mind national and energetic government, he
+attributed the failures of the campaigns, the long-drawn miseries, and
+in a word the needless prolongation of the Revolution. He saw, too,
+that what had been so nearly ruinous in war would be absolutely so in
+peace, and before the treaty was actually signed he had begun to call
+attention to the great question on the right settlement of which the
+future of the country depended.
+
+To Hamilton he wrote on March 4, 1783: "It is clearly my opinion,
+unless Congress have powers competent to all general purposes, that
+the distresses we have encountered, the expense we have incurred, and
+the blood we have spilt, will avail us nothing." Again he wrote to
+Hamilton, a few weeks later: "My wish to see the union of these States
+established upon liberal and permanent principles, and inclination
+to contribute my mite in pointing out the defects of the present
+constitution, are equally great. All my private letters have teemed
+with these sentiments, and whenever this topic has been the subject
+of conversation, I have endeavored to diffuse and enforce them." His
+circular letter to the governors of the States at the close of the
+war, which was as eloquent as it was forcible, was devoted to urging
+the necessity of a better central government. "With this conviction,"
+he said, "of the importance of the present crisis, silence in me would
+be a crime. I will therefore speak to your Excellency the language of
+freedom and of sincerity without disguise.... There are four things
+which I humbly conceive are essential to the well-being, I may
+even venture to say, to the existence, of the United States, as an
+independent power:--
+
+"First. An indissoluble union of the States under one federal head.
+
+"Second. A regard to public justice.
+
+"Third. The adoption of a proper peace establishment; and,
+
+"Fourth. The prevalence of that pacific and friendly disposition among
+the people of the United States, which will induce them to forget
+their local prejudices and policies; to make those mutual concessions
+which are requisite to the general prosperity; and in some instances
+to sacrifice their individual advantages to the interest of the
+community." The same appeal went forth again in his last address to
+the army, when he said: "Although the general has so frequently given
+it as his opinion, in the most public and explicit manner, that unless
+the principles of the federal government were properly supported, and
+the powers of the Union increased, the honor, dignity, and justice of
+the nation would be lost forever; yet he cannot help repeating on
+this occasion so interesting a sentiment, and leaving it as his last
+injunction to every soldier, who may view the subject in the same
+serious point of light, to add his best endeavors to those of his
+worthy fellow-citizens towards effecting those great and valuable
+purposes on which our very existence as a nation so materially
+depends."
+
+These two papers were the first strong public appeals for union. The
+letter to the governors argued the question elaborately, and was
+intended for the general public. The address to the army was simply a
+watchword and last general order; for the army needed no arguments to
+prove the crying need of better government. Before this, Hamilton had
+written his famous letters to Duane and Morris, and Madison was
+just beginning to turn his thoughts toward the problem of federal
+government; but with these exceptions Washington stood alone. In
+sending out these two papers he began the real work that led to the
+Constitution. What he said was read and heeded throughout the country,
+for at the close of the war his personal influence was enormous, and
+with the army his utterances were those of an oracle. By his appeal he
+made each officer and soldier a missionary in the cause of the Union,
+and by his arguments to the governors he gave ground and motive for
+a party devoted to procuring better government. Thus he started the
+great movement which, struggling through many obstacles, culminated in
+the Constitution and the union of the States. No other man could
+have done it, for no one but Washington had a tithe of the influence
+necessary to arrest public attention; and, save Hamilton, no other
+man then had even begun to understand the situation which Washington
+grasped so easily and firmly in all its completeness.
+
+He sent out these appeals as his last words to his countrymen at the
+close of their conflict; but he had no intention of stopping there.
+He had written and spoken, as he said, to every one on every occasion
+upon this topic, and he continued to do so until the work was done. He
+had no sooner laid aside the military harness than he began at once to
+push on the cause of union. In the bottom of his heart he must have
+known that his work was but half done, and with the same pen with
+which he reiterated his intention to live in repose and privacy, and
+spend his declining years beneath his own vine and fig-tree, he wrote
+urgent appeals and wove strong arguments addressed to leaders in
+every State. He had not been at home five days before he wrote to the
+younger Trumbull, congratulating him on his father's vigorous message
+in behalf of better federal government, which had not been very well
+received by the Connecticut legislature. He spoke of "the jealousies
+and contracted temper" of the States, but avowed his belief that
+public sentiment was improving. "Everything," he concluded, "my dear
+Trumbull, will come right at last, as we have often prophesied.
+My only fear is that we shall lose a little reputation first." A
+fortnight later he wrote to the governor of Virginia: "That the
+prospect before us is, as you justly observe, fair, none can deny; but
+what use we shall make of it is exceedingly problematical; not but
+that I believe all things will come right at last, but like a young
+heir come a little prematurely to a large inheritance, we shall wanton
+and run riot until we have brought our reputation to the brink of
+ruin, and then like him shall have to labor with the current of
+opinion, when compelled, perhaps, to do what prudence and common
+policy pointed out as plain as any problem in Euclid in the first
+instance." The soundness of the view is only equaled by the accuracy
+of the prediction. He might five years later have repeated this
+sentence, word for word, only altering the tenses, and he would have
+rehearsed exactly the course of events.
+
+While he wrote thus he keenly watched Congress, and marked its sure
+and not very gradual decline. He did what he could to bring about
+useful measures, and saw them one after the other come to naught. He
+urged the impost scheme, and felt that its failure was fatal to the
+financial welfare of the country, on which so much depended. He
+always was striving to do the best with existing conditions, but the
+hopelessness of every effort soon satisfied him that it was a waste of
+time and energy. So he turned again in the midst of his canal schemes
+to renew his exhortations to leading men in the various States on the
+need of union as the only true solution of existing troubles.
+
+To James McHenry, of Maryland, he wrote in August, 1785: "I confess to
+you candidly that I can foresee no evil greater than disunion; than
+those unreasonable jealousies which are continually poisoning our
+minds and filling them with imaginary evils for the prevention of real
+ones." To William Grayson of Virginia, then a member of Congress,
+he wrote at the same time: "I have ever been a friend to adequate
+congressional powers; consequently I wish to see the ninth article of
+the confederation amended and extended. Without these powers we cannot
+support a national character, and must appear contemptible in the eyes
+of Europe. But to you, my dear Sir, I will candidly confess that in
+my opinion it is of little avail to give them to Congress." He was
+already clearly of opinion that the existing system was hopeless, and
+the following spring he wrote still more sharply as to the state of
+public affairs to Henry Lee, in Congress. "My sentiments," he said,
+"with respect to the federal government are well known. Publicly and
+privately have they been communicated without reserve; but my opinion
+is that there is more wickedness than ignorance in the conduct of the
+States, or, in other words, in the conduct of those who have too
+much influence in the government of them; and until the curtain is
+withdrawn, and the private views and selfish principles upon which
+these men act are exposed to public notice, I have little hope of
+amendment without another convulsion."
+
+He did not confine himself, however, to letters, important as the work
+done in this way was, but used all his influence toward practical
+measures outside of Congress, of whose action he quite despaired. The
+plan for a commercial agreement between Maryland and Virginia was
+concerted at Mount Vernon, and led to a call to all the States to
+meet at Annapolis for the same object. This, of course, received
+Washington's hearty approval and encouragement, but he evidently
+regarded it, although important, as merely a preliminary step to
+something wider and better. He wrote to Lafayette describing the
+proposed gathering at Annapolis, and added: "A general convention
+is talked of by many for the purpose of revising and correcting the
+defects of the federal government; but whilst this is the wish of
+some, it is the dread of others, from an opinion that matters are
+not yet sufficiently ripe for such an event." This expressed his own
+feeling, for although he was entirely convinced that only a radical
+reform would do, he questioned whether the time had yet arrived, and
+whether things had become bad enough, to make such a reform either
+possible or lasting. He was chiefly disturbed because he felt that
+there was "more wickedness than ignorance mixed in our councils,"
+and he grew more and more anxious as public affairs declined without
+apparently producing a reaction. The growing contempt shown by foreign
+nations and the arrogant conduct of Great Britain especially alarmed
+him, while the rapid sinking of the national reputation stung him to
+the quick. "I do not conceive," he wrote to Jay, in August, 1786, "we
+can exist long as a nation without having lodged somewhere a power
+which will pervade the whole Union in as energetic a manner as the
+authority of the state governments extends over the several States."
+Thus with unerring judgment he put his finger on the vital point in
+the whole question, which was the need of a national government that
+should deal with the individual citizens of the whole country and
+not with the States. "To be fearful," he continued, "of investing
+Congress, constituted as that body is, with ample authorities for
+national purposes, appears to me the very climax of popular absurdity
+and madness.... Requisitions are actually little better than a jest
+and a byword throughout the land. If you tell the legislatures they
+have violated the treaty of peace, and invaded the prerogatives of the
+confederacy, they will laugh in your face.... It is much to be feared,
+as you observe, that the better kind of people, being disgusted with
+the circumstances, will have their minds prepared for any revolution
+whatever.... I am told that even respectable characters speak of
+a monarchical government without horror. From thinking proceeds
+speaking; thence to acting is often but a single step. But how
+irrevocable and tremendous! What a triumph for our enemies to verify
+their predictions!... It is not my business to embark again upon a sea
+of troubles. Nor could it be expected that my sentiments and opinions
+would have much weight on the minds of my countrymen. They have been
+neglected, though given as a last legacy in the most solemn manner. I
+had then perhaps some claims to public attention. I consider myself as
+having none at present."
+
+It is interesting to observe the ease and certainty with which, in
+dealing with the central question, he grasped all phases of the
+subject and judged of the effect of the existing weakness with regard
+to every relation of the country and to the politics of each State.
+He pointed out again and again the manner in which we were exposed
+to foreign hostility, and analyzed the designs of England, rightly
+detecting a settled policy on her part to injure and divide where she
+had failed to conquer. Others were blind to the meaning of the
+English attitude as to the western posts, commerce, and international
+relations. Washington brought it to the attention of our leading men,
+educating them on this as on other points, and showing, too, the
+stupidity of Great Britain in her attempt to belittle the trade of a
+country which, as he wrote Lafayette in prophetic vein, would one day
+"have weight in the scale of empires."
+
+He followed with the same care the course of events in the several
+States. In them all he resisted the craze for issuing irredeemable
+paper money, writing to his various correspondents, and urging
+energetic opposition to this specious and pernicious form of public
+dishonesty. It was to Massachusetts, however, that his attention was
+most strongly attracted by the social disorders which culminated in
+the Shays rebellion. There the miserable condition of public affairs
+was bearing bitter fruit, and Washington watched the progress of the
+troubles with profound anxiety. He wrote to Lee: "You talk, my
+good sir, of employing influence to appease the present tumults in
+Massachusetts. I know not where that influence is to be found, or,
+if attainable, that it would be a proper remedy for the disorders.
+_Influence_ is not _government_. Let us have a government by which our
+lives, liberties, and properties will be secured, or let us know the
+worst at once." Through "all this mist of intoxication and folly,"
+however, Washington saw that the Shays insurrection would probably be
+the means of frightening the indifferent, and of driving those who
+seemed impervious to every appeal to reason into an active support
+of some better form of government. He rightly thought that riot and
+bloodshed would prove convincing arguments.
+
+In order to understand the utter demoralization of society, politics,
+and public opinion at that time, the offspring of a wasting civil war
+and of colonial habits of thought, it is interesting to contrast the
+attitude of Washington with that of another distinguished American in
+regard to the Shays rebellion. While Washington was looking solemnly
+at this manifestation of weakness and disorder, and was urging strong
+measures with passionate vehemence, Jefferson was writing from Paris
+in the flippant vein of the fashionable French theorists, and uttering
+such ineffable nonsense as the famous sentence about "once in twenty
+years watering the tree of liberty with the blood of tyrants." There
+could be no better illustration of what Washington was than this
+contrast between the man of words and the man of action, between the
+astute leader of a party, the shrewd manager of men, and the silent
+leader of armies, the master builder of states and governments.
+
+I have followed Washington through the correspondence of this time
+with some minuteness, because it is the only way by which his work in
+overcoming the obstacles in the path to good government can be seen.
+He held no public office; he had no means of reaching the popular ear.
+He was neither a professional orator nor a writer of pamphlets, and
+the press of that day, if he had controlled it, had no power to mould
+or direct public thought. Yet, despite these obstacles, he set himself
+to develop public opinion in favor of a better government, and he
+worked at this difficult and impalpable task without ceasing, from
+the day that he resigned from the army until he was called to the
+presidency of the United States. He did it by means of private
+letters, a feeble instrument to-day, but much more effective then.
+Jefferson never made speeches nor published essays, but he built up a
+great party, and carried himself into power as its leader by means
+of letters. In the same fashion Washington started the scheme for
+internal waterways, in order to bind the East and the West together,
+set on foot the policy of commercial agreements between the States,
+and argued on the "imperial theme" with leading men everywhere. A
+study of these letters reveals a strong, logical, and deliberate
+working towards the desired end. There was no scattering fire. Whether
+he was writing of canals, or the Mississippi, or the Western posts,
+or paper money, or the impost, or the local disorders, he always was
+arguing and urging union and an energetic central government. These
+letters went to the leaders of thought and opinion, and were quoted
+and passed from hand to hand. They brought immediately to the cause
+all the soldiers and officers of the army, and they aroused and
+convinced the strongest and ablest men in every State. Washington's
+personal influence was very great, something we of this generation,
+with a vast territory and seventy millions of people, cannot readily
+understand. To many persons his word was law; to all that was best in
+the community, everything he said had immense weight. This influence
+he used with care and without waste. Every blow he struck went home.
+It is impossible to estimate just how much he effected, but it is safe
+to say that it is to Washington, aided first by Hamilton and then
+by Madison, that we owe the development of public opinion and the
+formation of the party which devised and carried the Constitution.
+Events of course worked with them, but they used events, and did not
+suffer the golden opportunities, which without them would have been
+lost, to slip by.
+
+When Washington wrote of the Shays rebellion to Lee, the movement
+toward a better union, which he had begun, was on the brink of
+success. That ill-starred insurrection became, as he foresaw, a
+powerful spur to the policy started at Mount Vernon, and adopted by
+Virginia and Maryland. From this had come the Annapolis convention,
+and thence the call for another convention at Philadelphia. As soon
+as the word went abroad that a general convention was to be held, the
+demand for Washington as a delegate was heard on all sides. At first
+he shrank from it. Despite the work which he had been doing, and which
+he must have known would bring him once more into public service, he
+still clung to the vision of home life which he had brought with him
+from the army. November 18, 1786, he wrote to Madison, that from a
+sense of obligation he should go to the convention, were it not that
+he had declined on account of his retirement, age, and rheumatism to
+be at a meeting of the Cincinnati at the same time and place. But
+no one heeded him, and Virginia elected him unanimously to head
+her delegation at Philadelphia. He wrote to Governor Randolph,
+acknowledging the honor, but reiterating what he had said to Madison,
+and urging the choice of some one else in his place. Still Virginia
+held the question open, and on February 3 he wrote to Knox that his
+private intention was not to attend. The pressure continued, and, as
+usual when the struggle drew near, the love of battle and the sense of
+duty began to reassert themselves. March 8 he again wrote to Knox that
+he had not meant to come, but that the question had occurred to him,
+"Whether my non-attendance in the convention will not be considered
+as dereliction of republicanism; nay, more, whether other motives may
+not, however injuriously, be ascribed for my not exerting myself
+on this occasion in support of it;" and therefore he wished to be
+informed as to the public expectation on the matter. On March 28 he
+wrote again to Randolph that ill-health might prevent his going, and
+therefore it would be well to appoint some one in his place. April 2
+he said that if representation of the States was to be partial, or
+powers cramped, he did not want to be a sharer in the business. "If
+the delegates assemble," he wrote, "with such powers as will enable
+the convention to probe the defects of the constitution to the bottom
+and point out radical cures, it would be an honorable employment;
+otherwise not." This idea of inefficiency and failure in the
+convention had long been present to his mind, and he had already said
+that, if their powers were insufficient, the convention should go
+boldly over and beyond them and make a government with the means of
+coercion, and able to enforce obedience, without which it would be, in
+his opinion, quite worthless. Thus he pondered on the difficulties,
+and held back his acceptance of the post; but when the hour of action
+drew near, the rheumatism and the misgivings alike disappeared before
+the inevitable, and Washington arrived in Philadelphia, punctual as
+usual, on May 13, the day before the opening of the convention.
+
+The other members were by no means equally prompt, and a week elapsed
+before a bare quorum was obtained and the convention enabled to
+organize. In this interval of waiting there appears to have been some
+informal discussion among the members present, between those who
+favored an entirely new Constitution and those who timidly desired
+only half-way measures. On one of these occasions Washington is
+reported by Gouverneur Morris, in a eulogy delivered twelve years
+later, to have said: "It is too probable that no plan we propose will
+be adopted. Perhaps another dreadful conflict is to be sustained. If,
+to please the people, we offer what we ourselves disapprove, how can
+we afterwards defend our work? Let us raise a standard to which the
+wise and honest can repair. The event is in the hand of God." The
+language is no doubt that of Morris, speaking from memory and in a
+highly rhetorical vein, but we may readily believe that the quotation
+accurately embodied Washington's opinion, and that he took this high
+ground at the outset, and strove from the beginning to inculcate upon
+his fellow-members the absolute need of bold and decisive action.
+The words savor of the orator who quoted them, but the noble and
+courageous sentiment which they express is thoroughly characteristic
+of the man to whom they were attributed.[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: It is necessary to say a few words in regard to this
+quotation of Washington's words made by Morris, because both Mr.
+Bancroft (_History of the Constitution_, ii. 8) and Mr. John Fiske
+(_The Critical Period of American History_, p. 232) quote them as if
+they were absolutely and verbally authentic. It is perfectly certain
+that from May 25 to September 17 Washington spoke but once; that
+is, he spoke but once in the convention after it became such by
+organization. This point is determined by Madison's statement (Notes,
+in. 1600), that when Washington took the floor in behalf of Gorham's
+amendment, "it was the only occasion on which the president entered _at
+all_ into the discussions of the convention." (The italics are mine.)
+I have examined the manuscript at the State Department, and these
+words are written in Madison's own hand in the body of the text and
+inclosed in brackets. Madison was the most accurate of men. His notes
+are only abstracts of what was said, but he was never absent from
+the convention, and there can be no question that if Washington had
+uttered the words attributed to him by Morris, a speech so important
+would have been given as fully as possible, and Madison would not have
+said distinctly that the Gorham amendment was the only occasion when
+the president entered into the discussions of the convention.
+
+It is, therefore, certain that Washington said nothing in the
+convention except on the occasion of the Gorham amendment, and Mr.
+Bancroft rightly assigns the Morris quotation to some time during the
+week which elapsed between the date fixed for the assembling of the
+convention and that on which a quorum of States was obtained. The
+words given by Morris, if uttered at all, must have been spoken
+informally in the way of conversation before there was any convention,
+strictly speaking, and of course before Washington was chosen
+president. Mr. Fiske, who devotes a page to these sentences from the
+eulogy, describes Washington as rising from his president's chair and
+addressing the convention with great solemnity. There is no authority
+whatever to show that he rose from the chair to address the other
+delegates, and, if he used the words quoted by Morris, he was
+certainly not president of the convention when he did so. The latter
+blunder, however, is Morris's own, and in making it he contradicts
+himself. These are his words: "He is their president. It is a question
+previous to their first meeting what course shall be pursued." In
+other words, he was their president before they had met and chosen a
+president. This is a fair illustration of the loose and rhetorical
+character of the passage in which Washington's admonition is quoted.
+The entire paragraph, with its mixture of tenses arising from the use
+of the historical present which Morris's classical fancies led him to
+employ, is, in fact, purely rhetorical, and has only the authority
+due to performances of that character. It seems to me impossible,
+therefore, to fairly suppose that the words quoted by Morris were
+anything more than his own presentation of a sentiment which he, no
+doubt, heard Washington urge frequently and forcibly. Even in this
+limited acceptation his account is both interesting and valuable,
+as indicating Washington's opinion and the tone he took with his
+fellow-members; but this, I think, is the utmost weight that can be
+attached to it. I have discussed the point thus minutely because two
+authorities so distinguished as Mr. Bancroft and Mr. Fiske have laid
+so much stress on the words given by Morris, and have seemed to me to
+accord to them a greater weight and a higher authenticity than the
+facts warrant. Morris's eulogy on Washington was delivered in New
+York, and may be found most readily in a little volume entitled
+_Washingtoniana_ (p. 110), published at Lancaster in 1802.]
+
+When a quorum was finally obtained, Washington was unanimously chosen
+to preside over the convention; and there he sat during the sessions
+of four months, silent, patient, except on a single occasion,[1]
+taking no part in debate, but guiding the business, and using all his
+powers with steady persistence to compass the great end. The debates
+of that remarkable body have been preserved in outline in the full and
+careful notes of Madison. Its history has been elaborately written,
+and the arguments and opinions of its members have been minutely
+examined and unsparingly criticised. We are still ignorant, and shall
+always remain ignorant, of just how much was due to Washington for the
+final completion of the work. His general views and his line of action
+are clearly to be seen in his letters and in the words attributed to
+him by Morris. That he labored day and night for success we know, and
+that his influence with his fellow-members was vast we also know, but
+the rest we can only conjecture. There came a time when everything
+was at a standstill, and when it looked as if no agreement could
+be reached by the men representing so many conflicting interests.
+Hamilton had made his great speech, and, finding the vote of his State
+cast against him by his two colleagues on every question, had gone
+home in a frame of mind which we may easily believe was neither very
+contented nor very sanguine. Even Franklin, most hopeful and buoyant
+of men, was nearly ready to despair. Washington himself wrote to
+Hamilton, on July 10: "When I refer you to the state of the counsels
+which prevailed at the period you left this city, and add that they
+are now, if possible, in a worse train than ever, you will find but
+little ground on which the hope of a good establishment can be formed.
+In a word, I almost despair of seeing a favorable issue to the
+proceedings of our convention, and do therefore repent having had any
+agency in the business." Matters were certainly in a bad state when
+Washington could write in this strain, and when his passion for
+success was so cooled that he repented of agency in the business.
+There was much virtue, however, in that little word "almost." He did
+not quite despair yet, and, after his fashion, he held on with grim
+tenacity. We know what the compromises finally were, and how they were
+brought about, but we can never do exact justice to the iron will
+which held men together when all compromises seemed impossible, and
+which even in the darkest hour would not wholly despair. All that can
+be said is, that without the influence and the labors of Washington
+the convention of 1787, in all probability, would have failed of
+success.
+
+[Footnote 1: Just at the close of the convention, when the
+Constitution in its last draft was in the final stage and on the eve
+of adoption, Mr. Gorham of Massachusetts moved to amend by reducing
+the limit of population in a congressional district from forty to
+thirty thousand. Washington took the floor and argued briefly and
+modestly in favor of the change. His mere request was sufficient, and
+the amendment was unanimously adopted.]
+
+At all events it did not fail, and after much tribulation the work was
+done. On September 17, 1787, a day ever to be memorable, Washington
+affixed his bold and handsome signature to the Constitution of the
+United States. Tradition has it that as he stood by the table, pen in
+hand, he said: "Should the States reject this excellent Constitution,
+the probability is that opportunity will never be offered to cancel
+another in peace; the next will be drawn in blood." Whether the
+tradition is well or ill founded, the sentence has the ring of truth.
+A great work had been accomplished. If it were cast aside, Washington
+knew that the sword and not the pen would make the next Constitution,
+and he regarded that awful alternative with dread. He signed first,
+and was followed by all the members present, with three notable
+exceptions. Then the delegates dined together at the city tavern, and
+took a cordial leave of each other. "After which," the president of
+the convention wrote in his diary, "I returned to my lodgings, did
+some business with, and received the papers from, the secretary of the
+convention, and retired to meditate upon the momentous work which had
+been executed." It is a simple sentence, but how much it means! The
+world would be glad to-day to know what the thoughts were which
+filled Washington's mind as he sat alone in the quiet of that summer
+afternoon, with the new Constitution lying before him. But he was then
+as ever silent. He did not go alone to his room to exhibit himself on
+paper for the admiration of posterity. He went there to meditate for
+his own guidance on what had been done for the benefit of his country.
+The city bells had rung a joyful chime when he arrived four months
+before. Ought they to ring again with a new gladness, or should they
+toll for the death of bright hopes, now the task was done? Washington
+was intensely human. In that hour of silent thought his heart must
+have swelled with a consciousness that he had led his people through
+a successful Revolution, and now again from the darkness of political
+confusion and dissolution to the threshold of a new existence. But at
+the same time he never deceived himself. The new Constitution was but
+an experiment and an opportunity. Would the States accept it? And
+if they accepted it, would they abide by it? Was this instrument of
+government, wrought out so painfully, destined to go to pieces after
+a few years of trial, or was it to prove strong enough to become the
+charter of a nation and hold the States together indissolubly against
+all the shocks of politics and revolution? Washington, with his
+foresight and strong national instinct, plainly saw these momentous
+questions, somewhat dim then, although clear to all the world to-day.
+We can guess how solemnly he thought about them as he meditated alone
+in his room on that September afternoon. Whatever his reflections, his
+conclusions were simple. He made up his mind that the only chance for
+the country lay in the adoption of the new scheme, but he was sober
+enough in his opinions as to the Constitution itself. He said of it to
+Lafayette the day after the signing: "It is the result of four months'
+deliberation. It is now a child of fortune, to be fostered by some and
+buffeted by others. What will be the general opinion or the reception
+of it is not for me to decide; nor shall I say anything for or against
+it. If it be good, I suppose it will work its way; if bad, it will
+recoil on the framers." We catch sight here of the old theory that his
+public life was at an end, and now, when this exceptional duty had
+been performed, that he would retire once more to remote privacy. This
+fancy, as well as the extremely philosophical mood about the fate of
+the Constitution, apparent in this letter, soon disappeared. Within a
+week he wrote to Henry, in whom he probably already suspected the
+most formidable opponent of the new plan in Virginia: "I wish the
+Constitution, which is offered, had been more perfect; but I sincerely
+believe it is the best that could be obtained at this time, and as a
+constitutional door is opened for amendments hereafter, the adoption
+of it under the present circumstances of the Union is, in my opinion,
+desirable." Copies of this letter were sent to Harrison and Nelson,
+and the correspondence thus started soon increased rapidly. He wrote
+to Hamilton and Madison to counsel with them as to the prospects of
+the Constitution, and to Knox to supply him with arguments and
+urge him to energetic work. By January of the new year the tone of
+indifference and doubt manifested in the letter to Lafayette had quite
+gone, and we find him writing to Governor Randolph, in reply to that
+gentleman's objections: "There are some things in the new form, I will
+readily acknowledge, which never did, and I am persuaded never will,
+obtain my cordial approbation, but I did then conceive and do now most
+firmly believe that in the aggregate it is the best Constitution that
+can be obtained at this epoch, and that this or a dissolution of the
+Union awaits our choice, and is the only alternative before us. Thus
+believing, I had not, nor have I now, any hesitation in deciding on
+which to lean."
+
+Thus the few letters to a few friends extended to many letters to many
+friends, and traveled into every State. They all urged the necessity
+of adopting the Constitution as the best that could be obtained. What
+Washington's precise objections to the Constitution were is not clear.
+In a general way it was not energetic enough to come up to his ideal,
+but he never particularized in his criticisms. He may have admitted
+the existence of defects in order simply to disarm opposition, and
+doubtless he, like most of the framers, was by no means completely
+satisfied with his work. But he brushed all faults aside, and drove
+steadily forward to the great end in view. He was as far removed as
+possible from that highly virtuous and very ineffective class of
+persons who will not support anything that is not perfect, and who
+generally contrive to do more harm than all the avowed enemies of
+sound government. Washington did not stop to worry over and argue
+about details, but sought steadily to bring to pass the main object
+at which he aimed. As he had labored for the convention, so he now
+labored for the Constitution, and his letters to his friends not
+only had great weight in forming a Federal party and directing its
+movements, but extracts from them were quoted and published, thus
+exerting a direct and powerful influence on public opinion.
+
+He made himself deeply felt in this way everywhere, but of course more
+in his own State than anywhere else. His confidence at first in regard
+to Virginia changed gradually to an intense and well-grounded anxiety,
+and he not only used every means, as the conflict extended, to
+strengthen his friends and gain votes, but he received and circulated
+personally copies of "The Federalist," in order to educate public
+opinion. The contest in the Virginia convention was for a long time
+doubtful, but finally the end was reached, and the decision was
+favorable. Without Washington's influence, it is safe to say that the
+Constitution would have been lost in Virginia, and without Virginia
+the great experiment would probably have failed. In the same spirit he
+worked on after the new scheme had secured enough States to insure
+a trial. The Constitution had been ratified; it must now be made to
+work, and Washington wrote earnestly to the leaders in the various
+States, urging them to see to it that "Federalists," stanch friends
+of the Constitution, were elected to Congress. There was no vagueness
+about his notions on this point. A party had carried the Constitution
+and secured its ratification, and to that party he wished the
+administration and establishment of the new system to be intrusted.
+He did not take the view that, because the fight was over, it was
+henceforth to be considered that there had been no fight, and that all
+men were politically alike. He was quite ready to do all in his power
+to conciliate the opponents of union and the Constitution, but he did
+not believe that the momentous task of converting the paper system
+into a living organism should be confided to any hands other than
+those of its tried and trusty friends.
+
+But while he was looking so carefully after the choice of the right
+men to fill the legislature of the new government, the people of the
+country turned to him with the universal demand that he should stand
+at the head of it, and fill the great office of first President of the
+Republic. In response to the first suggestion that came, he recognized
+the fact that he was likely to be again called upon for another
+great public service, and added simply that at his age it involved a
+sacrifice which admitted of no compensation. He maintained this tone
+whenever he alluded to the subject, in response to the numerous
+letters urging him to accept. But although he declined to announce any
+decision, he had made up his mind to the inevitable. He had put his
+hand to the plough, and he would not turn back. His only anxiety was
+that the people should know that he shrank from the office, and would
+only leave his farm to take it from a sense of overmastering duty.
+Besides his reluctance to engage in a fresh struggle, and his fear
+that his motives might be misunderstood, he had the same diffidence in
+his own abilities which weighed upon him when he took command of the
+armies. His passion for success, which determined him to accept the
+presidency, if it was deemed indispensable that he should do so, made
+him dread failure with an almost morbid keenness, although his courage
+was too high and his will too strong ever to draw back. Responsibility
+weighed upon his spirits, but it could not daunt him. He wrote to
+Trumbull in December, 1788, that he saw "nothing but clouds and
+darkness before him," but when the hour came he was ready. The
+elections were favorable to the Federalists. The electoral colleges
+gave Washington their unanimous vote, and on April 16, having been
+duly notified by Congress of his election, he left Mount Vernon for
+New York, to assume the conduct of the government, and stand at the
+head of the new Union in its first battle for life.
+
+From the early day when he went out to seek Shirley and win redress
+against the assumptions of British officers, Washington's journeys
+to the North had been memorable in their purposes. He had traveled
+northward to sit in the first continental congress, to take command of
+the army, and to preside over the constitutional convention. Now
+he went, in the fullness of his fame, to enter upon a task less
+dangerous, perhaps, than leading armies, but more beset with
+difficulties, and more perilous to his reputation and peace of mind,
+than any he had yet undertaken. He felt all this keenly, and noted in
+his diary: "About ten o'clock I bade adieu to Mount Vernon, to private
+life, and to domestic felicity; and with a mind oppressed with more
+anxious and painful sensations than I have words to express, set
+out for New York, with the best disposition to render service to my
+country, in obedience to its call, but with less hope of answering its
+expectations."
+
+The first stage of his journey took him only to Alexandria, a few
+miles from his home, where a public dinner was given to him by his
+friends and neighbors. He was deeply moved when he rose to reply to
+the words of affection addressed to him by the mayor as spokesman of
+the people. "All that now remains for me," he said, "is to commit
+myself and you to the care of that beneficent Being who, on a former
+occasion, happily brought us together after a long and distressing
+separation. Perhaps the same gracious Providence will again indulge
+me. But words fail me. Unutterable sensations must then be left to
+more expressive silence, while from an aching heart I bid all my
+affectionate friends and kind neighbors farewell."
+
+So he left his home, sad at the parting, looking steadily, but not
+joyfully, to the future, and silent as was his wont. The simple dinner
+with his friends and neighbors at Alexandria was but the beginning of
+the chorus of praise and Godspeed which rose higher and stronger as he
+advanced. The road, as he traveled, was lined with people, to see him
+and cheer him as he passed. In every village the people from the farm
+and workshop crowded the streets to watch for his carriage, and the
+ringing of bells and firing of guns marked his coming and his going.
+At Baltimore a cavalcade of citizens escorted him, and cannon roared a
+welcome. At the Pennsylvania line Governor Mifflin, with soldiers and
+citizens, gathered to greet him. At Chester he mounted a horse, and
+in the midst of a troop of cavalry rode into Philadelphia, beneath
+triumphal arches, for a day of public rejoicing and festivity. At
+Trenton, instead of snow and darkness, and a sudden onslaught upon
+surprised Hessians, there was mellow sunshine, an arch of triumph,
+and young girls walking before him, strewing flowers in his path, and
+singing songs of praise and gratitude. When he reached Elizabethtown
+Point, the committees of Congress met him, and he there went on board
+a barge manned by thirteen pilots in white uniform, and was rowed to
+the city of New York. A long procession of barges swept after him with
+music and song, while the ships in the harbor, covered with flags,
+fired salutes in his honor. When he reached the landing he declined
+to enter a carriage, but walked to his house, accompanied by Governor
+Clinton. He was dressed in the familiar buff and blue, and, as the
+people caught sight of the stately figure and the beloved colors, hats
+went off and the crowd bowed as he went by, bending like the ripened
+grain when the summer wind passes over it, and breaking forth into
+loud and repeated cheers.
+
+From Mount Vernon to New York it had been one long triumphal march.
+There was no imperial government to lend its power and military
+pageantry. There were no armies, with trophies to dazzle the eyes
+of the beholders; nor were there wealth and luxury to give pomp and
+splendor to the occasion. It was the simple outpouring of popular
+feeling, untaught and true, but full of reverence and gratitude to a
+great man. It was the noble instinct of hero-worship, always keen
+in humanity when the real hero comes to awaken it to life. Such an
+experience, rightly apprehended, would have impressed any man, and it
+affected Washington profoundly. He was deeply moved and touched, but
+he was neither excited nor elated. He took it all with soberness,
+almost with sadness, and when he was alone wrote in his diary:--
+
+"The display of boats which attended and joined us on this occasion,
+some with vocal and some with instrumental music on board; the
+decorations of the ships, the roar of cannon and the loud acclamations
+of the people, which rent the skies as I passed along the wharves,
+filled my mind with sensations as painful (considering the reverse of
+this scene, which may be the case after all my labors to do good) as
+they were pleasing."
+
+In the very moment of the highest personal glory, the only thought is
+of the work which he has to do. There is neither elation nor cynicism,
+neither indifference nor self-deception, but only deep feeling and a
+firm, clear look into the future of work and conflict which lay silent
+and unknown beyond the triumphal arches and the loud acclaim of the
+people.
+
+On April 30 he was inaugurated. He went in procession to the hall, was
+received in the senate chamber, and thence proceeded to the balcony
+to take the oath. He was dressed in dark brown cloth of American
+manufacture, with a steel-hilted sword, and with his hair powdered and
+drawn back in the fashion of the time. When he appeared, a shout went
+up from the great crowd gathered beneath the balcony. Much overcome,
+he bowed in silence to the people, and there was an instant hush over
+all. Then Chancellor Livingston administered the oath. Washington laid
+his hand upon the Bible, bowed, and said solemnly when the oath was
+concluded, "I swear, so help me God," and, bending reverently, kissed
+the book. Livingston stepped forward, and raising his hand cried,
+"Long live George Washington, President of the United States!" Then
+the cheers broke forth again, the cannon roared, and the bells rang
+out. Washington withdrew to the hall, where he read his inaugural
+address to Congress, and the history of the United States of America
+under the Constitution was begun.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+STARTING THE GOVERNMENT
+
+
+Washington was deeply gratified by his reception at the hands of the
+people from Alexandria to New York. He was profoundly moved by the
+ceremonies of his inauguration, and when he turned from the balcony to
+the senate chamber he showed in his manner and voice how much he felt
+the meaning of all that had occurred. His speech to the assembled
+Congress was solemn and impressive, and with simple reverence he
+acknowledged the guiding hand of Providence in the fortunes of the
+States. He made no recommendations to Congress, but expressed his
+confidence in their wisdom and patriotism, adjured them to remember
+that the success of republican government would probably be finally
+settled by the success of their experiment, reminded them that
+amendments to the Constitution were to be considered, and informed
+them that he could not receive any pecuniary compensation for his
+services, and expected only that his expenses should be paid as in the
+Revolution. This was all. The first inaugural of the first President
+expressed only one thought, but that thought was pressed home with
+force. Washington wished the Congress to understand as he understood
+the weight and meaning of the task which had been imposed upon them,
+for he felt that if he could do this all would be well. How far he
+succeeded it would be impossible to say, but there can be no doubt as
+to the wisdom of his position. To have attempted to direct the first
+movements of Congress before he had really grasped the reins of the
+government would have given rise, very probably, to jealousy and
+opposition at the outset. When he had developed a policy, then it
+would be time to advise the senators and representatives how to carry
+it out. Meanwhile it was better to arouse their patriotism, awaken
+their sense of responsibility, and leave them free to begin their work
+under the guidance of these impressions.
+
+As for himself, his feelings remained unchanged. He had accepted the
+great post with solemn anxiety, and when the prayers had all been
+said, and the last guns fired, when the music had ceased and the
+cheers had died away, and the illuminations had flickered and gone
+out, he wrote that in taking office he had given up all expectation
+of private happiness, but that he was encouraged by the popular
+affection, as well as by the belief that his motives were appreciated,
+and that, thus supported, he would do his best. In a few words,
+written some months later, he tersely stated what his office meant to
+him, and what grave difficulties surrounded his path.
+
+"The establishment of our new government," he said, "seemed to be the
+last great experiment for promoting human happiness by a reasonable
+compact in civil society. It was to be, in the first instance, in
+a considerable degree, a government of accommodation as well as
+a government of laws. Much was to be done by prudence, much by
+conciliation, much by firmness. Few who are not philosophical
+spectators can realize the difficult and delicate part which a man in
+my situation had to act. All see, and most admire, the glare which
+hovers round the external happiness of elevated office. To me there
+is nothing in it beyond the lustre which may be reflected from its
+connection with a power of promoting human felicity. In our progress
+towards political happiness my station is new, and, if I may use the
+expression, I walk on untrodden ground. There is scarcely an action
+the motive of which may not be subject to a double interpretation.
+There is scarcely any part of my conduct which may not hereafter be
+drawn into precedent. If, after all my humble but faithful endeavors
+to advance the felicity of my country and mankind, I may indulge a
+hope that my labors have not been altogether without success, it will
+be the only real compensation I can receive in the closing scenes of
+life."
+
+There is nothing very stimulating to the imagination in this soberness
+of mind and calmness of utterance. The military conquerors and the
+saviors of society, with epigrammatic sayings, dramatic effects and
+rhythmic proclamations, are much more exciting and dazzle the fancy
+much better. But it is this seriousness of mind, coupled with
+intensity of purpose and grim persistence, which has made the
+English-speaking race spread over the world and carry successful
+government in its train. The personal empire of Napoleon had crumbled
+before he died an exile in St. Helena, but the work of Washington
+still endures. Just what that work was, and how it was achieved, is
+all that still remains to be considered.
+
+The policies set on foot and carried through under the first federal
+administration were so brilliant and so successful that we are apt
+to forget that months elapsed before the first of them was even
+announced. When Washington, on May 1, 1789, began his duties, there
+was absolutely nothing of the government of the United States in
+existence but a President and a Congress. The imperfect and broken
+machinery of the confederation still moved feebly, and performed some
+of the absolutely necessary functions of government. But the new
+organization had nothing to work with except these outworn remnants of
+a discarded system. There were no departments, and no arrangements for
+the collection of revenue or the management of the postal service. A
+few scattered soldiers formed the army, and no navy existed. There
+were no funds and no financial resources. There were not even
+traditions and forms of government, and, slight as these things may
+seem, settled methods of doing public business are essential to its
+prompt and proper transaction. These forms had to be devised and
+adopted first, and although they seem matters of course now, after
+a century of use, they were the subject of much thought and of some
+sharp controversy in 1789. The manner in which the President was to be
+addressed caused some heated discussion even before the inauguration.
+America had but just emerged from the colonial condition, and the
+colonial habits were still unbroken. In private letters we find
+Washington referred to as "His Highness," and in some newspapers as
+"His Highness the President-General," while the Senate committee
+reported in favor of addressing him as "His Highness the President of
+the United States and Protector of their Liberties." In the House,
+however, the democratic spirit was strong, there was a fierce attack
+upon the proposed titles, and that body ended by addressing Washington
+simply as the "President of the United States," which, as it happened,
+settled the question finally. Washington personally cared little for
+titles, although, as John Adams wrote to Mrs. Warren, he thought them
+appropriate to high office. But in this case he saw that there was a
+real danger lurking in the empty name, and so he was pleased by the
+decision of the House. Another matter was the relation between the
+President and the Senate. Should he communicate with them in writing
+or orally, being present during their deliberations as if they formed
+an executive council? It was promptly decided that nominations should
+be made in writing; but as to treaties, it was at first thought best
+that the President should deliver them to the Senate in person, and
+it was arranged with minute care where he should sit, beside
+the Vice-President, while the matter was under discussion. This
+arrangement, however, was abandoned after a single trial, and it was
+agreed that treaties, like nominations, should come with written
+messages.
+
+Last and most important of all was the question of the mode of conduct
+and the etiquette to be established with regard to the President
+himself. In this, as in the matter of titles, Washington saw a real
+importance in what many persons might esteem only empty forms, and he
+proceeded with his customary thoroughness in dealing with the subject.
+What he did would be a precedent for the future as well as a target
+for present criticism, and he determined to devise a scheme which
+would resist attack, and be worthy to stand as an example for his
+successors. He therefore wrote to Madison: "The true medium, I
+conceive, must lie in pursuing such a course as will allow him (the
+President) time for all the official duties of his station. This
+should be the primary object. The next, to avoid as much as may be the
+charge of superciliousness, and seclusion from information, by too
+much reserve and too great a withdrawal of himself from company on
+the one hand, and the inconveniences, as well as a diminution of
+respectability, from too free an intercourse and too much familiarity
+on the other." This letter, with a set of queries, was also sent to
+the Vice-President, to Jay, and to Hamilton. They all agreed in the
+general views outlined by Washington. Adams, fresh from Europe, was
+inclined to surround the office, of which he justly had a lofty
+conception, with a good deal of ceremony, because he felt that these
+things were necessary in our relations with foreign nations. In the
+main, however, the advice of all who were consulted was in favor
+of keeping the nice line between too much reserve and too much
+familiarity, and this line, after all the advising, Washington of
+course drew for himself. He did it in this way. He decided that he
+would return no calls, and that he would receive no general visits
+except on specified days, and official visitors at fixed hours.
+The third point was in regard to dinner parties. The presidents of
+Congress hitherto had asked every one to dine, and had ended by
+keeping a sort of public table, to the waste of both time and dignity.
+Many persons, disgusted with this system, thought that the President
+ought not to ask anybody to dinner. But Washington, never given to
+extremes, decided that he would invite to dinner persons of official
+rank and strangers of distinction, but no one else, and that he would
+accept no invitations for himself. After a time he arranged to have a
+reception every Tuesday, from three to four in the afternoon, and Mrs.
+Washington held a similar levee on Fridays. These receptions, with a
+public dinner every week, were all the social entertainments for which
+the President had either time or health.
+
+By these sensible and apparently unimportant arrangements, Washington
+managed to give free access to every one who was entitled to it, and
+yet preserved the dignity and reserve due to his office. It was one
+of the real although unmarked services which he rendered to the new
+government, and which contributed so much to its establishment, for it
+would have been very easy to have lowered the presidential office by a
+false idea of republican simplicity. It would have been equally easy
+to have made it odious by a cold seclusion on the one hand, or by pomp
+and ostentation on the other. With his usual good judgment and perfect
+taste, Washington steered between the opposing dangers, and yet
+notwithstanding the wisdom of his arrangements, and in spite of
+their simplicity, he did not escape calumny on account of them. One
+criticism was that at his reception every one stood, which was thought
+to savor of incipient monarchy. To this Washington replied, with the
+directness of which he was always capable, that it was not usual to
+sit on such occasions, and, if it were, he had no room large enough
+for the number of chairs that would be required, and that, as the
+whole thing was perfectly unceremonious, every one could come and go
+as he pleased. Fault was also found with the manner in which he bowed,
+an accusation to which he answered with an irony not untinged with
+bitterness and contempt: "That I have not been able to make bows to
+the taste of poor Colonel B. (who, by the by, I believe never saw one
+of them) is to be regretted, especially too, as, upon those occasions,
+they were indiscriminately bestowed, and the best I was master of.
+Would it not have been better to throw the veil of charity over
+them, ascribing their stiffness to the effects of age, or to the
+unskillfulness of my teacher, rather than to pride and dignity of
+office, which God knows has no charms for me?"
+
+As party hostility developed, these attacks passed from the region of
+private conversation to the columns of newspapers and the declamation
+of mob orators, and an especial snarl was raised over the circumstance
+that at some public ball the President and Mrs. Washington were
+escorted to a sofa on a raised platform, and that guests passed before
+them and bowed. Much monarchy and aristocracy were perceived in this
+little matter, and Jefferson carefully set it down in that collection
+of withered slanders which he gave to an admiring posterity, after the
+grave had safely covered both him and those whom he feared and hated
+in his lifetime. This incident, however, was but an example of
+the political capital which was sought for in the conduct of the
+presidential office. The celebration of the birthday, the proposition
+to put Washington's head upon the coins, and many other similar
+trifles, were all twisted to the same purpose. The dynasty of Cleon
+has been a long one, so long that even the succession of the Popes
+seems temporary beside it, and it flourished in Washington's time as
+rankly as it did in Athens, or as it does to-day. The object of the
+assault varies, but the motives and the purpose are as old and as
+lasting as human nature. Envy and malice will always find a convenient
+shelter in pretended devotion to the public weal, and will seek
+revenge for their own lack of success by putting on the cloak of the
+tribune of the people, and perverting the noblest of offices to the
+basest uses.
+
+But time sets all things even. The demagogues and the critics who
+assailed Washington's demeanor and behavior are forgotten, while the
+wise and simple customs which he established and framed for the great
+office that he honored, still prevail by virtue of their good sense.
+We part gladly with all remembrance of those bold defenders of liberty
+who saw in these slight forms forerunners of monarchy. We would even
+consent to drop into oblivion the precious legacy of Jefferson. But
+we will never part with the picture drawn by a loving hand of that
+stately figure, clad in black velvet, with the hand on the hilt of the
+sword, standing at one of Mrs. Washington's levees, and receiving with
+gentle and quiet dignity, full of kindliness but untinged by cheap
+familiarity, the crowd that came to pay their respects. It was well
+for the republic that at the threshold of its existence it had for
+President a man who, by the kindness of his heart, by his good sense,
+good manners, and fine breeding, gave to the office which he held and
+the government he founded the simple dignity which was part of himself
+and of his own high character.
+
+Thus the forms and shows, important in their way, were dealt with,
+while behind them came the sterner realities of government, demanding
+regulation and settlement. At the outset Washington knew about the
+affairs of the government, especially for the last six years, only
+in a general way. He felt it to be his first duty, therefore, to
+familiarize himself with all these matters, and, although he was in
+the midst of the stir and bustle of a new government, he nevertheless
+sent for all the papers of each department of the confederation
+since the signature of the treaty of peace, went through them
+systematically, and made notes and summaries of their contents. This
+habit he continued throughout his presidency in dealing with all
+official documents. The natural result followed. He knew more at the
+start about the facts in each and every department of the public
+business than any other one man, and he continued to know more
+throughout his administration. In this method and this capacity for
+taking infinite pains is to be found a partial explanation at least
+of the easy mastery of affairs which he always showed, whether on the
+plantation, in the camp, or in the cabinet. It was in truth a striking
+instance of that "long patience" which the great French naturalist
+said was genius.
+
+While he was thus regulating forms of business, and familiarizing
+himself with public questions, it became necessary to fix the manner
+of dealing with foreign powers. There were not many representatives of
+foreign nations present at the birth of the republic, but there was
+one who felt, and perhaps not without reason, that he was entitled
+to peculiar privileges. The Count de Moustier, minister of France,
+desired to have private access to the President, and even to discuss
+matters of business with him. Washington's reply to this demand was,
+in its way, a model. After saying that the only matter which could
+come up would relate to commerce, with which he was unfamiliar, he
+continued: "Every one, who has any knowledge of my manner of acting in
+public life, will be persuaded that I am not accustomed to impede
+the dispatch or frustrate the success of business by a ceremonious
+attention to idle forms. Any person of that description will also be
+satisfied that I should not readily consent to lose one of the most
+important functions of my office for the sake of preserving an
+imaginary dignity. But perhaps, if there are rules of proceeding which
+have originated from the wisdom of statesmen, and are sanctioned by
+the common consent of nations, it would not be prudent for a young
+state to dispense with them altogether, at least without some
+substantial cause for so doing. I have myself been induced to think,
+possibly from habits of experience, that in general the best mode of
+conducting negotiations, the detail and progress of which might be
+liable to accidental mistakes or unintentional misrepresentations, is
+by writing. This mode, if I was obliged by myself to negotiate with
+any one, I should still pursue. I have, however, been taught to
+believe that there is in most polished nations a system established
+with regard to the foreign as well as the other great departments,
+which, from the utility, the necessity, and the reason of the thing,
+provides that business should be digested and prepared by the heads of
+those departments."
+
+The Count de Moustier hastened to excuse himself on the ground that
+he expressed himself badly in English, which was over-modest, for he
+expressed himself extremely well. He also explained and defended his
+original propositions by trying to show that they were reasonable and
+usual; but it was labor lost. Washington's letter was final, and the
+French minister knew it. The count was aware that he was dealing with
+a good soldier, but in statecraft he probably felt he had to do with a
+novice. His intention was to take advantage of the position of France,
+secure for her peculiar privileges, and put her in the attitude of
+patronizing inoffensively but effectively the new government founded
+by the people she had helped to free. He found himself turned aside
+quietly, almost deferentially, and yet so firmly and decidedly that
+there was no appeal. No nation, he discovered, was to have especial
+privileges. France was the good friend and ally of the United States,
+but she was an equal, not a superior. It was also fixed by this
+correspondence that the President, representing the sovereignty of
+the people, was to have the respect to which that sovereignty was
+entitled. The pomp and pageant of diplomacy in the old world were
+neither desired nor sought in America; yet the President was not to be
+approached in person, but through the proper cabinet officer, and all
+diplomatic communications after the fashion of civilized governments
+were to be in writing. Thus within a month France, and in consequence
+other nations, were quietly given to understand that the new republic
+was to be treated like other free and independent governments, and
+that there was to be nothing colonial or subservient in her attitude
+to foreign nations, whether those nations had been friends or foes in
+the past.
+
+It required tact, firmness, and a sure judgment to establish proper
+relations with foreign ministers. But once done, it was done for all
+time. This was not the case with another and far more important
+class of people, whose relation to the new administration had to be
+determined at the very first hour of its existence. Indeed, before
+Washington left Mount Vernon he had begun to receive letters from
+persons who considered themselves peculiarly well fitted to serve the
+government in return for a small but certain salary. In a letter to
+Mrs. Wooster, for whom as the widow of an old soldier he felt the
+tenderest sympathy, he wrote soon after his arrival in New York: "As
+a public man acting only with reference to the public good, I must be
+allowed to decide upon all points of my duty, without consulting my
+private inclinations and wishes. I must be permitted, with the best
+lights I can obtain, and upon a general view of characters and
+circumstances, to nominate such persons alone to offices as in my
+judgment shall be the best qualified to discharge the functions of
+the departments to which they shall be appointed." This sentiment in
+varying forms has been declared since 1789 by many Presidents and many
+parties. Washington, however, lived up exactly to his declarations.
+At the same time he did not by any means attempt to act merely as an
+examining board.
+
+Great political organizations, as we have known them since, did not
+exist at the beginning of the government, but there were nevertheless
+two parties, divided by the issue which had been settled by the
+adoption of the Constitution. Washington took, and purposed to take,
+his appointees so far as he could from those who had favored the
+Constitution and were friends of the new system. It is also clear
+that he made every effort to give the preference to the soldiers
+and officers of the army, toward whom his affectionate thought ever
+turned. Beyond this it can only be said that he was almost nervously
+anxious to avoid any appearance of personal feeling in making
+appointments, as was shown in the letter refusing to make his nephew
+Bushrod a district attorney, and that he resented personal pressure
+of any kind. He preferred always to reach his conclusions so far as
+possible from a careful study of written testimony. These principles,
+rigidly adhered to, his own keen perception of character, and his
+knowledge of men, resulted in a series of appointments running through
+eight years which were really marvelously successful. The only
+rejection, outside the special case of John Rutledge, was that of
+Benjamin Fishbourn for naval officer of the port of Savannah, which
+was due apparently to the personal hostility of the Georgia senators.
+Washington, conscious of his own painstaking, was not a little
+provoked by this setting aside of an old soldier. He sent in a sharp
+message on the subject, pointing out the trouble he took to make sure
+of the fitness of an appointment, and intimated that the same effort
+would not come amiss in the Senate when they rejected one of his
+nominees. In view of the fact that it was a new government, the
+absence of mistakes in the appointments is quite extraordinary,
+and the value of such success can be realized by considering the
+disastrous consequences which would have come from inefficient
+officers or malfeasance in office when the great experiment was just
+put on trial, and was surrounded by doubters and critics ready and
+eager to pick flaws and find faults.
+
+The general tone of the government and its reputation at widely
+scattered points depended largely on the persons appointed to the
+smaller executive offices. Important, however, as these were, the
+fate of the republic under the new Constitution was infinitely more
+involved in the men whom Washington called about him in his cabinet,
+to decide with him as to the policies which were to be begun, and
+on which the living vital government was to be founded. Congress,
+troubled about many things, and struggling with questions of revenue
+and taxation, managed in the course of the summer to establish and
+provide for three executive departments and for an attorney-general.
+To the selection of the men to fill these high offices Washington
+gave, of course, the most careful thought, and succeeded in forming
+a cabinet which, in its aggregate ability, never has been equaled in
+this country.
+
+Edmund Randolph was appointed attorney-general. Losing his father at
+an early age, and entering the army, he had been watched over and
+protected by Washington with an almost paternal care, and at the time
+of his appointment he was one of the most conspicuous men in public
+life, as well as a leading lawyer at the bar of Virginia. He came from
+one of the oldest and strongest of the Virginian families, and had
+been governor of his State, and a leader in the constitutional
+convention, where he had introduced what was known as the Virginian
+plan. He had refused to sign the Constitution, but had come round
+finally to its support, largely through Washington's influence. There
+was then, and there can be now, no question as to Randolph's really
+fine talents, or as to his fitness for his post. His defect was a lack
+of force of character and strength of will, which was manifested by a
+certain timidity of action, and by an infirmity of purpose, such as
+had appeared in his course about the Constitution. He performed the
+duties of his office admirably, but in the decision of the momentous
+questions which came before the cabinet he showed an uncertainty of
+opinion which was felt by all his colleagues.[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: This passage was written before the recent appearance of
+Mr. Conway's _Life of Randolph_. That ample biography, in my opinion,
+confirms the view of Randolph here given. If, in the light of this new
+material, I have erred at all, it is, I think, on the charitable side.
+Mr. Conway, in order to vindicate Randolph, has sacrificed so far as
+he could nearly every conspicuous public man of that period. From
+Washington, whom he charges with senility, down, there is hardly a
+man who ever crossed Randolph's path whom he has not assailed. Yet he
+presents no reason, so far as I can see, to alter the present opinion
+of Randolph.]
+
+Henry Knox of Massachusetts was head of the War Department under the
+confederacy, and was continued in office by Washington, who appointed
+him secretary of war under the new arrangement. It was a natural and
+excellent selection. Knox was a distinguished soldier, he had served
+well through the Revolution, and Washington was warmly attached to
+him. He was not a statesman by training or habit of mind, nor was he
+possessed of commanding talents. But he was an able man, sound in his
+views and diligent in his office, devoted to his chief and unswerving
+in his loyalty to the administration and all its measures. There was
+never any doubt as to the attitude of Henry Knox, and Washington found
+him as faithful and efficient in the cabinet as he had always been in
+the field.
+
+Second in rank, but first in importance, was the secretaryship of the
+treasury. "Finance! Ah, my friend, all that remains of the American
+Revolution grounds there." So Gouverneur Morris had written to Jay. So
+might he have written again of the American Union, for the fate of the
+experiment rested at the outset on the Treasury Department. Yet there
+was probably less hesitation as to the proper man for this place than
+for any other. Washington no doubt would have been glad to give it to
+Robert Morris, whose great services in the Revolution he could never
+forget. But this could not be, and acting on his own judgment,
+fortified by that of Morris himself, he made Alexander Hamilton
+secretary of the treasury.
+
+It is one of the familiar marks of greatness to know how to choose the
+right men to perform the tasks which no man, either in war or peace,
+can complete single-handed. Napoleon's marshals were conspicuous
+proofs of his genius, and Washington had a similar power of selection.
+The generals whom he trusted were the best generals, the statesmen
+whom he consulted stand highest in history. He was fallible, as other
+mortals are fallible. He, too, had his Varus, and the time was coming
+when he could echo the bitter cry of the great emperor for his lost
+legions. But the mistakes were the exceptions. He chose with the
+sureness of a strong and penetrating mind, and the most signal example
+of this capacity was his secretary of the treasury. He knew Hamilton
+well. He had known him as his staff officer, active, accomplished, and
+efficient. He had seen him leave his side in a tempest of boyish rage,
+and he had watched him charging with splendid gallantry the Yorktown
+redoubts. He was familiar with Hamilton's extraordinary mastery of
+financial and political problems, and he had found him a powerful
+leader in the work of forming the Constitution. He understood
+Hamilton's strength, and he knew where his dangers lay. Now he called
+him to his cabinet, and gave into his hands the department on which
+the immediate success of the government hinged. It was a brilliant
+choice. The mark in his lifetime for all the assaults of his political
+opponents, the leader and the victim of the schism which rent his own
+party, Hamilton, after his death, was made the target for attack and
+reprobation by his political foes, who for nearly sixty years, with
+few intermissions, controlled the government. His work, however, could
+not be undone, and as passions have subsided his fame has proved to
+be of that highest and rarest kind which broadens and rises with the
+lapse of years, until in the light of history it overtops that of any
+of our statesmen, except of his own great chief and Abraham Lincoln.
+The work to which he was called was that of organizing a national
+government, and in the performance of this work he showed that he
+belonged to the highest type of constructive statesmen, and was one of
+the rare men who build, and whose building stands the test of time.
+
+Last to be mentioned, but first in rank, was the Department of State.
+For this high place Washington chose Thomas Jefferson, who was then
+our minister in Paris, and who did not return to take up his official
+duties until the following March. Of the four cabinet offices, this
+was the only one where Washington proceeded entirely on public
+grounds. He took Jefferson on account of his wide reputation, his
+unquestioned ability, his standing before the country, and his
+experience in our foreign relations. With the other three there was
+a strong element of personal friendship and familiarity. With the
+secretary of state his intercourse had been, so far as we can judge,
+almost wholly of a public character, and, so far as can be inferred
+from an expression of some years before, the selection was made by
+Washington in deference simply to what he believed to be the public
+interest. The only allusion to Jefferson in all the printed volumes of
+correspondence prior to 1789 occurs in a letter to Robert Livingston,
+of January 8, 1783. He there said: "What office is Mr. Jefferson
+appointed to that he has, you say, lately accepted? If it is that of
+commissioner of peace, I hope he will arrive too late to have any hand
+in it." There is no indication that their personal relations were then
+or afterwards other than pleasant. Yet this brief sentence is a
+strong expression of distrust, and especially so from the fact that
+Washington was not at all given to criticising other people in his
+letters. What he distrusted was not Jefferson's ability, for that
+no man could doubt, still less his patriotism. But Washington read
+character well, and he felt that Jefferson might be lacking in the
+qualities of boldness and determination, so needful in a negotiation
+like that which resulted in the acknowledgment of our independence.
+
+The truth was that the two men were radically different, and never
+could have been sympathetic. Washington was strong, direct, masculine,
+and at times fierce in anger. Jefferson was adroit, subtle, and
+feminine in his sensitiveness. Washington was essentially a fighting
+man, tamed by a stern self-control from the recklessness of his early
+days, but always a fighter. Jefferson was a lover of peace, given to
+quiet, hating quarrels and bloodshed, and at times timid in dealing
+with public questions. Washington was deliberate and conservative,
+after the fashion of his race. Jefferson was quick, impressionable,
+and always fascinated by new notions, even if they were somewhat
+fantastic. A thoroughly liberal and open-minded man, Washington never
+turned a deaf ear to any new suggestion, whether it was a public
+policy or a mechanical invention, but to all alike he gave careful
+consideration before he adopted them. To Jefferson, on the other hand,
+mere novelty had a peculiar charm, and he jumped at any device, either
+to govern a state or improve a plough, provided that it had the
+flavor of ingenuity. The two men might easily have thought the same
+concerning the republic, but they started from opposite poles, and no
+full communion of thought and feeling was possible between them. That
+Washington chose fitly from purely public and outside considerations
+can not be questioned, but he made a mistake when he put next to
+himself a man for whom he did not have the personal regard and
+sympathy which he felt for his other advisers. The necessary result
+finally came, after many troubles in the cabinet, in dislike and
+distrust, if not positive alienation.
+
+Looking at the cabinet, however, as it stood in the beginning, we can
+only admire the wisdom of the selection and the high abilities which
+were thus brought together for the administration and construction of
+a great national government. It has always been the fashion to speak
+of this first cabinet as made up without reference to party, but the
+idea is a mistaken one from any point of view. Washington himself gave
+it color, for he felt very rightly that he was the choice of the whole
+people and not of a party. He wished to rise above party, and in fact
+to have no party, but a devotion of all to the good of the country.
+The time came when he sorrowed for and censured party bitterness and
+party strife, but it is to be observed that the party feeling which he
+most deplored was that which grew up against his own policies and his
+own administration. The fact was that Washington, who rose above party
+more than any other statesman in our history, was nevertheless, like
+most men of strong will and robust mind, and like all great political
+leaders, a party man, as we shall have occasion to see further on.
+It is true that his cabinet contained the chiefs and founders of two
+great schools of political thought, which have ever since divided
+the country; but when these parties were once fairly developed, the
+cabinet became a scene of conflict and went to pieces, only to be
+reformed on party lines. When it was first made up, the two parties of
+our subsequent history, with which we are familiar, did not exist, and
+it was in the administration of Washington that they were developed.
+Yet the cabinet of 1789 was, so far as there were parties, a partisan
+body. The only political struggle that we had had was over the
+adoption of the Constitution. The parties of the first Congress were
+the Federalists and the anti-Federalists, the friends and the enemies
+of the Constitution. Among those who opposed the Constitution were
+many able and distinguished men, but Washington did not invite Sam
+Adams, or George Mason, or Patrick Henry, or George Clinton to enter
+his cabinet. On the contrary, he took only friends and supporters
+of the Constitution. Hamilton was its most illustrious advocate.
+Randolph, after some vacillation, had done very much to turn the
+wavering scale in Virginia in its favor. Knox was its devoted friend;
+and Jefferson, although he had carped at it and criticised it in
+his letters, was not known to have done so, and was considered, and
+rightly considered, to be friendly to the new system. In other words,
+the cabinet was made up exclusively of the party of the Constitution,
+which was the victorious party of the moment. This was of course
+wholly right, and Washington was too great and wise a leader to have
+done anything else. The cabinet was formed with regard to existing
+divisions, and, when those divisions changed, the cabinet which gave
+birth to them changed too.
+
+Outside the cabinet, the most weighty appointments were those of the
+Supreme Court. No one then quite appreciated, probably, the vast
+importance which this branch of the government was destined to assume,
+or the great part it was to play in the history of the country and the
+development of our institutions. At the same time no one could fail to
+see that much depended on the composition of the body which was to be
+the ultimate interpreter of the Constitution. The safety of the entire
+scheme might easily have been imperiled by the selection of men as
+judges who were lacking in ability or character. Washington chose with
+his wonted sureness. At the head of the court he placed John Jay, one
+of the most distinguished of the public men of the day, who gave to
+the office at once the impress of his own high character and spotless
+reputation. With him were associated Wilson of Pennsylvania, Cushing
+of Massachusetts, Blair of Virginia, Iredell of North Carolina, and
+Rutledge of South Carolina. They were all able and well-known
+men, sound lawyers, and also, be it noted, warm friends of the
+Constitution.
+
+Thus the business of organizing the government in the first great and
+essential points was completed. It was the work of the President, and,
+anxious and arduous as it was, it is worth remembering, too, that
+it was done, and thoroughly done, in the midst of severe physical
+suffering. Just after the inauguration, Washington was laid up with an
+anthrax or carbuncle in his thigh, which brought him at one time very
+near death. For six weeks he could lie only on one side, endured the
+most constant and acute pain, and was almost incapable of motion. He
+referred to his illness at the time in a casual and perfectly simple
+way, and mind and will so prevailed over the bodily suffering that
+the great task of organizing the government was never suspended nor
+interrupted.
+
+When the work was done and Congress had adjourned, Washington, feeling
+that he had earned a little rest and recreation, proceeded to carry
+out a purpose, which he had formed very early in his presidency, of
+visiting the Eastern States. This was the first part of a general plan
+which he had conceived of visiting while in office all portions of
+the Union. The personal appearance of the President, representing
+the whole people, would serve to bring home to the public mind the
+existence and reality of a central government, which to many if not to
+most persons in the outlying States seemed shadowy and distant. But
+General Washington was neither shadowy nor distant to any one. Every
+man, woman, and child had heard of and loved the leader of the
+Revolution. To his countrymen everywhere, his name meant political
+freedom and victory in battle; and when he came among them as the
+head of a new government, that government took on in some measure the
+character of its chief. His journey was a well-calculated appeal, not
+for himself but for his cause, to the warm human interest which a man
+readily excites, but which only gathers slowly around constitutions
+and forms of government. The world owes a good deal to the right kind
+of hero-worship, and the United States have been no exception.
+
+The journey itself was uneventful, and was carried out with
+Washington's usual precision. It served its purpose, too, and brought
+out a popular enthusiasm which spoke well for the prospects of the
+federal government, and which was the first promise of the loyal
+support which New England gave to the President, as she had already
+given it to the general. In the succession of crowds and processions
+and celebrations which marked the public rejoicing, one incident of
+this journey stands out as still memorable, and possessed of real
+meaning. Mr. John Hancock was governor of Massachusetts. There is
+no need to dwell upon him. He was a man of slender abilities,
+large wealth, and ready patriotism, with a great sense of his own
+importance, and a fine taste for impressive display. Every external
+thing about him, from his handsome house and his Copley portrait to
+his imposing gout and his immortal signature, was showy and effective.
+He was governor of Massachusetts, and very proud of that proud old
+commonwealth as well as of her governor. Within her bounds he was the
+representative of her sovereignty, and he felt that deference was due
+to him from the President of the United States when they both stood on
+the soil of Massachusetts. He did not meet Washington on his arrival,
+and Washington thereupon did not dine with the governor as he had
+agreed to do. It looked a little stormy. Here was evidently a man with
+some new views as to the sovereignty of States and the standing of the
+union of States. It might have done for Governor Hancock to allow the
+President of Congress to pass out of Massachusetts without seeing its
+governor, and thereby learn a valuable lesson, but it would never
+do to have such a thing happen in the case of George Washington, no
+matter what office he might hold. A little after noon on Sunday,
+October 26, therefore, the governor wrote a note to the President,
+apologizing for not calling before, and asking if he might call
+in half an hour, even though it was at the hazard of his health.
+Washington answered at once, expressing his pleasure at the prospect
+of seeing his excellency, but begging him, with a touch of irony, not
+to do anything to endanger his health. So in half an hour Hancock
+appeared. Picturesque, even if defeated, he was borne up-stairs on
+men's shoulders, swathed in flannels, and then and there made his
+call. The old house in Boston where this happened has had since then a
+series of successors, but the ground on which it stood has been duly
+remembered and commemorated. It is a more important spot than we are
+wont to think; for there it was settled, on that autumn Sunday, that
+the idea that the States were able to own and to bully the Union they
+had formed was dead, and that the President of the new United States
+was henceforth to be regarded as the official superior of every
+governor in the land. It was a mere question of etiquette, nothing
+more. But how the general government would have sunk in popular
+estimation if the President had not asserted, with perfect dignity and
+yet entire firmness, its position! Men are governed very largely by
+impressions, and Washington knew it. Hence his settling at once and
+forever the question of precedence between the Union and the States.
+Everywhere and at all times, according to his doctrine, the nation was
+to be first.[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: The most lately published contemporary account of
+this affair with Hancock can be found in the _Magazine of American
+History_, June, 1888, p. 508, entitled "Incidents in the Life of John
+Hancock, as related by Dorothy Quincy Hancock Scott (from the Diary of
+Gen. W.H. Sumner)."]
+
+So the President traveled on to the North, and then back by another
+road to New York, and that excellent bit of work in familiarizing the
+people with their federal government was accomplished. Meantime the
+wheels had started, the machine was in motion, and the chief officers
+were at their places. The preliminary work had been done, and the next
+step was to determine what policies should be adopted, and to find out
+if the new system could really perform the task for which it had been
+created.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+DOMESTIC AFFAIRS
+
+
+To trace in detail the events of Washington's administration would be
+to write the history of the country during that period. It is only
+possible here to show, without much regard to chronological sequence,
+the part of the President in developing the policy of the government
+at home, and his attitude toward each question as it arose. We are
+concerned here merely with the influence and effect of Washington in
+our history, and not with the history itself. What did he do, and what
+light do we get on the man himself from his words and deeds? These are
+the only questions that a brief study of a career so far-reaching can
+attempt to answer.
+
+Congress came together for the first time with the government actually
+organized on January 4, 1790. On the day when the session opened,
+Washington drove down to the hall where the Congress met, alone in his
+own coach drawn by four horses. He was preceded by Colonel Humphreys
+and Major Jackson, mounted on his two white horses, while immediately
+behind came his chariot with his private secretaries, and Mr. Lewis on
+horseback. Then followed in their own coaches the chief justice and
+the secretaries of war and of the treasury. When the President reached
+the hall he was met at the entrance by the doorkeeper of the Congress,
+and was escorted to the Senate chamber. There he passed between the
+members of each branch, drawn up on either hand, and took his seat by
+the Vice-President. When order and silence were obtained, he rose and
+spoke to the assembled representatives of the people standing before
+him. Having concluded his speech, he bowed and withdrew with his
+suite as he had come. Jefferson killed this simple ceremonial, and
+substituted for it the written message, sent by a secretary and read
+by a clerk in the midst of talk and bustle, which is the form we
+have to-day. Jefferson's change was made, of course, in the name of
+liberty, and also because he was averse to public speaking. From the
+latter point of view, it was reasonable enough, but the ostensible
+cause was as hollow and meaningless as any of the French notions to
+which it was close akin. It is well for the head of the state to meet
+face to face the representatives of the same people who elected him.
+For more than a century this has been the practice in Massachusetts,
+to take a single instance, and liberty in that commonwealth has not
+been imperiled, nor has the State been obliged to ask Federal aid to
+secure to her a republican form of government because of her adherence
+to this ancient custom.
+
+The forms adopted by Washington had the grave and simple dignity which
+marked all he did, and it was senseless to abandon what his faultless
+taste and patriotic feeling approved. Forms are in their way important
+things: they may conceal perils to liberty, or they may lend dignity
+and call forth respect to all that liberty holds most dear. The net
+result of all this business has been very curious. Jefferson's
+written message prevails; and yet at the same time we inaugurate
+our Presidents with a pomp and parade to which those of the dreaded
+Federalists seem poor and quiet, and which would make the hero of the
+message-in-writing fancy that the air was darkened by the shadows of
+monarchy and despotism. The author of the Declaration of Independence
+was a patriotic man and lover of freedom, but he who fought out the
+Revolution in the field was quite as safe a guardian of American
+liberty; and his clear mind was never confused by the fantasies of
+that Parisian liberty which confused facts with names, and ended in
+the Terror and the first Empire. The people of the United States
+to-day surround the first office of the land with a respect and
+dignity which they deem equal to the mighty sovereignty that it
+represents, and in this is to be found the genuine American feeling
+expressed by Washington in the plain and simple ceremonial which he
+adopted for his meetings with the Congress.
+
+In this first speech, thus delivered, Washington indicated the
+subjects to which he wished Congress to direct their attention, and
+which in their development formed the policies of his administration.
+His first recommendation was to provide for the common defense by a
+proper military establishment. His last and most elaborate was in
+behalf of education, for which he invoked the aid of Congress and
+urged the foundation of a national university, a scheme he had much at
+heart, and to which he constantly returned. The history of these
+two recommendations is soon told. Provision was made for the army,
+inadequate enough, as Washington thought, but still without dispute,
+and such additional provision was afterwards made from time to time as
+the passing exigency of the moment demanded. For education nothing
+was done, and the national university has never advanced beyond the
+recommendation of the first President.
+
+He also advised the adoption of a uniform standard of coinage,
+weights, and measures. In two years a mint was duly established after
+an able report from Hamilton, and out of his efforts and those of
+Jefferson came our decimal system. There was debate over the devices
+on the coins in which the ever-vigilant Jeffersonians scented
+monarchical dangers, but with this exception the country got its
+uniform coinage peacefully enough. The weights and measures did not
+fare so well. They obtained a long report from Jefferson, and a still
+longer and more learned disquisition from John Quincy Adams thirty
+years later. But that was all. We still use the rule of thumb systems
+inherited from our English ancestors, and Washington's uniform
+standard, except for the two reports, has gone no further than the
+national university.
+
+Another recommendation to the effect that invention ought to be
+encouraged and protected bore fruit in this same year in patent and
+copyright laws, which became the foundation of our present system. The
+same good fortune befell the recommendation for a uniform rule for
+naturalization, and the law of 1790 was quietly enacted, no one then
+imagining that its alteration less than ten years later was destined
+to form part of a policy which, after a fierce struggle, settled
+the fate of parties and decided the control of the government. The
+post-office was also commended to the care of Congress, and for that,
+as for the army, provision was duly made, insufficient at the outset,
+but growing steadily from this small beginning, as it was called upon
+to meet the spread and increase of population.
+
+Provision was also made gradually, and with much occasional conflict,
+for a diplomatic service such as the President advised. But this was
+merely the machinery to carry out our foreign policy on which, in a
+few years, our political history largely turned, and which will demand
+a chapter by itself.
+
+A paragraph devoted to Indian affairs informed Congress that measures
+were on foot to establish pacific relations with our savage neighbors,
+but that it would be well to be prepared to use force. This brief
+sentence was the beginning of an important policy, which, in its
+consequences and effects, played a large part in the history of the
+next eight years.
+
+These various matters thus disposed of, there remained only the
+request to the House to provide for the revenue and the public credit.
+From this came Hamilton's financial policy which created parties,
+and with it was interwoven in the body of the speech the general
+recommendation to make all proper effort for the advancement of
+manufactures, commerce, and agriculture.
+
+The speech as a whole, short though it was, drew the outline of
+a vigorous system, which aimed at the establishment of a strong
+government with enlarged powers. It cut at a blow all ties between the
+new government and the feeble strivings of the dead confederation. It
+displayed a broad conception of the duties of the government under
+the Constitution, and in every paragraph it breathed the spirit of a
+robust nationality, calculated to touch the people directly in every
+State of the Union.
+
+Before taking up the financial question, which became the great issue
+in our domestic affairs, it will be well to trace briefly the story of
+our relations with the Indians. The policy of the new administration
+in this respect was peculiarly Washington's own, and, although it
+affected more or less the general course of events at that period, it
+did not directly become the subject of party differences. The "Indian
+problem" is still with us, but it is now a very mild problem indeed.
+Within a few years, it is true, we have had Indian wars, conducted by
+the forces of the United States, and ever-recurring outbreaks between
+savages and frontiersmen. But it has been a very distant business. To
+the great mass of the American people it has been little more than
+interesting news, to be leisurely scanned in the newspaper without
+any sense of immediate and personal concern. Moreover, the popular
+conception of the Indian has for a long time been wildly inaccurate.
+We have known him in various capacities, as the innocent victim of
+corrupt agents and traders, and as the brutal robber and murderer with
+the vices and force of the Western frontiersman, but without any of
+the latter's redeeming virtues. Last and most important of all, we
+have known him as the rare hero and the conventional villain of
+romance, ranging from the admirable stories of Cooper to the last
+production of the "penny dreadful." The result has been to create in
+the public mind a being who probably never existed anywhere except in
+the popular imagination, and who certainly is not the North American
+Indian.
+
+We are always loath to admit that our conceptions are formed by
+fiction, but in the case of people remote from our daily observation
+it plays in nine instances out of ten a leading part, and it has
+certainly done so here. In this way we have been provided with two
+types simple and well defined, which represent the abnormally good on
+the one hand and the inconceivably bad on the other. The Indian hero
+is a person of phenomenal nobility of character, and of an
+ability which would do credit to the training of a highly refined
+civilization. He is the product of the orator, the novelist, or the
+philanthropist, and has but slight and distant relation to facts. The
+usual type, however, and the one which has entered most largely into
+the popular mind, is the Indian villain. He is portrayed invariably
+as cunning, treacherous, cruel, and cowardly, without any relieving
+quality. In this there is of course much truth. As a matter of fact,
+Indians are cunning, treacherous, and cruel, but they are also bold
+fighters. The leading idea of the Indian that has come down from
+Cooper's time, and which depicts him as a "cowardly redskin," unable
+to stand for a moment against a white man in fair fight, is a complete
+delusion designed to flatter the superior race. It has been in a large
+measure dissipated by Parkman's masterly histories, but the ideas born
+of popular fiction die hard. They are due in part to the theory that
+cruelty implies cowardice, just as we say that a bully must be a
+coward, another mistaken bit of proverbial wisdom.
+
+As a matter of fact, the records show that the North American Indian
+is one of the most remarkable savage warriors of whom we have any
+knowledge; and the number of white men killed for each Indian slain
+in war exhibits an astonishing disproportion of loss. Captain James
+Smith, for many years a captive, and who figured in most of the
+campaigns of the last century, estimated that fifty of our people were
+killed to one of theirs. This of course includes women and children;
+and yet even in the battle of the Big Kanawha, the Virginia riflemen,
+although they defeated the Indians with an inferior force, lost two
+to one, and a similar disproportion seems to have continued to the
+present day.
+
+The Indian, moreover, not only fought well and to the death, if
+surrounded, but he had a discipline and plan of battle which were
+most effective for the wilderness. It seems probable that, if the
+experiment had been properly tried, the Indians might have been turned
+into better soldiers than the famous Sikhs; and the French, who
+used the red men skillfully, if without much discipline, found them
+formidable and effective allies. They cut off more than one English
+and American army, and the fact that they resorted to ambush and
+surprise does not detract from their exploits. It was a legitimate
+mode of warfare, and was used by them with terrible effect. They have
+fought more than one pitched battle against superior numbers when the
+victory hung long in the balance, and they have carried on guerrilla
+wars for years against overwhelming forces with extraordinary
+persistence and success. There is no savage, except the Zulu or Maori,
+who has begun to exhibit the natural fighting quality of the American
+Indian; and although the Zulu appears to have displayed greater dash,
+the Indian, by his mastery of the tactics of surprise, has shown a
+far better head. In a word, the Indian has always been a formidable
+savage, treacherous, cruel, and cunning to an extreme degree, no
+doubt, but a desperate and dogged fighter, with a natural instinct for
+war. It must be remembered, too, that he was far more formidable
+in 1790 than he is to-day, with the ever-rising tide of civilized
+population flowing upon him and hemming him in. When the Constitution
+came into being, the Indians were pretty well out of the Atlantic
+States, but beyond the Alleghanies all was theirs, and they had the
+unbroken wilderness as their ally and their refuge. There they lay
+like a dark line on the near frontier, threatening war and pillage
+and severe check to the westward advance of our people. They were
+a serious matter to a new government, limited in resources and
+representing only three millions of people.
+
+Fortunately the President was of all men best fitted to deal with
+this grave question, for he knew the Indians thoroughly. His earliest
+public service had been to negotiate with them, and from that time on
+he had been familiar with them in peace and in diplomacy, while he had
+fought with them in war over and over again. He was not in the least
+confused in his notions about them, but saw them, as he did most
+facts, exactly as they were. He had none of the false sentimentality
+about the noble and injured red man, which in later days has been at
+times highly mischievous, nor on the other hand did he take the purely
+brutal view of the fighting scout or backwoodsman. He knew the Indian
+as he was, and understood him as a dangerous, treacherous,
+fighting savage. Better than any one else he appreciated
+the difficulties of Indian warfare when an army had to be
+launched into the wilderness and cut off from a base of supplies.
+He was well aware, too, that the western tribes were a constant
+temptation to England and Spain on either border, and might be used
+against us with terrible effect. In taking up the question for
+solution, he believed first, as was his nature, in justice, and he
+resolved to push every pacific measure, and strive unremittingly by
+fair dealing and binding treaties to keep a peace which was of great
+moment to the young republic. But he also felt that pacific measures
+were an uncertain reliance, and that sharp, decisive blows were often
+the only means of maintaining peace and quiet on the frontier, and
+of warding off English and Spanish intrigue. This was the policy he
+indicated in the brief sentences of his first speech, and it only
+remains to see how he carried it out.
+
+The outlook in regard to the Indians, when Washington assumed the
+presidency, was threatening enough. The Continental Congress had shown
+in this respect most honorable intention and some vigor, but their
+honest purposes had been in large measure thwarted by the action of
+the various States, which they were unable to control. In New York
+peace reigned, despite some grumbling; for the Six Nations had made a
+general treaty, and also two special treaties, not long before, which
+were on the whole just and satisfactory. At the same time a general
+treaty had been made with the western Indians, which modified some of
+the injustices of the treaties of 1785, and which were also fair and
+reasonable. In this treaty, however, the tribes of the Wabash were not
+included, and they therefore were engaged in war with the Kentucky
+people. Those hardy backwoodsmen were quick enough to retaliate, and
+they generally proceeded on the simple backwoods principle that tribal
+distinctions were futile, and that every Indian was an enemy. This
+view, it must be admitted, saved a good deal of thought, but it led
+the Kentuckians in their raids to kill many Indians who did not belong
+to the Wabash tribes, but to those protected by treaty. The result
+of this impartiality was, that, besides the chronic Wabash troubles,
+there was every probability that a general war with all the western
+and northwestern tribes might break out at any moment.
+
+South of the Ohio, matters were even worse. The Choctaws, it is
+true, owing to their distance from our frontier settlements, were on
+excellent terms with our government. But the Cherokees had just
+been beaten and driven back by Sevier and his followers from the
+short-lived state of Franklin, and had taken refuge with the Creeks.
+These last were a formidable people. Not only were they good fighters,
+but they were also well armed, thanks to their alliance with the
+Spaniards, from whom they obtained not only countenance, but guns,
+ammunition, and supplies. They were led also by a chief of remarkable
+ability, a Scotch half-breed, educated at Charlestown, and named
+Alexander McGillivray. With a tribe so constituted and commanded, it
+was not difficult to bring on trouble, as soon proved to be the case.
+Georgia had claimed and seized certain lands under treaties which she
+alleged had been made, whereupon the Creeks denied the validity of
+these treaties and went to war, in which they were highly successful.
+The Georgians had already asked assistance from their neighbors, and
+they now demanded it from the new general government. Thereupon, under
+an act of Congress, Washington appointed as commissioners to arrange
+the difficulties General Lincoln, Colonel Humphrey, and David Griffin
+of Virginia, all remote from the scene of conflict, and all judicious
+selections. The Creeks readily met the new commissioners, but when
+they found that no lands were to be given up, they declined to treat
+further, and said they would await a new negotiation.
+
+Washington attributed this failure, and no doubt correctly, to the
+intrigues and influence of Spain. On the day the report of the
+commissioners went to Congress, he wrote to Governor Pinckney of South
+Carolina: "For my own part I am entirely persuaded that the present
+general government will endeavor to lay the foundations for its
+proceedings in national justice, faith, and honor. But should the
+government, after having attempted in vain every reasonable pacific
+measure, be obliged to have recourse to arms for the defense of its
+citizens, I am also of opinion that sound policy and good economy will
+point to a prompt and decisive effort, rather than to defensive and
+lingering operations." "Lingering" had been the curse of our Indian
+policy, and it was this above all things that Washington was
+determined to be rid of. Whether peace or war, there was to be quick
+and decisive action. He therefore, in this spirit, at once sent
+southward another commissioner, Colonel Willett, who very shrewdly
+succeeded in getting McGillivray and his chiefs to agree to accompany
+him to New York. Thither they accordingly came in due time, the Scotch
+half-breed and twenty-eight of his chiefs. They were entertained and
+well treated at the seat of government, and there, with Knox acting
+for the United States, they made a treaty which involved concessions
+on both sides. The Creeks gave up all claims to lands north and east
+of the Oconee, and the United States, under a recent general act
+regulating trade and intercourse with the Indians, gave up all lands
+south and west of the same river, and agreed to make the tribes an
+annual present. Then Washington gave them wampum and tobacco, and
+shook hands with them, and the chiefs went home. There was grumbling
+on both sides, especially among the Georgians, but nevertheless the
+treaty held for a time at least, and there was peace.
+
+Washington's policy of justice had succeeded, and the Indians got an
+idea of the power and fair dealing of the new government, which was of
+real value. More valuable still was the lesson to the people of the
+United States that this central government meant to deal justly
+with the Indians, and would try to prevent any single State from
+frustrating by bad faith the policy designed to benefit the whole
+country. Trouble soon began again in this direction, and in later days
+States inflated with state-right doctrines carried this resistance in
+Indian affairs to a much greater extent, and flouted the acts of the
+federal government. This, however, does not detract from the wisdom of
+the President, who inaugurated the policy of acting justly toward
+the Indians, and of overruling the selfish injustice of the State
+immediately affected. If the policy of justice and firmness adopted by
+Washington had never been abandoned, it would have been better for the
+honor and the interest both of the nation and the separate States.
+
+The same pacific policy which had succeeded in the south was tried in
+the west and failed. The English, with their usual thoughtfulness,
+incited the Indians to claim the Ohio as their boundary, which meant
+war and murderous assaults on all our people traveling on the river.
+Retaliation, of course, followed, and in April, 1790, Colonel Harmer
+with a body of Kentucky militia invaded the Indian country, burned a
+deserted village, and returned without having accomplished anything
+substantial. The desultory warfare of murder and pillage went on for a
+time, and then Washington felt that the moment had come for the other
+branch of his policy. At all events there should be no lingering, and
+there should be action. Peaceful measures having failed, there should
+be war and a settlement in some fashion.
+
+Accordingly, in the fall of 1790, soon after his successful Creek
+negotiation, he ordered out some three hundred regulars and eleven
+hundred militia from Pennsylvania and Kentucky, and sent them under
+Harmer into the Miami country. The expedition burned a village on the
+Scioto; and then Colonel Hardin, detached with some hundred and
+fifty men in pursuit of the Indians, was caught in an ambush and
+his regulars cut off, the militia running away apparently quite
+successfully. Thereupon Harmer retreated; but, changing his mind in a
+day or two, advanced again, and again sent out Hardin with a larger
+force than before. Then the advance was again surprised, and the
+regulars nearly all killed, while the militia, who stood their ground
+better this time, lost about a hundred men. The end was the repulse
+of the whites after a pretty savage fight. Then Harmer withdrew
+altogether, declaring, with a strange absence of humor, if of no more
+important quality, that he had won a victory. After reaching home,
+this mismanaged expedition caused much crimination and heart-burning,
+followed by courts-martial on Hardin and Harmer, who were both
+acquitted, and by the resignation of the latter.
+
+This defeat of course simply made worse the state of affairs in
+general, and the Six Nations, who had hitherto been quiet, became
+uneasy and were kept so by the ever-kind incitement of the English.
+Various mediations with these powerful tribes failed; but Colonel
+Pickering, appointed a special commissioner, managed at last to
+appease their discontents. To the southward also the Cherokees began
+to move and threaten, but were pacified by the exertions of Governor
+Blount of the Southwest Territory. Meantime an act had been passed to
+increase the army, and Arthur St. Clair was appointed major-general.
+Washington, who had been greatly disturbed by the failure of Harmer,
+was both angered and disheartened by the conduct of the States and of
+the frontier settlers. "Land-jobbing, the intermeddling of the States,
+and the disorderly conduct of the borderers, who were indifferent as
+to the killing of an Indian," were in his opinion the great obstacles
+in the way of success. Yet these very men who shot Indians at sight
+and plundered them of their lands, as well as the States immediately
+concerned, were the first to cry out for aid from the general
+government when a war, brought about usually by their own violation of
+the treaties of the United States, was upon them. On the other hand,
+the Indians themselves were warlike and quarrelsome, and they were
+spurred on by England and Spain in a way difficult to understand at
+the present day.
+
+In all this perplexity, however, one thing was now clear to
+Washington. There could not longer be any doubt that the western
+troubles must be put down vigorously and by the armed hand. Even while
+he was negotiating in the north and south, therefore, he threw himself
+heart and soul into the preparation of St. Clair's expedition, pushing
+forward all necessary arrangements, and planning the campaign with a
+care and foresight made possible by his military ability and by his
+experience as an Indian fighter. While the main army was thus
+getting ready, two lesser expeditions, one under Scott and one under
+Wilkinson, were sent into the Indian country; but beyond burning some
+deserted villages and killing a few stray savages both were fruitless.
+
+At last all was ready. St. Clair had an interview with Washington, in
+which the whole plan of campaign was gone over, and especial warning
+given against ambuscades. He then took his departure at once for the
+west, and late in September left Cincinnati with some two thousand
+men. The plan of campaign was to build a line of forts, and
+accordingly one named Fort Hamilton was erected twenty-four miles
+north on the Miami, and then Fort Jefferson was built forty-four miles
+north of that point. Thence St. Clair pushed slowly on for twenty-nine
+miles until he reached the head-waters of the Wabash. He had been
+joined on the march by some Kentucky militia, who were disorderly
+and undisciplined. Sixty of them promptly deserted, and it became
+necessary to send a regiment after them to prevent their plundering
+the baggage trains. At the same time some Chickasaw auxiliaries, with
+the true rat instinct, deserted and went home. Nevertheless St. Clair
+kept on, and finally reached what proved to be his last camp, with
+about fourteen hundred men. The militia were on one side of the
+stream, the regulars on the other. At sunrise the next day the
+Indians surprised the militia, drove them back on the other camp, and
+shattered the first line of the regulars. The second line stood their
+ground, and a desperate fight ensued; but it was all in vain. The
+Indians charged up to the guns, and, though they were repulsed by the
+bayonet, St. Clair, who was ill in his tent, was at last forced to
+order a retreat. The retreat soon became a rout, and the broken army,
+leaving their artillery and throwing away their arms, fled back to
+Fort Jefferson, where they left their wounded, and hurried on to their
+starting-point at Fort Washington. It was Braddock over again. General
+Butler, the second in command, was killed on the field, while the
+total loss reached nine hundred men and fifty-nine officers, and of
+these six hundred were killed. The Indians do not appear to have
+numbered much more than a thousand. No excuse for such a disaster and
+such murderous slaughter is possible, for nothing but the grossest
+carelessness could have permitted a surprise of that nature upon
+an established camp. The troops, too, were not only surprised, but
+apparently utterly unprepared to fight, and the battle was merely a
+wild struggle for life.
+
+Washington was above all things a soldier, and his heart was always
+with his armies whenever he had one in the field. In this case
+particularly he hoped much, for he looked to this powerful expedition
+to settle the Indian troubles for a time, and give room for that
+great western movement which always was in his thoughts. He therefore
+awaited reports from St. Clair with keen anxiety, but in this case
+the ill tidings did not attain their proverbial speed. The battle was
+fought on November 4, and it was not until the close of a December
+day that the officer carrying dispatches from the frontier reached
+Philadelphia. He rode at once to the President's house, and Washington
+was called out from dinner, where he had company. He remained away
+some time, and on returning to the table said nothing as to what
+he had heard, talked with every one at Mrs. Washington's reception
+afterwards, and gave no sign. Through all the weary evening he was as
+calm and courteous as ever. When the last guest had gone he walked up
+and down the room for a few minutes and then suddenly broke out:
+"It's all over--St. Clair's defeated--routed; the officers nearly all
+killed, the men by wholesale; the rout complete--too shocking to think
+of--and a surprise into the bargain." He paused and strode up and down
+the room; stopped again and burst forth in a torrent of indignant
+wrath: "Here on this very spot I took leave of him; I wished him
+success and honor; 'You have your instructions,' I said, 'from the
+secretary of war; I had a strict eye to them, and will add but one
+word--Beware of a surprise! I repeat it--_beware of a surprise_! You
+know how the Indians fight us.' He went off with that as my last
+solemn warning thrown into his ears. And yet, to suffer that army to
+be cut to pieces, hacked, butchered, tomahawked, by a surprise, the
+very thing I guarded him against! O God, O God, he's worse than a
+murderer! How can he answer it to his country! The blood of the slain
+is upon him, the curse of widows and orphans, the curse of Heaven!"
+
+His secretary was appalled and silent, while Washington again strode
+fiercely up and down the room. Then he sat down, collected himself,
+and said, "This must not go beyond this room." Then a long silence.
+Then, "General St. Clair shall have justice. I looked hastily through
+the dispatches, saw the whole disaster, but not all the particulars;
+I will receive him without displeasure; I will hear him without
+prejudice; he shall have full justice." The description of this scene
+by an eye-witness has been in print for many years, and yet we find
+people who say that Washington was cold of heart and lacking in human
+sympathy. What could be more intensely human than this? What a warm
+heart is here, and what a lightning glimpse of a passionate nature
+bursting through silence into burning speech! Then comes the iron will
+which has mastered all the problems of his life. "He shall have full
+justice;" and St. Clair had justice. He had been an unfortunate
+choice, but as a Revolutionary soldier and governor of the Northwest
+Territory his selection had been natural. He had never been a
+successful general, for it was not in him to be so. Something he
+lacked, energy, decision, foresight, it matters not what. But at least
+he was brave. Broken by sickness, he had displayed the utmost personal
+courage on that stricken field; and for this Washington would always
+forgive much. He received the unfortunate general kindly. He could not
+order a court martial, for there were no officers of sufficient rank
+to form one; but he gave St. Clair every opportunity for vindication,
+and a committee of Congress investigated the campaign and exculpated
+the leader. His personal bravery saved him and his reputation, but
+nothing can alter the fact that the surprise was unpardonable and the
+disaster awful.
+
+Immediate results of the St. Clair defeat were not so bad as might
+have been expected. Panic, of course, ran rampant along the frontier,
+reaching even to Pittsburg; but the Indians failed to follow up
+their advantage, and did not come. Still the alarm was there, and
+Pennsylvania and Virginia ordered troops to be raised, while Congress
+also took action. Another increase of the army was ordered, with
+consequent increase of appropriation, so that this Indian victory
+entered at this point into the great current of the financial policy,
+and thus played its part in the events on which parties were dividing,
+and history was being made.
+
+No matter what happened, however, there was to be neither lingering
+nor delay in this business. The President set to work at once to
+organize a fresh army, and fight out a settlement of the troubles. His
+first thought for a new commander was of Henry Lee of Virginia, but
+considerations of rank deterred him. He then selected and appointed
+Wayne, who recently had got into politics and been deprived, on a
+contested election, of his seat in the House. No little grumbling
+ensued over this appointment, especially in Virginia, but it was
+unheeded by the President, and its causes now are not very clear.
+The event proved the wisdom of the choice, as so often happened with
+Washington, and it is easy to see the reason for it. Wayne was one
+of the shining figures of our Revolution, appealing strongly to the
+imagination of posterity. He was not a great general in the highest
+sense, but he was a brilliant corps-commander, capable of daring feats
+of arms like the storming of Stony Point. He was capable also of
+dashing with heedless courage into desperate places, and incurring
+thereby defeat and consequent censure, but escaping entire ruin
+through the same quickness of action which had involved him in
+trouble. He was well fitted for the bold and rapid movement
+required in Indian warfare, and with him Washington put well-chosen
+subordinates, selected evidently for their fighting capacity, for he
+clearly was determined that this should be at all events a fighting
+campaign.
+
+Wayne, after his appointment, betook himself to Pittsburg, and
+proceeded with characteristic energy to raise and organize his army,
+a work of no little difficulty because he wished to have picked men.
+Washington did all that could be done to help him, and at the same
+time pushed negotiations with admirable patience, but with very
+varying success. Kirkland brought chiefs of the Six Nations to
+Congress with good results, and the Cherokees were pacified by
+additional presents. On the other hand, the Creeks were restless,
+stirred up always by Spain, and two brave officers, sent to try
+for peace with the western tribes, were murdered in cold blood.
+Nevertheless, treaties were patched up with some of them, and a great
+council was held in the fall of 1792, the Six Nations acting as
+mediators, which resulted in a badly kept armistice, but in nothing of
+lasting value. The next year Congress passed a general act regulating
+trade and intercourse with the Indians, and Washington appointed yet
+another commission to visit the northwestern tribes, more to
+satisfy public opinion than with any hope of peace. Indeed, these
+commissioners never succeeded in even meeting the Indians, who
+rejected in advance all proposals which would not concede the Ohio as
+the boundary. English influence, it was said, was at the bottom of
+this demand, and there seems to be little doubt that such was the
+case, for England and France were now at war, and England thereupon
+had redoubled her efforts to injure the United States by every sort of
+petty outrage both on sea and land. This masterly policy had perhaps
+reasons for its existence which pass beyond the average understanding,
+but, so far as any one can now discover, it seems to have had no
+possible motive except to feed an ancient grudge and drive the country
+into the arms of France. Carried on for a long time in secret,
+this Indian intrigue came to the surface in a speech made by Lord
+Dorchester to the western tribes, in which he prophesied a speedy
+rupture with the United States and urged his hearers to continue war.
+It is worth remembering that for five years, covertly or openly,
+England did her best to keep an Indian war with all that it implied
+alive upon our borders,--the borders of a friendly nation with whom
+she was at peace.
+
+But while Washington persistently negotiated, he as persistently
+prepared to fight, not trusting overmuch either the savages or the
+English. Wayne, with similar views, moved his army forward in the
+autumn of 1793 to a point six miles beyond Fort Jefferson, and then
+went into winter quarters. Early in the spring of 1794 he was in
+motion again and advanced to St. Clair's battlefield, where he built
+Fort Recovery, and where he was attacked by the Indians, whom he
+repulsed after two days' fighting. He then marched in an unexpected
+direction and struck the central villages at the junction of the Au
+Glaize and Maumee. The surprised savages fled, and Wayne burned their
+village, laid waste their extensive fields, and built Fort Defiance.
+To the Indians, who had retreated thirty miles down the Maumee to the
+shelter of a British post, he sent word that he was ready to treat.
+The reply came back asking for a delay of ten days; but Wayne at once
+advanced, and found the Indians prepared for battle near the English
+fort. The ground was unfavorable, especially for cavalry, but Wayne
+made good arrangements and attacked. The Indians gave way before the
+bayonet, and were completely routed, the American loss being only one
+hundred and seven men. The army was not averse to storming the English
+fort; but Wayne, with unusual caution, contented himself with a sharp
+correspondence with the commandant, and then withdrew after a most
+successful campaign. The next year, strengthened by his victory and by
+the surrender of the British posts under the Jay treaty, Wayne made
+a treaty with the western tribes by which vast tracts of disputed
+territory were ceded to the United States, and peace was established
+in that long troubled region.
+
+On the southern frontier there were no such fortunate results. While
+Washington was negotiating and fighting in the north and west, all
+his patient efforts were frustrated in the south by the conduct of
+Georgia. The borderers kept assailing the Indians, peaceful tribes
+being generally chosen for the purpose; and the State itself broke
+through and disregarded all treaties and all arrangements made by the
+United States. The result was constant disquiet and chronic war, with
+the usual accompaniments of fire, murder, and pillage.
+
+On the whole, however, when Washington left the presidency, his
+Indian policy had been a marked success. In place of uncertainty and
+weakness, a definite general system had been adopted. The northern
+and western tribes had been beaten and pacified, and the southern
+incursions and disorders had been much checked. The British posts, the
+most dangerous centres of Indian intrigue, had been abandoned, and the
+great regions of the west and northwest had been opened to the tide of
+settlement. These results were due to a well-defined plan, and above
+all to the persistent vigor which pushed steadily forward to its
+object without swinging, as had been done before, between feverish and
+often misdirected activity on the one side and complete and
+feeble inaction on the other. They were achieved, too, amid many
+difficulties, for there was anything but a unanimous support of the
+government in its Indian affairs. The opposition grumbled at the
+expense, and said that money needlessly raised by taxation was
+squandered in Indian wars, while the great body of the people, living
+safely along the eastern coast, thought but little about the frontier.
+Some persons took the sentimental view and considered the government
+barbarous to make causeless war. Others believed that altogether
+too much of the public time and money were wasted in looking after
+outlying settlements. The borderers themselves, on the other hand,
+thought that the general government was in league with the savages,
+and broke through treaties, and destroyed so far as they could the
+national policy. St. Clair was hissed and jeered as he traveled home,
+but a wakeful opposition turned from the unsuccessful general to a
+vain attempt to prove that ambushed savages and sleeping sentries were
+due to a weak war department and a corrupt and inefficient treasury.
+The mass of moderate people, no doubt, desired tranquillity on the
+frontier, and sustained the President's labors for that end, but for
+the most part they were silent. The voices that Washington heard most
+loudly joined in a discordant chorus of disapproval around his Indian
+policy. No one understood that here was an important part of a scheme
+to build up a nation, to make all the movements of the United States
+broad and national, and to open the vast west to the people who were
+to make it theirs. Washington heard all the criticism and saw all the
+opposition, and still pressed forward to his goal, not attaining all
+he wished, but fighting in a very clear and manful spirit, and not
+laboring in vain.
+
+The Indian question in its management touched, as has been seen, at
+various points our financial policy and our foreign relations, on
+which the history of the country really turned in those years. The
+latter had not risen to their later importance when the government
+began, but the former was knocking importunately at the door of
+Congress when it first assembled. The condition of affairs is soon
+told. The Revolution narrowly escaped shipwreck on the financial
+reefs, and the shaky government of the confederation had there gone to
+pieces. The country, as a political organism, was bankrupt. It owed
+sums of money, which were vast in amount for those days, both at
+home and abroad, and it could not pay these debts, nor was there any
+provision for them. All interest was in arrears, there were no means
+provided for meeting it, and the national credit everywhere was
+dishonored and gone. The continental currency had disappeared, and the
+circulating medium was represented by a confused jumble of foreign
+coins and worthless scrip. Many of the States were up to their eyes in
+schemes of inflation, paper money, and repudiation. There was no money
+in the treasury to pay the ordinary charges of government; there was
+no revenue and no policy for raising one, or for funding the debt.
+This picture is darkly drawn, but it is not exaggerated. That high
+spirit of public honor, which seventy-five years later rose above the
+ravages of war and the temptings of dishonesty to pay the debt and the
+interest, dollar for dollar in gold, seemed in 1789 to be wellnigh
+extinct. But it was not dead. It was confused and overclouded in the
+minds of the people, but it was still there, and it was strong, clear,
+and determined in Washington and those who followed him.
+
+Congress grappled with the financial difficulties in the most
+courageous and honest way, but it struggled with them rather
+helplessly despite its good disposition. It could lay taxes in one way
+or another so as to get money, but this was plainly insufficient. It
+could not formulate a coherent policy, which was the one essential
+thing, nor could it settle the thousand and one perplexing questions
+which hedged the subject on every side. The members turned, therefore,
+with a sigh of relief to the new Secretary of the Treasury, asked him
+the questions which were troubling them, and having directed him to
+make various reports, adjourned.
+
+The result is well known. The great statesman to whom the task was
+confided assumed it with the boldness and ease of conscious power,
+and when Congress reassembled it listened to the first report on
+the public credit. In that great state paper all the confusions
+disappeared, and in terse sentences an entire scheme for funding the
+debt, disposing of the worthless currency, and raising the necessary
+revenue came out clear and distinct, so that all men could comprehend
+it. The provision for the foreign debt passed without resistance. That
+for the domestic debt excited much debate, and also passed. Last came
+the assumption of the state debts, and over that there sprang up
+a fierce struggle. It was carried by a narrow majority, and then
+defeated by the votes of the North Carolina members, who had just
+taken their seats. Washington strongly favored this hotly contested
+measure. He defended it in a letter to David Stuart, and again
+to Jefferson, at a later time, when that statesman was trying to
+undermine Hamilton by wailing about a "corrupt squadron" in Congress.
+
+To Washington, assumption seemed as obviously just as it does to
+posterity. All the debts had been incurred in a common cause, he said,
+why should they not be cared for by the common government? He had
+no patience with the sectional argument that assumption was unfair,
+because some States got more out of it than others. Some States had
+suffered more than others, but all shared in the freedom that had been
+won.[1] He saw in it, moreover, as Hamilton had seen, something far
+more important than a mere provision for the debts and for the payment
+of money to this community or to that. Assumption was essentially a
+union measure. The other debts were incurred by the central government
+directly, but the state debts were incurred by the States for a common
+cause. If the United States assumed them, it showed to the people and
+to the world that there were no state lines when the interests of the
+whole country were involved. It was therefore a national measure, a
+breeder of national sentiment, a new bond to fasten the States to each
+other and to the Union. This was enough to assure Washington's hearty
+approval; but the measure was saved and carried finally by the famous
+arrangement between Hamilton and Jefferson, which took the capital
+to the Potomac and made the war debts of the States a part of the
+national debt. Washington was more than satisfied with this solution,
+for both sides of the agreement pleased him, and there was nothing in
+the compromise which meant sacrifice on his part. He rejoiced in
+the successful adoption of the great financial policy of his
+administration, and he was much pleased to have the capital, in which
+he was intensely interested, placed near to his own Mount Vernon, in
+the very region he would have selected if he had had the power of
+fixing it.
+
+[Footnote 1: Sparks, _Writings of Washington_, x. 98.]
+
+The next great step in the development of the financial policy was the
+establishment of the national bank, and on this there arose another
+bitter contest in Congress and in the newspapers. A sharp opposition
+had developed by this time, and the supporters of the Secretary of the
+Treasury became on their side correspondingly ardent. In this debate
+much stress was laid on the constitutional point that Congress had no
+power to charter a bank. Nevertheless, the bill passed and went to the
+President, with the constitutional doubts following it and pressed
+home in this last resort. As has been seen from his letters written
+just after the Philadelphia convention, Washington was not a blind
+worshiper of the Constitution which he had helped so largely to make;
+but he believed it would work, and every day confirmed his belief. He
+felt, moreover, that one great element of its lasting success lay
+in creating a genuine reverence for it among the people, and it was
+therefore of the utmost importance that this reverence should begin
+among those to whom the management of the government had been
+intrusted. For this reason he exercised a jealous care in everything
+touching the organic law of the Union, and he was peculiarly sensitive
+to constitutional objections to any given measure. In the case of the
+national bank, the objections were strongly as well as vigorously
+urged, and Washington paused, before signing, to the utmost limit of
+the time allowed. He turned to Jefferson and Randolph, both opposed
+to the bill, and asked them for their objections to its
+constitutionality. They gave him in response two able reports. These
+he sent to Hamilton, who returned them with that most masterly
+argument, in which he not only defended the bank charter, but
+vindicated, in a manner never afterwards surpassed, the new doctrine
+of the implied powers of the Constitution. With both sides thus before
+him, Washington considered the question, and signed the bill.
+
+Rives, in his "Life of Madison," intimates that Washington had doubts
+even after signing, but of this there is no evidence of any weight. He
+was not a man who indulged in doubts after he had made up his mind and
+rendered a decision, and it was not in his nature to fret over what
+had been done and was past, whether in war or peace. The story that he
+was worried about his action in this instance arose from his delay in
+signing, and from the disappointment of those who had hoped much
+from his hesitation. This pause, however, was both natural and
+characteristic. Washington had approved Morris's bank policy in the
+Revolution, and remembered the service it rendered. He was familiar
+with Hamilton's views on the subject, and knew that they were the
+result of long study and careful thought. He must also have known that
+any financial policy devised by his Secretary of the Treasury would
+contain as an integral part a national bank. There can be no doubt
+that both the plan for the bank and the report which embodied it were
+submitted to him before they went in to Congress, but the violence of
+the objections raised there on constitutional grounds awakened
+his attention in a new direction. He saw at once the gravity of a
+question, which involved not merely the incorporation of a bank,
+but which opened up a new field of constitutional powers and
+constitutional construction. When such far-reaching results were
+involved he paused and reflected, and, as was always the case with him
+under such circumstances, listened to and examined all the arguments
+on both sides. This done he decided, and with his national feeling
+he could not have decided otherwise than he did. The doctrine of the
+implied powers of the Constitution was the greatest weapon possible
+for those whose leading thought was to develop the union of States
+into a great and imperial nation; and we may well believe that it was
+this feeling, and not merely faith in the bank as a financial engine,
+which led Washington to sign the bill. When he did so he assented to
+the charter of a national bank, but he also assented to the doctrine
+of the implied powers and gave to that far-reaching construction of
+the Constitution the great weight of his name and character. It was,
+perhaps, the most important single act of his presidency.
+
+It is impossible here, even were it necessary, to follow Washington's
+action in regard to all the details which went to make up and to
+sustain Hamilton's policy, to which, as a whole, Washington gave his
+hearty approval and support. The revenue system, the public lands,
+the arrangement of loans, the mint, all alike met with his active
+concurrence. He was too great a man not to value rightly Hamilton's
+work, and the way in which that work brought order, credit, honor, and
+prosperity out of a chaos of debt and bankruptcy appealed peculiarly
+to his own love for method, organization, and sound business
+principles. He met every criticism on Hamilton's policy without
+concession, and defended it when it was attacked. To Hamilton's genius
+that policy must be credited, but it gained its success and strength
+largely from the firm support of Washington.
+
+There are two matters, however, connected with the Treasury
+Department, which cannot be passed over in this general way. One was
+a policy reasoned out and published by Hamilton, but never during his
+lifetime put into the form of law in the broad and systematic manner
+which he desired. The other was a consequence of his financial policy
+as adopted, but which reached far beyond the bounds of financial
+arrangements. The first was the policy set forth in Hamilton's Report
+on Manufactures. The second was the enforcement of the excise and its
+results.
+
+The defense of our commerce against foreign discriminations was a
+proximate cause of the movement which resulted in the Constitution of
+the United States, and closely allied to it was the anxious wish to
+develop our internal resources and our domestic industry. This idea
+was not at all new. Sporadic attempts to start and carry on various
+industries had been made during the colonial period. They had all
+failed, either because the watchful mother-country took pains to
+stifle them, or because lack of capital and experience, in addition to
+foreign competition, killed them almost at their birth. The idea of
+developing American industries was generally diffused for the
+first time when the colonists strove to bring England to terms by
+non-intercourse acts. The Americans then thought that they could carry
+their points by making war upon the British pocket, and excluding
+English merchants from their markets. The next step, of course, was
+to supply their own markets themselves; and the non-intercourse
+agreements, which were economically prohibitory tariff acts, gave a
+fitful impulse to various simple industries. In the clash of arms this
+idea naturally dropped out of the popular mind, but it began to revive
+soon after the return of peace. The government of the confederation
+was too feeble to adopt any policy in this or any other matter, but
+in the first Congress the desire to develop American industries found
+expression. The first tariff was laid primarily to raise the revenue
+so sorely needed at that moment. But the effort to do this gave rise
+to a debate in which the policy of protection, strongly advocated by
+the Pennsylvanian members, was freely discussed. Nobody, however, at
+that time, had any comprehensive plan or general system, so that the
+efforts for protection were incoherent, and resulted only in certain
+special protective features in the tariff bill, and not in a broad
+and well-rounded measure. Still the protective idea was there; it was
+recognized in the preamble of the act, and the constitutionality of
+the policy was affirmed by the framers and contemporaries of the
+Constitution.
+
+Hamilton, of course, watched all these movements intently. His guiding
+thought in all things was the creation of a great nation. For this he
+strove for national unity and national sentiment, and he saw of course
+that one essential condition of national greatness was industrial
+independence, in addition to the political independence already won.
+One of the greatest thinkers of the time on all matters of public
+finance and political economy, he perceived at once that the irregular
+attempts of Congress to encourage home industries could have at best
+but partial results. He saw that a system broad, just, and continental
+in its scope must take the place of the isolated industries which
+now and again obtained an uncertain protection under the haphazard
+measures of Congress. With these views and purposes he wrote and sent
+to Congress his Report on Manufactures. In that great state paper he
+made an argument in behalf of protection, as applied to the United
+States and to the development of home industries, which has never been
+overthrown. The system which he proposed was imperial in its range and
+national in its design, like everything that proceeded from Hamilton's
+mind. He argued, of course, with reference to existing economic
+conditions, and in behalf only of what he then sought,--industrial
+independence and the establishment and diversification of industries.
+The social side of the question, which to-day overshadows all others,
+was not visible a hundred years ago. The Report, however, bore no
+immediate fruit, and Hamilton had been in his grave for years before
+the country turned from this practice of accidental protection, and
+tried to replace it by a broad, coherent system as set forth by the
+great Secretary.
+
+But although it had no result at the moment, the Report on
+Manufactures, which laid the foundation of the American protective
+system, and which has so powerfully influenced American political
+thought, was one of the very greatest events of Washington's
+administration. To trace its effects and history through the
+succeeding century would be wholly out of place here. All that
+concerns us is Washington's relation to this far-reaching policy of
+his Secretary. If we had not a word or a line on the subject from his
+pen, we should still know that the policy of Hamilton was his policy
+too, for Washington was the head of his own administration, and was
+responsible and meant to be responsible for all its acts and policies.
+With his keen foresight he saw the full import of the Report on
+Manufactures, and we may be sure that when it went forth it was with
+his full and cordial approval, and after that minute consideration
+which he gave to all public questions. But we are not left to
+inference. We have Washington's views and feelings on this matter set
+forth again and again, and they show that the principle of the Report
+on Manufactures was as near and dear to him, and as full of meaning,
+as it was to Hamilton.
+
+Washington was brought up and had lived all his life under a system
+which came as near as possible to the ideal of the modern free-trader.
+The people of Virginia were devoted almost entirely to a single
+interest, tobacco-growing, that being the occupation in which they
+could most profitably engage. No legislative artifices had been
+employed to enable them to diversify their industries or to establish
+manufactures. They bought in the cheapest market every luxury and
+most of the necessities of life. British merchants supplied all their
+wants, carried their tobacco, and advanced them money. Cheap labor, a
+single staple with wide fluctuations of value, a credit system, entire
+dependence on foreigners, and absolute free trade according to the
+Manchester theories, should have produced an earthly paradise. As a
+matter of fact, the Virginia planters had little ready money and were
+deeply in debt. Bankruptcy, as has been already said, seems to have
+come to them about once in a generation. The land, rapidly exhausted
+by tobacco, was prodigally wasted, and the general prosperity
+declined. Washington, with his strong sense and perfect business
+methods, personally escaped most of these evils, but he saw the
+mischief of the system all the more clearly. It was bad enough in
+his time, but he did not live to see Virginia with her wasted and
+exhausted lands stand still, while her sister States to the north
+passed her with giant strides in the race for wealth and population.
+He did not live to see her become, as a result of her colonial system,
+a mere breeder of slaves for the plantations of the Gulf States. But
+he saw enough, and the lesson taught him by the results of industrial
+dependence was well learned.
+
+When the war came and he was carrying the terrible burden of the
+Revolution, he learned the same lesson in a new and more bitter way.
+Nothing went so near to wreck the American cause as lack of all the
+supplies by which war was carried on, for the United States produced
+little or nothing of what was then needed. The resources of the
+northern colonies were soon exhausted, and the South had none. Powder,
+cannon, muskets, clothing, medical stores, all were lacking, and the
+fate of the nation hung trembling in the balance on account of the
+dependence in which the colonies had been kept by the skillful policy
+of England. These were teachings that a lesser man than Washington
+would have taken to heart and pondered deeply. In the midst of the
+struggle he wrote to James Warren (March 31, 1779): "Let vigorous
+measures be adopted, ... to punish speculators, forestallers, and
+extortioners, and, above all, to sink the money by heavy taxes,
+to promote public and private economy, and _to encourage
+manufactures_.[1] Measures of this sort, gone heartily into by the
+several States, would strike at once at the root of all our evils,
+and give the _coup de grace_ to the British hope of subjugating this
+continent either by their arms or their acts."
+
+[Footnote 1: The italics are mine.]
+
+To Lafayette he wrote in 1789: "Though I would not force the
+introduction of manufactures by extravagant encouragements and to the
+prejudice of agriculture, yet I conceive much might be done in
+that way by women, children, and others, without taking one really
+necessary hand from tilling the earth. Certain it is, great savings
+are already made in many articles of apparel, furniture, and
+consumption. Equally certain it is, that no diminution in agriculture
+has taken place at this time, when greater and more substantial
+improvements in manufactures are making than were ever before known in
+America."
+
+In the same year he wrote to Governor Randolph, favoring bounties, the
+strongest form of protection; and this encouragement he wished to have
+given to that industry which a hundred years later has been held up as
+one of the least deserving of all that have received the assistance of
+legislation. He said in this letter: "From the original letter, which
+I forward herewith, your Excellency will comprehend the nature of a
+proposal for introducing and establishing the woolen manufacture
+in the State of Virginia. In the present stage of population and
+agriculture, I do not pretend to determine how far that plan may be
+practicable and advisable; or, in case it should be deemed so, whether
+any or what public encouragement ought to be given to facilitate
+its execution. _I have, however, no doubt as to the good policy
+of increasing the number of sheep in every state_.[1] By a little
+legislative encouragement the farmers of Connecticut have, in two
+years past, added one hundred thousand to their former stock. If a
+greater quantity of wool could be produced, and if the hands which are
+often in a manner idle could be employed in manufacturing it, a spirit
+of industry might be promoted, a great diminution might be made in
+the annual expenses of individual families, and the public would
+eventually be exceedingly benefited." The only hesitation is as to the
+time of applying the policy. There is no doubt as to the wisdom of the
+policy itself, of giving protection and encouragement in every proper
+legislative form to domestic industry.
+
+[Footnote 1: The italics are mine.]
+
+In his first speech to Congress he recommended measures for the
+advancement of manufactures, having already affixed his signature to
+the bill which declared their encouragement to be one of its objects.
+At the same time he wrote, in reply to an address: "The promotion
+of domestic manufactures will, in my conception, be among the first
+consequences which may naturally be expected to flow from an energetic
+government." In 1791 he consulted Hamilton as to the advisability of
+urging Congress to offer bounties for the culture of cotton and hemp,
+his only doubts being as to the power of the general government in
+this respect, and as to the temper of the time in regard to such an
+expenditure of public money. The following year Hamilton's Report
+on Manufactures was given to the country, finally establishing the
+position of the administration as to our economic policy.
+
+The general drift of legislation, although it was not systematized,
+followed the direction pointed out by the administration. But this did
+not satisfy Washington. In his speech to Congress, December 7, 1796,
+he said: "Congress has repeatedly, and not without success, directed
+their attention to the encouragement of manufactures. _The object is
+of too much consequence not to insure a continuance of their efforts
+in every way which shall appear eligible._"[1] He then goes on to
+argue at some length that, although manufacturing on the public
+account is usually inexpedient, it should be established and carried
+on to supply all that was needed for the public force in time of war.
+This was his last address to Congress, and his last word on this
+matter was to approve the course of Congress in following the
+recommendation of his first speech. All his utterances and all his
+opinions on the subject were uniform. Washington had never been a
+student of public finance or political economy like Hamilton, and he
+lived before the days of the Manchester school and its new gospel
+of procuring heaven on earth by special methods of transacting the
+country's business. But Washington was a great man, a state-builder
+who fought wars and founded governments. He knew that nations were
+raised up and made great and efficient, and that civilization was
+advanced, not by _laissez aller_ and _laissez faire_, but by much
+patient human striving. He had fought and conquered, and again he had
+fought and been defeated, and through all he had come to victory, and
+to certain conclusive results both in peace and war. He had not done
+this by sitting still and letting each man go his way, but by strong
+brain and strong will, and by much organization and compulsion. He had
+set his hand to the building of a nation. He had studied his country
+and understood it, and with calm, far-seeing eyes he had looked
+forward into the future of his people. Neither the study nor the
+outlook were vain, and both told him that political independence
+was only part of the work, and that national sentiment, independent
+thinking, and industrial independence also must be reached. The
+first two, time alone could bring. The last, wise laws could help
+to produce; and so he favored protection by legislation to American
+industry and manufactures, threw all his potent influence into the
+scale, and gave his support to the protective policy set forth by his
+Secretary.
+
+[Footnote 1: The italics are mine.]
+
+Two matters connected with the treasury, I have said, deserved
+fuller consideration than a general review could give. The one just
+described, the policy of the Report on Manufactures, came, as has been
+seen, to no clear and immediate result. The other reached a very
+sharp and definite conclusion, not without great effect on the new
+government of the United States, both at the moment and in the future.
+When Hamilton "struck the rock of the national resources," the stream
+of revenue which he sought at the outset was that flowing from duties
+on imports, for this, in his theory, was not only the first source,
+but the best. He would fain have had it the only one; but the
+situation drove him forward. The assumption of the state debts, a
+part of the legacy of the Revolution, and the continuing and at first
+increasing expenses of unavoidable Indian wars, made additional
+revenue absolutely essential. He turned therefore to the excise on
+domestic spirits to furnish what was needed.
+
+Washington approved assumption. It was a measure of honesty, it would
+raise the public credit, and above all, it was thoroughly national in
+its operation and results. The appropriations for Indian wars he of
+course approved, for their energetic prosecution was part of the
+vigorous policy toward our wild neighbors upon which he was so
+determined. It followed, of course, that he did not shrink from
+imposing the taxes thus made necessary; and to raise the money from
+domestic spirits seemed to him, under the existing exigency, to be
+what it was,--thoroughly proper and reasonable both in form and
+subject.
+
+It would seem, however, that neither Washington nor Hamilton realized
+the unpopularity of this mode of getting revenue. The frontier
+settlers along the line of the Alleghanies in Pennsylvania, Virginia,
+and North Carolina, who distilled whiskey, were not very familiar,
+perhaps, with Johnson's dictionary, but they would have cordially
+accepted his definition of an excise. To them it was indeed a "hateful
+tax," and nothing else. In fact, the word was one disliked throughout
+the States, for it brought up evil memories, and excited much jealous
+hostility and prejudice. The first excise law, therefore, when it went
+into force, was the signal for a general outburst of opposition; and
+in the Alleghany region, as might have been expected, the resistance
+was immediate and most bitter. State legislatures passed resolutions,
+public meetings were held and more resolutions were passed, while
+in the wilder parts of the country threats of violence were freely
+uttered. All these murmurings and menaces came on the passage of the
+first bill in 1791. The administration, however, had no desire to
+precipitate an uncalled-for strife, and so the law was softened and
+amended in the following year, the tax being lowered and the most
+obnoxious features removed. The result was general acquiescence
+throughout most of the States, and renewed opposition in the western
+counties of Pennsylvania and North Carolina. In the former a meeting
+was held denouncing the law, pledging the people to "boycott" the
+officers, and hinting at forcible resistance. If the people engaged in
+this business had stopped to consider the men with whom they had
+to deal, they would have been saved a great deal of suffering and
+humiliation. The President and his Secretary of the Treasury were not
+men who could be frightened by opposition or violent speeches. But
+angry frontiersmen, stirred up by demagogues, are not given to much
+reflection, and they meant to have their own way.
+
+Washington was quite clear in his policy from the beginning. He was
+ready to make every proper concession, but when this was done he meant
+on his side to have his own way, which was the way of law and order
+and good government. He wrote to Hamilton in August, 1792: "If, after
+these regulations are in operation, opposition to the due exercise of
+the collection is still experienced, and peaceable procedure is no
+longer effectual, the public interests and my duty will make it
+necessary to enforce the laws respecting this matter; and however
+disagreeable this would be to me, it must nevertheless take place."
+
+Meantime the disorders went on, and the officers were insulted and
+thwarted in the execution of their duty. Washington's next letter
+(September 7) has a touch of anger. He hated disorder and riot
+anywhere, but he was disgusted when they came from the very people for
+whose defense the Indian war was pushed and the excise made necessary.
+He approved of Hamilton's sending out an officer to examine into the
+survey, and said: "If, notwithstanding, opposition is still given to
+the due execution of the law, I have no hesitation in declaring, if
+the evidence of it is clear and unequivocal, that I shall, however
+reluctantly I exercise them, exert all the legal powers with which the
+executive is invested to check so daring and unwarrantable a spirit.
+It is my duty to see the laws executed. To permit them to be trampled
+upon with impunity would be repugnant to it; nor can the government
+longer remain a passive spectator of the contempt with which they are
+treated. Forbearance, under a hope that the inhabitants of that
+survey would recover from the delirium and folly into which they
+were plunged, seems to have had no other effect than to increase the
+disorder."
+
+A few weeks later he issued a proclamation, declaring formally and
+publicly what he had already said in private. He warned the people
+engaged in resistance to the law that the law would be enforced, and
+exhorted them to desist. The proclamation was effective in the south,
+and the opposition died out in North Carolina. Not so in Pennsylvania.
+There the Scotch-Irish borderers who lived in the western counties
+were bent on having their way. A brave, self-willed, hotheaded,
+turbulent people, they were going to have their fight out. They
+had ridden rough-shod over the Quaker and German government in
+Pennsylvania before this, and they no doubt thought they could do the
+same with this new government of the United States. They merely made a
+mistake about the man at the head of the government; nothing more than
+that. Such mistakes have been made before. The Paris mob, for example,
+made a similar blunder on the 13th Vendemiaire, when Bonaparte settled
+matters by the famous whiff of grape-shot. There is some excuse for
+the error of our Scotch-Irish borderers in their past experience, more
+excuse still in the drift of other events that touched all men just
+then with the madness of France, and gave birth to certain democratic
+societies which applauded any resistance to law, even if the cause was
+no nobler than a whiskey still.
+
+Perhaps, too, the Pennsylvanians were encouraged by the moderation
+and deliberate movement of the government. A lull came after the
+proclamation of 1792. Then every effort was made to settle the
+troubles by civil processes and by personal negotiation, but all
+proved vain. The disturbances went on increasing for two years, until
+law was at an end in the insurgent counties. The mails were stopped
+and robbed, there were violence, bloodshed, rioting, attacks on the
+officers of the United States, and meetings threatening still worse
+things.
+
+Meanwhile Washington had waited and watched, and bided his time. He
+felt now that the moment had come when, if ever, public opinion must
+be with him, and that the hour had arrived when he must put his
+fortune to the touch, and "try if it were current gold indeed." On
+August 7 he issued a second proclamation, setting forth the outrages
+committed, and announcing his power to call out the militia, and his
+intention to do so if unconditional submission did not follow at once.
+As he wrote to a friend three days later: "Actual rebellion exists
+against the laws of the United States." On the crucial point, however,
+he felt safe. He was confident that all the public opinion worth
+having was now on his side, and that the people were ready to stand by
+the government. The quick and unconditional submission did not come,
+and on September 25 he issued a third proclamation, reciting the facts
+and calling out the militia of New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Maryland, and
+Virginia.
+
+Washington had judged rightly. The States responded, and the troops
+came to the number of fifteen thousand, for he was in the habit of
+doing things thoroughly, and meant to have an overwhelming force.
+To Governor Lee of Virginia the command of the combined forces was
+intrusted. "I am perfectly in sentiment with you, that the
+business we are drawn out upon should be effectually executed,
+and that the daring and factious spirit which threatens to
+overturn the laws and to subvert the Constitution ought to be
+subdued." Thus he wrote to Morgan, while the commissioners from the
+insurgents were politely received, and told that the march of the
+troops could not be countermanded. Washington would fain have gone
+himself, in command of the army, but he felt that he could not leave
+the seat of government for so long a time with propriety. He went as
+far as Bedford with the troops, and then parted from them. When he
+took leave, he wrote a letter to Lee, to be read to the army, in which
+he said: "No citizen of the United States can ever be engaged in a
+service more important to their country. It is nothing less than to
+consolidate and to preserve the blessings of that revolution which
+at much expense of blood and treasure constituted us a free and
+independent nation." Thus admonished, the army marched, Hamilton going
+with them in characteristic fashion to the end. They did their work
+thoroughly. The insurrection disappeared, and resistance dropped
+suddenly out of sight. The Scotch-Irish of the border, with all their
+love of fighting, found too late that they were dealing with a power
+very different from that of their own State. The ringleaders of the
+insurrection were arrested and tried by civil process, the disorders
+ceased, law reigned once more, and the "hateful tax" was duly paid and
+collected.
+
+The "Whiskey Rebellion" has never received due weight in the history
+of the United States. Its story has been told in the utmost detail,
+but its details are unimportant. As a fact, however, it is full of
+meaning, and this meaning has been too much overlooked. That this
+should be so, is not to be wondered at, for everything has conspired
+to make it seem, after a century has gone by, both mean and trivial.
+Its very name suggests ridicule and contempt, and it collapsed so
+utterly that people laughed at it and despised it. Its leaders, with
+the exception of Gallatin, were cheap and talkative persons of
+little worth, and the cause itself was neither noble, romantic, nor
+inspiriting. Nevertheless, it was a dangerous and formidable business,
+for it was the first direct challenge to the new government. It was
+the first clear utterance of the stern question asked of every people
+striving to live as a nation, Have you a right to live? Have you a
+government able to fight and to endure? Have you men ready to take up
+the challenge? These questions were put by rough frontier settlers,
+and put in the name and for the sake of distilling whiskey unvexed by
+law. But they were there, they had to be answered, and on the reply
+the existence of the government was at stake. If it failed, all was
+over. If the States did not respond to this first demand, that they
+should put down disorder and dissension within the borders of one of
+their number, the experiment had failed. It came, as it almost always
+does come, to one man to make the answer. That man took up the
+challenge. He did not move too soon. He waited with unerring judgment,
+as Lincoln waited with the Proclamation of Emancipation, until he had
+gathered public opinion behind him by his firmness and moderation.
+Then he struck, and struck so hard that the whole fabric of
+insurrection and riot fell helplessly to pieces, and wiseacres looked
+on and laughed, and thought it had been but a slight matter after all.
+The action of the government vindicated the right of the United States
+to live, because they had proved themselves able to keep order. It
+showed to the American people that their government was a reality
+of force and power. If it had gone wrong, the history of the United
+States would not have differed widely from that of the confederation.
+No mistake was made, and people regarded the whole thing as an
+insignificant incident, and historians treat it as an episode. There
+could be no greater tribute to the strong and silent man who did the
+work and bore the stress of waiting for nearly five years. He did his
+duty so well and so completely that it seems nothing now, and yet the
+crushing of that insurrection in the western counties of Pennsylvania
+was one of the turning-points in a nation's life.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+FOREIGN RELATIONS
+
+
+Our present relations with foreign nations fill as a rule but a slight
+place in American politics, and excite generally only a languid
+interest, not nearly so much as their importance deserves. We have
+separated ourselves so completely from the affairs of other people
+that it is difficult to realize how commanding and disproportionate a
+place they occupied when the government was founded. We were then a
+new nation, and our attitude toward the rest of the world was wholly
+undefined. There was, therefore, among the American people much
+anxiety to discover what that attitude would be, for the unknown is
+always full of interest. Moreover, Europe was still our neighbor, for
+England, France, and Spain were all upon our borders, and had large
+territorial interests in the northern half of the New World. Within
+fifteen years we had been colonies, and all our politics, except those
+which were purely local and provincial, had been the politics of
+Europe; for during the eighteenth century we had been drawn into and
+had played a part in every European complication, and every European
+war in which England had the slightest share. Thus the American people
+came to consider themselves a part of the European system, and looked
+to Europe for their politics, which was a habit of thought both
+natural and congenial to colonists. We ceased to be colonists when
+the Treaty of Paris was signed; but treaties, although they settle
+boundaries and divide nations, do not change customs and habits of
+thought by a few strokes of the pen. The free and independent people
+of the United States, as there has already been occasion to point out,
+when they set out to govern themselves under their new Constitution,
+were still dominated by colonial ideas and prejudices. They felt,
+no doubt, that the new system would put them in a more respectable
+attitude toward the other nations of the earth. But this was probably
+the only definite popular notion on the subject. What our actual
+relations with other nations should be, was something wholly vague,
+and very varying ideas were entertained about it by communities and
+by individuals, according to their various prejudices, opinions, and
+interests.
+
+The one idea, however, that the American people did not have on this
+subject was, that they should hold themselves entirely aloof from the
+politics of the Old World, and have with other nations outside the
+Americas no relations except those born of commerce. It had not
+occurred to them that they should march steadily forward on a course
+which would drive out European governments, and sever the connections
+of those governments with the North American continent. After a
+century's familiarity, this policy looks so simple and obvious that
+it is difficult to believe that our forefathers could even have
+considered any other seriously; but in 1789 it was so strange that no
+one dreamed of it, except perhaps a few thinkers speculating on the
+future of the infant nation. It was something so novel that when
+it was propounded it struck the people like a sudden shock of
+electricity. It was so broad, so national, so thoroughly American,
+that men still struggling in the fetters of colonial thought could not
+comprehend it. But there was one man to whom it was neither strange
+nor speculative. To Washington it was not a vague idea, but a
+well-defined system, which he had been long maturing in his mind.
+
+Before he had been chosen President, he wrote to Sir Edward Newenham:
+"I hope the United States of America will be able to keep disengaged
+from the labyrinth of European politics and wars; and that before long
+they will, by the adoption of a good national government, have become
+respectable in the eyes of the world, so that none of the maritime
+powers, especially none of those who hold possessions in the New
+World or the West Indies, shall presume to treat them with insult or
+contempt. It should be the policy of the United States to administer
+to their wants without being engaged in their quarrels. And it is
+not in the power of the proudest and most polite people on earth to
+prevent us from becoming a great, a respectable, and a commercial
+nation if we shall continue united and faithful to ourselves." This
+plain statement shows his fixed belief that in an absolute breaking
+with the political affairs of other peoples lay the most important
+part of the work which was to make us a nation in spirit and in truth.
+He carried this belief with him when he took up the Presidency, and it
+was the chief burden of the last words of counsel which he gave to his
+countrymen when he retired to private life. To have begun and carried
+on to a firm establishment this policy of a separation from Europe
+would have required time, skill, and patience even under the calmest
+and most favorable conditions. But it was the fate of the new
+government to be born just on the eve of the French Revolution. The
+United States were at once caught up and tossed by the waves of that
+terrific storm, and it was in the midst of that awful hurly-burly,
+when the misdeeds of centuries of wrong-doing were brought to an
+account, that Washington opened and developed his foreign policy. It
+was a great task, and the manner of its performance deserves much and
+serious consideration.
+
+His first act in foreign affairs, on entering the Presidency, was to
+make the minister of France understand that the government of the
+United States was to be treated with due formality and respect.
+His second was to examine the whole mass of foreign correspondence
+collected in the State Department of the confederation, and he did
+this, as has been said, pencil in hand, making notes and abstracts as
+he went. It was well worth doing, for he learned much, and from this
+laborious study and thorough knowledge certain facts became apparent,
+for the most part of a hard and unpleasant nature. First, he saw that
+England, taking advantage of our failure to fulfill completely our
+obligations under the treaty, had openly violated hers, and continued
+to hold the fortified posts along the northwestern and western
+borders. Here was a dangerous thorn which pricked sharply, for the
+posts in British hands offered constant temptations to Indian risings,
+and threatened war both with the savages and with Great Britain.
+Further west still, Spain held the Mississippi, closed navigation,
+and intrigued to separate our western settlers from the Union. No
+immediate danger lay here, but still peril and need of close watching,
+for the Mississippi was never to slip out of our power. The mighty
+river and the great region through which it flows were important
+features in that empire which Washington foresaw. His plan was that we
+should get them by binding the settlers beyond the Alleghanies to the
+old States with roads, canals, and trade, and then trust to those
+hardy pioneers to keep the river and its valley for themselves and
+their country. All that was needed for this were time, and vigilant
+firmness with Spain.
+
+Beyond the sea were the West India Islands, the home of a commerce
+long carried on by the colonies and of much profit to them, especially
+to those of New England. This trade was now hampered by England, and
+was soon to be still further blocked, and thereby become the cause of
+much bickering and ill-will.
+
+Across the ocean we maintained with the Barbary States the relations
+usual between brigands and victims, and we tried to make treaties with
+them, and really paid tribute to them, as was the fashion in dealing
+with those pirates at that period. With Holland, Sweden, and Prussia
+we had commercial treaties, and the Dutch sent a minister to the
+United States. With France alone were our relations close. She had
+been our ally, and we had formed with her a treaty of alliance and a
+treaty of commerce, as well as a consular convention, which we were at
+this time engaged in revising. To most of the nations of the world,
+however, we were simply an unknown quantity, an unconsidered trifle.
+The only people who really knew anything about us were the English,
+with whom we had fought, and from whom we had separated; the French,
+who had helped us to win our independence; and the Dutch, from whom
+we had borrowed money. Even these nations, with so many reasons for
+intelligent and profitable interest in the new republic, failed, not
+unnaturally, to see the possibilities shut up in the wild American
+continent.
+
+To the young nation just starting thus unnoticed and unheeded,
+Washington believed that honorable peace was essential, if a firm
+establishment of the new government, and of a respectable and
+respected position in the eyes of the world, was ever to be attained;
+and it was toward England, therefore, as the source of most probable
+trouble, that Washington turned to begin his foreign policy. The
+return of John Adams had left us without a minister at London,
+and England had sent no representative to the United States. The
+President, therefore, authorized Gouverneur Morris, who was going
+abroad on private business, to sound the English government informally
+as to an exchange of ministers, the complete execution of the treaty
+of peace, and the negotiation of a commercial treaty. The mission was
+one of inquiry, and was born of good and generous feelings as well as
+of broad and wise views of public policy. "It is in my opinion very
+important," he wrote to Morris, "that we avoid errors in our system of
+policy respecting Great Britain; and this can only be done by forming
+a right judgment of their disposition and views."
+
+What was the response to these fair and sensible suggestions? On the
+first point the assent was ready enough; but on the other two, which
+looked to the carrying out of the treaty and the making of a treaty of
+commerce, there was no satisfaction. Morris, who was as high-spirited
+as he was able, was irritated by the indifference and hardly concealed
+insolence shown to him and his business. It was the fit beginning of
+the conduct by which England for nearly a century has succeeded in
+alienating the good-will of the people of the United States. Such a
+policy was neither generous nor intelligent, and politically
+it was a gross blunder. Washington, however, was too great
+a man to be disturbed by the bad temper and narrow ideas
+of English ministers. After his fashion he persevered in
+what he knew to be right and for his country's interest, and in due
+time a diplomatic representation was established, while later still,
+in the midst of difficulties of which he little dreamed at the outset,
+he carried through a treaty that removed the existing grievances. In a
+word, he kept the peace, and it lasted long enough to give the United
+States the breathing space they so much needed at the beginning of
+their history.
+
+The greatest perils in our foreign relations came, as it happened,
+from another quarter, where peace seemed most secure, and where no man
+looked for trouble. The government of the United States and the French
+revolution began almost together, and it is one of the strangest facts
+of history that the nation which helped so powerfully to give freedom
+to America brought the results of that freedom into the gravest peril
+by its own struggle for liberty. When the great movement in France
+began, it was hailed in this country with general applause, and with a
+sympathy as hearty as it was genuine, for every one felt that France
+was now to gain all the blessings of free government with which
+America was familiar. Our glorious example, it was clear, was destined
+to change the world, and monarchies and despotisms were to disappear.
+There was to be a new political birth for all the nations, and the
+reign of peace and good-will was to come at once upon the earth at
+the hands of liberated peoples freely governing themselves. It was a
+natural delusion, and a kindly one. History, in the modern sense, was
+still unwritten, and men did not then understand that the force and
+character of a revolution are determined by the duration and intensity
+of the tyranny and misgovernment which have preceded and caused it.
+The vast benefit destined to flow from the French revolution was to
+come many years after all those who saw it begin were in their graves,
+but at the moment it was expected to arrive immediately, and in a form
+widely different from that which, in the slow process of time, it
+ultimately assumed. Moreover, Americans did not realize that the
+well-ordered liberty of the English-speaking race was something
+unknown and inconceivable to the French.
+
+There were a few Americans who were never deceived for a moment, even
+by their hopes. Hamilton, who "divined Europe," as Talleyrand said,
+and Gouverneur Morris, studying the situation on the spot with keen
+and practical observation, soon apprehended the truth, while others
+more or less quickly followed in their wake. But Washington, whom no
+one ever credited with divination, and who never crossed the Atlantic,
+saw the realities of the thing sooner, and looked more deeply into the
+future than anybody else. No man lived more loyal than he, or more
+true to the duties of gratitude; but he looked upon the world of facts
+with vision never dimmed nor dazzled, and watched in silence, while
+others slept and dreamed. Let us follow his letters for a moment. In
+October, 1789, in the first flush of hope and sympathy, he wrote to
+Morris: "The revolution which has been effected in France is of so
+wonderful a nature that the mind can hardly realize the fact. If it
+ends as our last accounts to the first of August predict, that nation
+will be the most powerful and happy in Europe; but I fear though it
+has gone triumphantly through the first paroxysm, it is not the last
+it has to encounter before matters are finally settled. In a word,
+the revolution is of too great magnitude to be effected in so short
+a space, and with the loss of so little blood.... To forbear running
+from one extreme to another is no easy matter; and should this be the
+case, rocks and shelves, not visible at present, may wreck the vessel,
+and give a higher-toned despotism than the one which existed before."
+
+Seven years afterwards, reviewing his opinions in respect to France,
+he wrote to Pickering: "My conduct in public and private life, as it
+relates to the important struggle in which the latter is engaged, has
+been uniform from the commencement of it, and may be summed up in a
+few words: that I have always wished well to the French revolution;
+that I have always given it as my decided opinion that no nation had a
+right to intermeddle in the internal concerns of another; that every
+one had a right to form and adopt whatever government they liked best
+to live under themselves; and that if this country could, consistently
+with its engagements, maintain a strict neutrality and thereby
+preserve peace, it was bound to do so by motives of policy, interest,
+and every other consideration that ought to actuate a people situated
+as we are, already deeply in debt, and in a convalescent state from
+the struggle we have been engaged in ourselves."
+
+Thus prepared, Washington waited and saw his cautious predictions
+verified, and the revolution rush headlong from one extreme to
+another. He also saw the flames spread beyond the borders of France,
+changing and dividing public opinion everywhere; and he knew it was
+only a question of time how soon the new nation, at whose head he
+stood, would be affected. Histories and biographies which treat of
+that period, as a rule convey the idea that the foreign policy of our
+first administration dealt with the complications that arose as they
+came upon us. Nothing could be further from the truth, for the general
+policy was matured at the outset, as has been seen in the letter to
+Newenham, and the occasions for its application were sure to come
+sooner or later, in one form or another. Washington was not surprised
+by the presence of the perils that he feared, and danger only made
+him more set on carrying out the policy upon which he had long since
+determined. In July, 1791, he wrote to Morris: "I trust we shall never
+so far lose sight of our own interest and happiness as to become
+unnecessarily a party to these political disputes. Our local situation
+enables us to maintain that state with respect to them which otherwise
+could not, perhaps, be preserved by human wisdom." He followed this up
+with a strong and concise argument as to the advantage and necessity
+of this policy, showing a complete grasp of the subject, which came
+from long and patient thought.
+
+All his firmness and knowledge were needed, for the position was most
+trying. With every ship that brought news of the extraordinary doings
+in Europe, the applause which greeted the early uprisings of Paris
+grew less general. The wise, the prudent, the conservative, cooled
+gradually at first, and then more quickly in their admiration of the
+French; but in the beginning, this deepening and increasing hostility
+to the revolution kept silence. It was popular to be the friend of
+France, and highly unpopular to be anything else. But when excesses
+multiplied and blood flowed, when religion tottered and the
+foundations of society were shaken, this silence was broken.
+Discussion took the place of harmonious congratulation, and it soon
+became apparent that there was to be a sharp and bitter division of
+public opinion, growing out of the affairs of France. It was necessary
+for the government to maintain a friendly yet cautious attitude toward
+our former ally, and not endanger the stability of the Union and the
+dignity of the country by giving to the French sympathizers any good
+ground for accusing them of ingratitude, or of lukewarmness toward
+the cause of human rights. That a time would soon come when decisive
+action must be taken, Washington saw plainly enough; and when that
+moment arrived, the risk of fierce party divisions on a question of
+foreign politics could not be avoided. Meantime domestic bitterness on
+these matters was to be repressed and delayed, and yet in so doing
+no step was to be taken which would involve the country in any
+inconsistency, or compel a change of position when the crisis was
+actually reached. The policy of separating the United States from all
+foreign politics is usually dated from what is called the neutrality
+proclamation; but the theory, as has been pointed out, was clear and
+well defined in Washington's mind when he entered upon the presidency.
+The outlines were marked out and pursued in practice long before the
+outbreak of war between France and England put his system to the
+touch. In everything he said or wrote, whether in public or private,
+his tone toward France was so friendly that her most zealous supporter
+could not take offense, and at the same time it was so absolutely
+guarded that the country was committed to nothing which could hamper
+it in the future. The course of the administration as a whole, and its
+substantive acts as well, were in harmony with the tone of expression
+used by the President; for Washington, it may be repeated, was the
+head of his own administration, a fact which the biographers of the
+very able men who surrounded him are too prone to overlook. In this
+case he was not only the leader, but the work was peculiarly his own,
+and a few extracts from his letters will show the completeness of his
+policy and the firmness with which he followed it whenever occasion
+came.
+
+To Lafayette he wrote in July, 1791, a letter full of sympathy, but
+with an undertone of warning none the less significant because it was
+veiled. Coming to a point where there was an intimation of trouble
+between the two countries, he said: "The decrees of the National
+Assembly respecting our tobacco and oil do not appear to be very
+pleasing to the people of this country; but I do not presume that any
+hasty measures will be adopted in consequence thereof; for we have
+never entertained a doubt of the friendly disposition of the French
+nation toward us, and are therefore persuaded that, if they have done
+anything which seems to bear hard upon us at a time when the Assembly
+must have been occupied in very important matters, and which, perhaps,
+would not allow time for a due consideration of the subject, they will
+in the moment of calm deliberation alter it and do what is right."
+
+[Illustration: LAFAYETTE]
+
+The unfriendly act was noted, so that Lafayette would understand that
+no tame submission was intended, and yet no resentment was expressed.
+The same tone can be noticed in a widely different direction.
+Washington foresaw that the troubles in France, sooner or later, would
+involve her in war with England. The United States, as the former
+allies of the French, were certain to attract the attention of the
+mother country, and so he watched on that side also with equal
+caution. England, if possible, was to be made to understand that the
+American policy was not dictated by anything but the interests and the
+dignity of the United States, and their resolve to hold aloof from
+European complications. In June, 1792, he wrote to Morris: "One thing,
+however, I must not pass over in silence, lest you should infer from
+it that Mr. D. had authority for reporting that the United States had
+asked the mediation of Great Britain to bring about a peace between
+them and the Indians. You may be fully assured, sir, that such
+mediation never was asked, that the asking of it never was in
+contemplation, and I think I might go further and say that it not only
+never will be asked, but would be rejected if offered. The United
+States will never have occasion, I hope, to ask for the interposition
+of that power, or any other, to establish peace within their own
+territory."
+
+Here is again the same note, always so true and clear, that the United
+States are not colonies but an independent nation. So far as it was in
+the power of the President, this was something which should be heard
+by all men, even at the risk of much reiteration. It was a fact not
+understood at home and not recognized abroad, but Washington proposed
+to insist upon it so far as in him lay, until it was both understood
+and admitted.
+
+Meantime the flames were ever spreading from Paris, consuming and
+threatening to consume the heaped up rubbish of centuries, and also
+burning up many other more valuable things, as is the way with great
+fires when they get beyond control. Many persons were interested in
+the things of worth now threatened with destruction, and many others
+in the rubbish and the tyrannous abuses. It was clear that war of a
+wide and far-reaching kind could not be long put off. In March, 1793,
+Washington wrote: "All our late accounts from Europe hold up the
+expectation of a general war in that quarter. For the sake of
+humanity, I hope such an event will not take place. But if it should,
+I trust that we shall have too just a sense of our own interest to
+originate any cause that may involve us in it."
+
+Even while he wrote, the general war that he anticipated, the war
+between France and England, had come. The news reached him at Mount
+Vernon, and in the letter to Jefferson announcing his immediate
+departure for Philadelphia he said: "War having actually commenced
+between France and Great Britain, it behooves the government of this
+country to use every means in its power to prevent the citizens
+thereof from embroiling us with either of those powers, by endeavoring
+to maintain a strict neutrality. I therefore require that you will
+give the subject mature consideration, that such measures as shall be
+deemed most likely to effect this desirable purpose may be adopted
+without delay." These instructions were written on April 12, and on
+the 18th Washington was in Philadelphia, and had sent out a series
+of questions to be considered by his cabinet and answered on the
+following day. After much discussion, it was unanimously agreed
+to issue a proclamation of neutrality, to receive the new French
+minister, and not to convene Congress in extra session. The remaining
+questions were put over for further consideration.
+
+Hamilton framed the questions, say the historians; Randolph drafted
+the proclamation, says his biographer, in a very instructive and fresh
+discussion of the relations between the Secretary of State and the
+Attorney-General. It is interesting to know what share the President's
+advisers took when he consulted them on this momentous question, but
+the leading idea was his own. When the moment came, the policy long
+meditated and matured was put in force. The world was told that a new
+power had come into being, which meant to hold aloof from Europe,
+and which took no interest in the balance of power or the fate of
+dynasties, but looked only to the welfare of its own people and to the
+conquest and mastery of a continent as its allotted tasks. The policy
+declared by the proclamation was purely American in its conception,
+and severed the colonial tradition at a stroke. In the din then
+prevailing among civilized men, it was but little heeded, and even at
+home it was almost totally misunderstood; yet nevertheless it did
+its work. For twenty-five years afterward the American people slowly
+advanced toward the ground then taken, until the ideas of the
+neutrality proclamation received their final acceptance and extension
+at the hands of the younger Adams, in the promulgation of the Monroe
+doctrine. The shaping of this policy which was then launched was
+a great work of far-sighted and native statesmanship, and it was
+preeminently the work of the President himself.
+
+Moreover, it did not stop here. A circular to the officers of the
+customs provided for securing notice of infractions of the law, and
+the task of enforcing the principles laid down in the proclamation
+began. As it happened, the theory of neutrality was destined at once
+to receive rude tests of its soundness in practice. The new French
+minister was landing on our shores, and beginning his brief career in
+this country, while the proclamation was going from town to town and
+telling the people, in sharp and unaccustomed tones, that they were
+Americans and not colonists, and must govern themselves accordingly.
+
+Everything, in fact, seemed to conspire to make the path of the new
+policy rough and thorny. In the excitement of the time a large portion
+of the population regarded it as a party measure aimed against our
+beloved allies, while, to make the situation worse, France on one
+side and England on the other proceeded, as if deliberately, to do
+everything in their power to render neutrality impossible, and to
+drive us into war with some one.
+
+The new minister, Genet, could not have been better chosen, if the
+special errand for which he had been employed had been to make
+trouble. Light-headed and vain, with but little ability and a vast
+store of unintelligent zeal, the whirl of the French revolution flung
+him on our shores, where he had a glorious chance for mischief. This
+opportunity he at once seized. As soon as he landed he proceeded to
+arm privateers at Charleston. Thence he took his way north, and the
+enthusiastic popular acclaim which everywhere greeted his arrival
+almost crazed him, and drew forth a series of high-flown and most
+injudicious speeches. By the time he reached Philadelphia, and before
+he had presented his credentials, he had induced enough violations of
+neutrality, and sown the seeds of enough trouble, to embarrass our
+government for months to come.
+
+Washington had written to Governor Lee on May 6: "I foresaw in the
+moment information of that event (the war) came to me, the necessity
+for announcing the disposition of this country towards the belligerent
+powers, and the propriety of restraining, as far as a proclamation
+would do it, our citizens from taking part in that contest.... The
+affairs of France would seem to me to be in the highest paroxysm of
+disorder; not so much from the presence of foreign enemies, for in
+the cause of liberty this ought to be fuel to the fire of a patriot
+soldier and to increase his ardor, but because those in whose hands
+the government is intrusted are ready to tear each other to pieces,
+and will more than probably prove the worst foes the country has."
+
+He easily foresaw the moment of trial, when he would be forced to
+the declaration of his policy, which was so momentous for the United
+States, and he also understood the condition of affairs at Paris, and
+the probable tendencies and proximate results of the Revolution. It
+was evident that the great social convulsion had brought forth men of
+genius and force, and had maddened them with the lust of blood and
+power. But it was less easy to foresee, what was equally natural, that
+the revolution would also throw to the surface men who had neither
+genius nor force, but who were as wild and dangerous as their betters.
+No one, surely, could have been prepared to meet in the person of the
+minister of a great nation such a feather-headed mischief-maker as
+Genet.
+
+In everything relating to France Washington had observed the utmost
+caution, and his friendliness had been all the more marked because he
+had felt obliged to be guarded. He had exercised this care even in
+personal matters, and had refrained, so far as possible, from seeing
+the _emigres_ who had begun to come to this country. Such men as the
+Vicomte de Noailles had been referred to the State Department, and in
+many cases the maintenance of this attitude had tried his feelings
+severely, for the exiles were not infrequently men who had fought or
+sympathized with us in our day of conflict. Now came the new minister
+of the republic, a being apparently devoid of training or manners.
+Before he had been received, or had appeared at the seat of
+government, before he had even taken possession of his predecessor's
+papers, he had behaved in a way which would not have been
+inappropriate to a Roman governor of a conquered province. He had
+ordered the French consuls to act as admiralty courts, he had armed
+cruisers, enlisted and commissioned American citizens, and had seen
+the vessels of a power with which the United States were at peace
+captured in American waters, and condemned in the States by French
+consular courts. Three weeks before Genet's audience Jefferson had a
+memorial from the British minister, justly complaining of the injuries
+done his country under cover of our flag; and while the government was
+considering this pleasant incident, Genet was faring gayly northward,
+feted and caressed, cheered and applauded, the subject of ovations
+and receptions everywhere. At Philadelphia he was received by a
+great concourse of citizens, called together by the guns of the very
+privateer that had violated our neutrality, and led by provincial
+persons, who thought it fine to name themselves "citizen" Smith and
+"citizen" Brown, because that particular folly was the fashion in
+France. A day was passed in receiving addresses, and then Genet was
+presented to the President.
+
+A stranger contrast could not easily have been found even in that
+strange time, and two men more utterly unlike probably never faced
+each other as representatives of two great nations. In the difference
+between them the philosopher may find, perhaps, some explanation of
+the difference in the character and results of the revolutions which
+came so near together in the two countries. Nothing, moreover, could
+well be conceived more distasteful to Washington than the Frenchman's
+conduct except the Frenchman himself. There was about the man and his
+performances everything most calculated to bring one of those gusts of
+passionate contempt which now and again had made things unpleasant
+for some one who had failed in sense, decency, and duty. This was
+impossible to a President, but nevertheless his self-restraint from
+the beginning to the end of his intercourse with Genet was very
+remarkable in a man of his temperament. At their first interview his
+demeanor may have been a little colder than usual, and the dignified
+reserve somewhat more marked, but there was no trace of any feeling.
+His manner, nevertheless, chilled Genet and came upon him like a
+cold bath after the warm atmosphere of popular plaudits and turgid
+addresses. He went away grumbling, and complained that he had seen
+medallions of the Capets on the walls of the President's room.
+
+But although Washington was calm and polite, he was also watchful and
+prepared, as he had good reason to be, for Genet immediately began,
+in addition to his wild public utterances, to pour in notes upon the
+State Department. He demanded money; he announced in florid style the
+opening of the French ports; he wrote that he was ready to make a
+new treaty; and finally he filed an answer to the complaints of the
+British minister. His arguments were wretched, but they seemed to
+weigh with Jefferson, although not with the President; and meantime
+the dragon's teeth which he had plentifully sown began to come up and
+bear an abundant harvest. More prizes were made by his cruisers, and
+after many remonstrances one was ordered away, and two Americans whom
+Genet had enlisted were indicted. Genet declared that this was an act
+which his pen almost refused to state; but still it was done, and the
+administration pushed on and ordered the seizure of privateers fitting
+in American ports. Governor Clinton made a good beginning with one at
+New York, and in hot haste Genet wrote another note more furious and
+impertinent than any he had yet sent. He was answered civilly, and the
+work of stopping the sale of prizes went on.
+
+Meantime the opposition were not idle. The French sympathizers
+bestirred themselves, and attacks began to be made even on the
+President himself. The popular noise and clamor were all against the
+administration, but the support of it was really growing stronger,
+although the President and his secretaries could not see it.
+Jefferson, on whom the conduct of foreign affairs rested, was uneasy
+and wavering. He wrote able letters, as he was directed, but held, it
+is to be feared, quite different language in his conversations with
+Genet. Randolph argued and hesitated, while Hamilton, backed by Knox,
+was filled with wrath and wished more decisive measures. Still, as we
+look at it now across a century, we can observe that the policy went
+calmly forward, consistent and unchecked. The French minister was held
+back, privateers were stopped, the English minister's complaints were
+answered, every effort was made for exact justice, and neutrality was
+preserved. It was hard and trying work, especially to a man of strong
+temper and fighting propensities. Still it was done, and toward the
+end of June Washington went for a little rest to Mount Vernon.
+
+Then came a sudden explosion. One July morning the rumor ran through
+Philadelphia that the Little Sarah, a prize of the French man-of-war,
+was fitting out as a privateer. The reaction in favor of the
+administration was beginning, and men, indignant at the proceeding,
+carried the news to Governor Mifflin, and also to the Secretary
+of State. Great disturbance of mind thereupon ensued to these two
+gentlemen, who were both much interested in France and the rights of
+man. The brig would not sail before the arrival of the President, said
+the Secretary of State. Still the arming went on apace, and then came
+movements on the part of the governor. Dallas, Secretary of State for
+Pennsylvania, went at midnight to expostulate with Genet, who burst
+into a passion, and declared that the vessel should sail. This
+defiance roused the governor, and a company of militia marched to
+the vessel and took possession. Greatly excited, Jefferson went next
+morning to Genet, who very honestly declined to promise to detain the
+vessel, but said that she would not be ready to sail until Wednesday.
+This announcement, which was distinctly not a promise, the Secretary
+of State chose to accept as such, and as he was very far from being
+a fool, he did so either from timidity, or from a very unworthy
+political preference for another nation's interests to the dignity of
+his own country. At all events, he had the troops withdrawn, and the
+Little Sarah, now rejoicing in the name of the Petit Democrat,
+dropped down to Chester. Hamilton and Knox, being neither afraid nor
+un-American, were for putting a battery on Mud Island and sinking
+the privateer if she attempted to go by. Great saving of trouble and
+bloodshed would have been accomplished by the setting up of this
+battery and the sinking of this vessel, for it would have informed the
+world that though the United States were weak and young, they were
+ready nevertheless to fight as a nation, a fact which we subsequently
+were obliged to prove by a three years' war.
+
+Jefferson, however, opposed decisive measures, and while the cabinet
+wrangled, Washington, hurrying back from Mount Vernon, reached
+Philadelphia. He was full of just anger at what had been done and left
+undone. Jefferson, feeling uneasy, had gone to the country, where he
+was fond of making a retreat at unpleasant moments, and Washington at
+once wrote him a letter, which could not have been very agreeable
+to the discoverer of diplomatic promises in a refusal to give any.
+"What," said the President, "is to be done in the case of the Little
+Sarah, now at Chester? Is the minister of the French Republic to set
+the acts of this government at defiance _with impunity_? and then
+threaten the executive with an appeal to the people? What must the
+world think of such conduct, and of the government of the United
+States in submitting to it?" Then came a demand for an immediate
+opinion.
+
+To the tender feelings of the Secretary of State, who had not been
+considering the affair from an American standpoint, this must have
+seemed a violent and almost a coarse way of treating the "great
+republic," and he replied that the French minister had assured him
+that the vessel would not sail until the President reached a decision.
+Having got the vessel to Chester, however, by telling the truth, Genet
+now changed his tack. He lied about detaining her, and she went to
+sea. This performance filled the cup of Washington's disgust almost to
+overflowing, for he had what Jefferson seems to have totally lost at
+this juncture--a keen national feeling, and it was touched to the
+quick. The truth was, that in all this business Jefferson was thinking
+too much of France and of the cause of human liberty in Paris, while
+Washington thought of the United States alone. The result was
+the escape of the vessel, owing to Washington's absence, and the
+consequent humiliation to the government. To refrain from ordering
+Genet out of the country at once required a strong effort of
+self-control; but he wished to keep the peace as long as possible, and
+he proposed to get rid of him speedily but decorously. He resolved
+also that no more such outrages should be committed through his
+absence, and the consequent differences among his advisers. He
+continued, of course, to consult his cabinet, but he took the
+immediate control, more definitely even than before, into his own
+hands. On July 25 he wrote to Jefferson, whose vigor at this critical
+time he evidently doubted: "As the letter of the minister of the
+Republic of France, dated the 22d of June, lies yet unanswered, and
+as the official conduct of that gentleman, relative to the affairs of
+this government, will have to undergo a very serious consideration,
+... in order to decide upon measures proper to be taken thereupon, it
+is my desire that all the letters to and from that minister may
+be ready to be laid before me, the heads of departments, and the
+attorney-general, whom I shall advise with on the occasion." He also
+saw to it that better precautions should be taken by the officers of
+the customs to prevent similar attempts to break neutrality, and set
+the administration and the laws of the country at defiance.
+
+The cabinet consultations soon bore good fruit, and Genet's recall
+was determined on during the first days of August. There was some
+discussion over the manner of requesting the recall, but the terms
+were made gentle by Jefferson, to the disgust of the Secretary of the
+Treasury and the Secretary of War, who desired direct methods and
+stronger language. As finally toned up and agreed upon by the
+President and cabinet, the document was sufficiently vigorous to annoy
+Genet, and led to bitter reproaches addressed to his friend in the
+State Department. Then there was question about publishing the
+correspondence, and again Jefferson intervened in behalf of mildness.
+The substantive fact, however, was settled, and the letter asking
+Genet's recall, as desired by Washington, went in due time, and in the
+following February came a successor. Genet, however, did not go back
+to his native land, for he preferred to remain here and save his head,
+valueless as that article would seem to have been. He spent the rest
+of his days in America, married, harmless, and quite obscure. His
+noise and fireworks were soon over, and one wonders now how he could
+ever have made as much flare and explosion as he did.
+
+But even while his recall was being decided, before he knew of it
+himself, and long before his successor came, Genet's folly produced
+more trouble than ever, and his insolence rose to a higher pitch. The
+arming of privateers had been checked, but the consuls continued to
+arrogate powers which no self-respecting nation could permit, and for
+some gross offense Washington revoked the _exequatur_ of Duplaine,
+consul at Boston. An insolent note from Genet thereupon declared that
+the President had overstepped his authority, and that he should appeal
+to the sovereign State of Massachusetts. Next there was riot and the
+attempted murder of a man from St. Domingo who was accused by the
+refugees. Then it began to get abroad that Genet had threatened to
+appeal from the President to the people, and frantic denials ensued
+from all the opposition press; whereupon a card appeared from John Jay
+and Rufus King, which stated that they were authority for the story
+and believed it. Apologies now took the place of denial, and were
+backed by ferocious attacks on the signers of the card. Unluckily,
+intelligent people seemed to put faith in Jay and King rather than in
+the opposition newspapers, and the tide, which had turned some time
+before, now ran faster every moment against the French. To make it
+flow with overwhelming force and rapidity was reserved for Genet
+himself, who was furious at the Jay card, and wrote to the President,
+demanding a denial of the statement which it contained. A cool note
+informed him that the President did not consider it proper or material
+to make denials, and pointed out to him that he must address his
+communications to the State Department. This correspondence was
+published, and the mass of the people were at last aroused, and turned
+from Genet in disgust. The leaders tried vainly to separate the
+minister from his country, and Genet himself frothed and foamed,
+demanded that Randolph should sue Jay and King for libel, and declared
+that America was no longer free. This sad statement had little effect.
+Washington had triumphed completely, and without haste but with
+perfect firmness had brought the people round to his side as that of
+the national dignity and honor.
+
+The victory had been won at no little cost to Washington himself in
+the way of self-control. He had been irritated and angered at every
+step, so much so that he even referred in a letter to Richard Henry
+Lee to the trial of temper to which he had been put, a bit of personal
+allusion in which he rarely indulged. "The specimens you have seen,"
+he wrote, "of Mr. Genet's sentiments and conduct in the gazettes form
+a small part only of the aggregate. But you can judge from them to
+what test the temper of the executive has been put in its various
+transactions with this gentleman. It is probable that the whole will
+be exhibited to public view in the course of the next session of
+Congress. Delicacy towards his nation has restrained the doing of
+it hitherto. The best that can be said of this agent is, that he is
+entirely unfit for the mission on which he is employed; unless (which
+I hope is not the case), contrary to the express and unequivocal
+declaration of his country made through himself, it is meant to
+involve ours in all the horrors of a European war."
+
+But there was another side to the neutrality question even more full
+of difficulties and unpopularity, which began to open just as the
+worst of the contests with Genet was being brought to a successful
+close. Genet had not confined his efforts to the seaboard, nor been
+content with civic banquets, privateers, rioting, and insolent notes
+to the government. He had fitted out ships, and he intended also to
+levy armies. With this end in view he had sent his agents through the
+south and west to raise men in order to invade the Floridas on the
+one hand and seize New Orleans on the other. To conceive of such a
+performance by a foreign minister on the soil of the United States,
+requires an effort of the imagination to-day almost equal to that
+which would be necessary for an acceptance of the reality of the
+Arabian nights. It brings home with startling clearness not merely the
+crazy insolence of Genet, but a painful sense of the manner in which
+we were regarded by the nations of Europe. Still worse is the fact
+that they had good reason for their view. The imbecility of the
+confederation had bred contempt, and it was now seen that we were
+still so wholly provincial that a large part of the people was not
+only ready to condone but even to defend the conduct of the minister
+who engaged in such work. Worst of all, the people among whom the
+French agents went received their propositions with much pleasure. In
+South Carolina, where it was said five thousand men had been enlisted,
+there was sufficient self-respect to stop the precious scheme. The
+assembly arrested certain persons and ordered an inquiry, which
+came to nothing; but the effect of their action was sufficient. In
+Kentucky, on the other hand, the authorities would not interfere. The
+people there were always quite ready for a march against New Orleans,
+and that it did not proceed was due to Genet's inability to get money;
+for the governor declined to meddle, and the democratic society of
+Lexington demanded war. Matters looked so serious that the cavalry was
+sent to Kentucky, and the rest of the army wintered in Ohio. It was
+actually necessary to teach the American people by the presence of the
+troops of the United States that they must not enroll themselves in
+the army of a foreign minister.
+
+Nothing can show more strikingly than this the almost inconceivable
+difficulties with which the President was contending. To develop a
+policy of wise and dignified neutrality, and to impress it upon the
+world, was a great enough task in itself. But Washington was obliged
+to impress it also upon his own people, and to teach them that they
+must have a policy of their own toward other nations. He had to carry
+this through in the teeth of an opposition so utterly colonial that
+it could not grasp the idea of having any policy but that which, from
+sympathy or hate, they took from foreigners. Beyond the mountains, he
+had to bring this home to men to whom American nationality was such a
+dead letter that they were willing to defy their own government,
+throw off their allegiance, and enlist for an offensive war under the
+banners of a crazy French Girondist. It is neither easy nor pleasant
+to carry out a new foreign policy in time of general war, with one's
+own people united in its support; but when the foreign divisions are
+repeated at home, the task is enhanced in difficulty a thousand-fold.
+Nevertheless, there was the work to do, and the President faced it. He
+dealt with Genet, he prevailed in public opinion on the seaboard, and
+in some fashion he maintained order west of the mountains.
+
+Washington also saw, as we can see now very plainly, that, wrong and
+unpatriotic as the Kentucky attitude was, there was still an excuse
+for it. Those bold pioneers, to whom the country owes so much, had
+very substantial grievances. They knew nothing of the laws of nations,
+and did not yet realize that they had a country and a nationality; but
+they had the instincts of all great conquering races. They looked upon
+the Mississippi and felt that it was of right theirs, and that it must
+belong to the vast empire which they were winning from the wilderness.
+They saw the mighty river held and controlled by Spaniards, and they
+were harassed and interfered with by Spanish officials, whom they both
+hated and despised. To men of their mould and training there was but
+one solution conceivable. They must fight the Spaniard, and drive him
+from the land forever. Their purposes were quite right, but their
+methods were faulty. Washington, born to a life of adventure and
+backwoods conquest, had a good deal of real sympathy with these men,
+for he knew them to be in the main right, and his ultimate purposes
+were the same as theirs. But he had a nation in his charge to whom
+peace was precious. To have the backwoodsmen of Kentucky go down the
+river and harry the Spaniards out of the country, as their descendants
+afterwards harried the Mexicans out of Texas, would have been a
+refreshing sight, but it would have interfered sadly with the nation
+which was rising on the Atlantic seaboard, and of which Kentucky was a
+part. War was to be avoided, and above all a war into which we should
+have been dragged as the vassal of France; so Washington intended to
+wait, and he managed to make the Kentuckians wait too, a process by no
+means agreeable to that enterprising people.
+
+His own policy about the Mississippi, which has already been
+described, never wavered. He meant to have the great river, for his
+ideas of the empire of the future were quite as extended as those of
+the pioneers, and much more definite, but his way of getting it was
+to build up the Atlantic States and bind them, with their established
+resources, to the settlers over the mountains. This done, time would
+do the rest; and the sequel showed that he was right. A little more
+than a year after he came to the presidency he wrote to Lafayette:
+"Gradually recovering from the distresses in which the war left us,
+patiently advancing in our task of civil government, unentangled in
+the crooked politics of Europe, _wanting scarcely anything but the
+free navigation of the Mississippi, which we must have, and as
+certainly shall have, if we remain a nation_,"[1] etc.
+
+[Footnote 1: The italics are mine.]
+
+Time and peace, sufficient for the up-building of the nation, that is
+the theme everywhere. Yet he knew that a sacrifice of everything for
+peace was the surest road both to war and ruin. Peace must be kept;
+yet war was still the last resort, and he was ready to go to war with
+the Spaniards, as with the Indians, if all else failed. But he did
+not mean to have all else fail, nor did he mean to submit to Spanish
+insolence and exactions. The grievances of the pioneers of the West
+were to be removed, if possible, by treaty, and if that way was
+impossible, then by fighting.
+
+Carmichael, who had been minister at Madrid under the confederation,
+had been continued there by the new government. But while the
+intrigues of Spain to detach Kentucky, and the interference and
+exactions of Spanish officials, went on, our negotiation for the
+settlement of our rights to the navigation of the Mississippi halted.
+Tired of this inaction, Washington, late in 1791, united William
+Short, our minister to Holland, in a commission with Carmichael, to
+open a fresh and special negotiation as to the Mississippi, and at
+the same time a confidential agent was sent to Florida to seek some
+arrangements with the governor as to fugitive slaves, a matter of
+burning interest to the planters on the border. The joint commission
+bore no fruit, and the troubles in the West increased. Fostered by
+Genet, they came near bringing on war and detaching the western
+settlements from the Union, so that it was clearly necessary to take
+more vigorous measures.
+
+Accordingly, in 1794, after Genet had been dismissed, Washington sent
+Thomas Pinckney, who for some years had been minister in London, on
+a special treaty-making mission to Madrid. The first results were
+vexatious and unpromising enough, and Pinckney wrote at the outset
+that he had had two interviews with the Duke de Alcudia, but to no
+purpose. It was the old game of delay, he said, with inquiries as to
+why we had not replied to propositions, which in fact never had been
+made. Even what Pinckney wrote, unsatisfactory as it was, could not be
+wholly made out, for some passages were in a cipher to which the State
+Department had no key. Washington wrote to Pickering, then acting as
+Secretary of State: "A kind of fatality seems to have pursued this
+negotiation, and, in short, all our concerns with Spain, from the
+appointment of Mr. Carmichael, under the new government, as minister
+to that country, to the present day.... Enough, however, appears
+already to show the temper and policy of the Spanish court, and its
+undignified conduct as it respects themselves, and insulting as it
+relates to us; and I fear it will prove that the late treaty of peace
+with France portends nothing favorable to these United States."
+Washington's patience had been sorely tried by the delays and shifty
+evasions of Spain, but he was now on the brink of success, just as he
+concluded that negotiation was hopeless.
+
+He had made a good choice in Thomas Pinckney, better even than he
+knew. Triumphing over all obstacles, with persistence, boldness, and
+good management, Pinckney made a treaty and brought it home with him.
+Still more remarkable was the fact that it was an extremely good
+treaty, and conceded all we asked. By it the Florida boundary was
+settled, and the free navigation of the Mississippi was obtained. We
+also gained the right to a place of deposit at New Orleans, a pledge
+to leave the Indians alone, a commercial agreement modeled on that
+with France, and a board of arbitration to settle American claims.
+All this Pinckney obtained, not as the representative of a great and
+powerful state, but as the envoy of a new nation, distant, unknown,
+disliked, and embroiled in various complications with other powers.
+Our history can show very few diplomatic achievements to be compared
+with this, for it was brilliant in execution, and complete and
+valuable in result. Yet it has passed into history almost unnoticed,
+and both the treaty and its maker have been singularly and most
+unjustly neglected. Even the accurate and painstaking Hildreth omits
+the date and circumstances of Pinckney's appointment, while the last
+elaborate history of the United States scarcely alludes to the matter,
+and finds no place in its index for the name of its author. It was
+in fact one of the best pieces of work done during Washington's
+administration, and perfected its policy on a most difficult and
+essential point. It is high time that justice were done to the gallant
+soldier and accomplished diplomatist who conducted the negotiation and
+rendered such a solid service to his country. Thomas Pinckney, who
+really did something, who did work worth doing and without many words,
+has been forgotten, while many of his contemporaries, who simply made
+a noise, are freshly remembered in the pages of history.
+
+There was, however, another nation out on our western and northern
+border more difficult to deal with than Spain; and in this quarter
+there was less evasion and delay, but more arrogance and bad temper.
+It was to England that Washington turned first when he took up the
+presidency, and it was in her control of the western posts and her
+influence among the Indian tribes that he saw the greatest dangers
+to the continental movement of our people. Morris, as we have seen,
+sounded the British government with but little success. Still they
+promised to send a minister, and in due time Mr. George Hammond
+arrived in that capacity, and opened a long and somewhat fruitless
+correspondence with the Secretary of State on the various matters of
+difference existing between the two countries. This interchange of
+letters went on peaceably and somewhat monotonously for many months,
+and then suddenly became very vivid and animated. This was the effect
+of the arrival of Genet; and at this point begins the long series of
+mistakes made by Great Britain in her dealings with the United States.
+
+The principle of the declaration of neutrality could be easily upheld
+on broad political grounds, but technically its defense was by no
+means so simple. By the treaty of commerce with France we were bound
+to admit her privateers and prizes to our ports; and here, as any one
+could see, and as the sequel amply proved, was a fertile source of
+dangerous complications. Then by the treaty of alliance we guaranteed
+to France her West Indian possessions, binding ourselves to aid her
+in their defense; and a proclamation of neutrality when France was
+actually at war with a great naval power was an immediate and obvious
+limitation upon this guarantee. Hamilton argued that while France had
+an undoubted right to change her government, the treaty applied to a
+totally different state of affairs, and was therefore in suspense. He
+also argued that we were not bound in case of offensive war, and that
+this war was offensive. Jefferson and Randolph held that the treaties
+were as binding and as much in force now as they had ever been; but
+they both assented to the proclamation of neutrality. There can be
+little question that on the general legal principle Jefferson and
+Randolph were right. Hamilton's argument was ingenious and very
+fine-spun. But when he made the point about the character of the war
+as relieving us from the guarantee, he was unanswerable; and this of
+itself was a sufficient ground. He went beyond it in order to make his
+reasoning fit existing conditions consistently and throughout, and
+then it was that his position became untenable. In reality the French
+revolution was showing itself so wholly abnormal and was so rapid in
+its changes, that as a matter of practical statesmanship it was
+worse than idle even to suppose that previous treaties, made with an
+established government, were in force with this ever-shifting thing
+which the revolution had brought forth. Still the general doctrine as
+to the binding force of treaties remained unaltered, and this conflict
+between fact and principle was what constituted the great difficulty
+in the way of Washington and Hamilton. The latter met it with one
+clever and adroit argument which it was difficult to sustain, and
+avoided it with a second, which was narrower, but at the same time
+sound and all-sufficient, as to the character of the war. Jefferson
+and Randolph stood by the general principle, but abandoned it in
+practice under pressure of imperious facts, as men generally do, while
+France herself soon removed all technical difficulties by abrogating
+by her measures the treaty of commerce, an act which relieved us of
+any further obligations and justified Hamilton's position. But in
+the beginning this was not known, and yet action was none the less
+necessary.
+
+The result was right, and Washington had his way, which it must be
+confessed he had fully determined on before his cabinet supplied him
+with technical arguments.
+
+All these points must have been plain enough to Hammond and the
+English ministry. They could not see the full scope of the neutrality
+policy in its national meaning, and they very naturally failed to
+perceive that it marked the rise of a new power wholly disconnected
+from Europe, to which their own views were confined. But they were
+quite able to understand the immediate aspect of the case. They saw
+Washington adopt and carry out a policy of dignified impartiality;
+they were well able to value rightly the technical objections which
+stood in his path, and they could see also that this policy was at the
+outset very unpopular in America. The remembrance of old injuries and
+of the war for independence was still fresh, and the hatred of England
+was well nigh universal in the United States. On the other hand, a
+lively sense of gratitude to France, and a sympathy with the objects
+of the revolution, made affection for that country uniform and
+general. The easy and popular course was for our government to range
+itself more or less directly with the French, and the refusal to do so
+was bold and in the highest degree creditable to the administration.
+It was, moreover, an important advantage to England that the United
+States should not ally themselves with her enemy, for next to herself,
+the Americans were the great seafaring people of the world, and were
+in a position to ravage her commerce, and, aided by France, to break
+up her West Indian possessions. If the United States had followed the
+natural prejudices of the time and had espoused the cause of France,
+it would have been wise and right for England to attack them and break
+them down if possible. But when, from a sense of national dignity and
+of fair dealing, the United States stood apart from the conflict
+and placed their former foe on the same footing as their friend and
+ancient ally, a very small allowance of good sense would have led
+the British ministry to encourage them in so doing. By favorable
+treatment, and by a friendly and conciliatory policy, they should have
+helped Washington in his struggle against popular prejudices, and
+endeavored by so doing to keep the United States neutral, and
+lead them, if possible, to their side; but with a fatuity almost
+incomprehensible they pursued an almost exactly opposite course. By
+similar conduct England had brought on the war for independence, which
+ended in the division of her empire. In precisely the same way she now
+proceeded to make it as arduous as possible for Washington to maintain
+neutrality, and thereby played directly into the hands of the party
+that supported France. The true policy demanded no sacrifices on the
+part of Great Britain. Civility and consideration in her dealings,
+and a careful abstention from wanton aggression and insult, were
+all-sufficient. But England disliked us, as was quite natural; she did
+not wish us to thrive and prosper, and she knew that we were weak and
+not in a position to enter upon an offensive war.
+
+As soon as it became known that Genet's privateers, manned by seamen
+enlisted in our ports, were preying on British commerce, and that the
+French man-of-war L'Ambuscade had taken an English vessel, The Grange,
+within the capes of the Delaware, Hammond filed a memorial in regard
+to these incidents. In so doing he was of course quite right, and the
+government responded immediately, and proceeded in good faith to make
+every effort to repair these breaches of neutrality, and to redress
+the wrongs suffered by Great Britain. Hammond, however, instead of
+doing all in his power, not merely to gain his own ends, but to
+make it easy for our government to satisfy him, assumed at once a
+disagreeable tone with a strong flavor of bullying, which was not
+calculated to conciliate the statesmen with whom he was dealing. It
+was a small matter enough, but unfortunately it was an indication of
+what was to come.
+
+On November 6, 1793, a British order in council was passed, but not
+immediately published, directing the seizure of all vessels carrying
+the produce of the French islands, or loaded with provisions for the
+use of the French colonies. The object of the order was to destroy all
+neutral trade, and it was aimed particularly at the commerce of the
+United States. The moment selected for its adoption was when the
+troubles with Genet had culminated, when we were on the point of
+getting rid of that very objectionable person, and when we had proved
+that we meant to maintain an honest and a real neutrality. It was as
+well calculated as any move could have been to drive us back into the
+arms of France, yet the manner of executing the order was far worse
+than the order itself. Our merchantmen and traders had been quick to
+take advantage of the opening of the French ports, and they had gone
+in swarms to the French islands. Now, without a word of warning, their
+vessels were seized by the cruisers of a nation with which we were
+supposed to be at peace. Every petty governor of an English island sat
+as a judge in admiralty. Many of them were corrupt, all were unfit for
+the duty, and our vessels were condemned and pillaged. The crews were
+made prisoners, and in many cases thrown into loathsome and unhealthy
+places of confinement, while the ships were left to rot in the
+harbors. The tale of the outrages and miseries thus inflicted on
+citizens of the United States without any warning, and by a nation
+considered to be at peace with us, fills an American with shame and
+anger even to-day. If our people remonstrated, they were told that
+England meant to have no neutrals, and that six of their frigates
+could blockade our coast. A course of kind treatment would have made
+us the friends of Great Britain, but the experiment was not even
+tried. The truth was that we were weak, and this was not only a
+misfortune but apparently an unpardonable sin. England could not
+conquer us, but she could harry our coasts, and let loose her Indians
+on our borders; and we had no navy with which to retaliate. She meant
+that there should be no neutrals, and so adopted a policy which would
+make us the active ally of France. It was no answer to say, what was
+perfectly true, that French privateers preyed upon our commerce with
+that fine indifference to rights and treaties which characterized
+the governments of the Revolution. If both sides maltreated us, the
+natural course was to unite with the power to which we at least owed a
+debt of gratitude.
+
+About the same time a speech was reported from Quebec, in which Lord
+Dorchester told the Indians that they should soon take the war-path
+for England against the United States. Lord Grenville denied in
+Parliament, and subsequently to Jay, that the ministry had ever taken
+any step to incite the Indians against the United States, and the
+authenticity of Lord Dorchester's utterances has been questioned in
+later days; but it was not disavowed at the time, even by Hammond in
+a sharp correspondence which he held on that and other topics with
+Randolph. The speech, as is now known and proved, was probably made,
+whether it was authorized or not, and it was universally accepted at
+the moment as both true and authoritative.
+
+This menace of desolating savage war in the West, in addition to the
+unquestioned outrages to our seamen, the loss of our ships, and the
+destruction of our commerce, with consequent ruin to all our seaboard
+towns, led to a general outburst of indignation from men of all
+parties, and Congress began to prepare for war. Many of the methods
+suggested were feeble and inadequate, but there could be no doubt of
+either the spirit or intentions which dictated them. News that an
+order of January 8, 1794, modified that of November 6, and confined
+the seizure to vessels carrying French property, and reports that
+some of our vessels were being restored, moderated the movements of
+Congress, but it was nevertheless evident that a resolution cutting
+off commercial intercourse with Great Britain would soon pass. In the
+existing state of things such a step in all probability meant war, and
+Washington was thus brought face to face with the most serious problem
+of his administration. It did not take him unawares, nor find him
+unprepared, for he had anticipated the situation, and his mind was
+made up. He had no intention of letting the country drift into war
+without a great effort to prevent it, and the time for that effort had
+now come. As in the case of Spain, he was resolved to send a special
+envoy to make a treaty. His first choice for this important mission
+was Hamilton, which, like most of his selections, would have been
+the best choice that could have been made. Hamilton, however, was so
+conspicuous as the great leader of the party which supported both the
+foreign and domestic policy of the administration, and he was so hated
+by the opposition, that a loud outcry was at once raised against his
+appointment. At that particular juncture it was very important that
+the envoy should depart with as much general good-will and public
+confidence as possible, so Hamilton sacrificed himself to this
+necessity, and withdrew his name voluntarily. His withdrawal was a
+mistake, but it was a wholly natural one under the circumstances.
+Washington then made the next best choice, and appointed John Jay,
+who was a man of most spotless character, honorable, high-minded, and
+skilled in public affairs. He was chief justice of the United States,
+and that fact gave additional weight to the mission. The only point in
+which he fell behind Hamilton was in aggressiveness of character, and
+this negotiation demanded, not merely firmness and tact, which Jay
+had in abundance, but a boldness verging on audacity. The immediate
+purpose, however, was answered, and Jay set forth on his journey with
+much good feeling toward himself, and with a very solemn sense among
+the people of the gravity of his undertaking. Washington himself saw
+Jay depart with many misgivings, and the act of sending such a mission
+at all was very trying to him, for the conduct of England galled him
+to the quick. He had long suspected Great Britain, as well as Spain,
+of inciting the Indians secretly to assail our settlements, and
+knowing as he did the character of savage warfare, and feeling deeply
+the bloodshed and expense of our Indian wars, he cherished a profound
+dislike for those who could be capable of promoting such misery to the
+injury of a friendly and-civilized nation. As England became more and
+more hostile, he made up his mind that she was bent on attacking us,
+and in March, 1794, he wrote to Governor Clinton that he had no doubts
+as to the authenticity of Lord Dorchester's speech, and that he
+believed England intended war. He therefore urged the governor to
+inquire carefully into the state of feeling in Canada, and as to the
+military strength of the country, especially on the border. He put no
+trust in the disclaimers of the ministry when he saw the long familiar
+signs of hostile intrigue among the Indians, and he was quite
+determined that, if war should come, all the suffering should not be
+on one side.
+
+This belief in the coming of war, however, only strengthened him in
+his well-matured plans to leave nothing undone to prevent it. It was
+in this spirit that he despatched the special mission, although his
+first letter to Jay shows that he had no very strong hopes of peace,
+and that his uppermost thoughts were of the wrongs which had been
+perpetrated, and of the perils which hung over the border. He did not
+wish the commissioner to mince matters at all. "There does not remain
+a doubt," he wrote, "in the mind of any well-informed person in this
+country, not shut against conviction, that all the difficulties we
+encounter with the Indians, their hostilities, the murder of helpless
+women and innocent children along our frontiers, result from the
+conduct of the agents of Great Britain in this country.... Can it
+be expected, I ask, so long as these things are known in the United
+States, or at least firmly believed, and suffered with impunity by
+Great Britain, that there ever will or can be any cordiality between
+the two countries? I answer, No. And I will undertake, without the
+gift of prophecy, to predict that it will be impossible to keep this
+country in a state of amity with Great Britain long, if the posts are
+not surrendered. A knowledge of these being my sentiments would have
+little weight, I am persuaded, with the British administration, and
+perhaps not with the nation, in effecting the measure; but both may
+rest satisfied that, if they want to be in peace with this country,
+and to enjoy the benefits of its trade, to give up the posts is the
+only road to it. Withholding them, and the consequences we feel at
+present continuing, war will be inevitable."
+
+Jay meantime had been well received in England. Lord Grenville
+expressed the most friendly feelings, and every desire that the
+negotiation might succeed. Jay was also received at court, where he
+was said to have kissed the queen's hand, a crime, so the opposition
+declared, for which his lips ought to have been blistered to the bone,
+a difficult and by no means common form of punishment. Receptions,
+dinner parties, and a ready welcome everywhere, did not, however,
+make a treaty. When it came to business, the English did not differ
+materially from their neighbors whom Canning satirized.
+
+ "The fault of the Dutch
+ Is giving too little and asking too much."
+
+So the Americans now found it with Lord Grenville. There were many
+subjects of dispute, some dangerous, and all requiring settlement for
+the benefit of both countries. Boundaries, negro claims, and British
+debts were easily disposed of by reference to boards of arbitration.
+Two others, awkward and threatening, but not immediately pressing,
+were the impressment of British seamen, real or pretended, from
+American ships, and the exclusion of American vessels from the trade
+of the British West Indies. The latter circumstance was no doubt
+disagreeable to us, and deprived us of profit; but it is difficult to
+see what right we had to complain of it, for the ports of the British
+West Indies belonged to Great Britain, and if she chose to close
+them to us, or anybody else, she was quite within her rights. At all
+events, Lord Grenville declined to let us in, except in a very limited
+way and under most onerous conditions. The right of search and the
+right of impressment were simply the rights of the powerful over the
+weak. England wanted to get seamen where she could for her navy; and
+so long as she could violate our flag and carry off as recruits any
+able-bodied seaman who spoke English, she meant to do it. It was worse
+than idle to negotiate about it. When we should be ready and willing
+to fight we could settle that question, but not before. In due time we
+were ready to fight. England defeated us in various battles, ravaged
+our coasts, and burned our capital; while we whipped her frigates
+and lake flotillas, and repulsed her Peninsula veterans with heavy
+slaughter at New Orleans. Impressment was not mentioned in the treaty
+which concluded that war, but it ended at that time. The English are a
+brave and combative people, but rather than get into wars with nations
+that will fight, and fight hard, they will desist from wanton and
+illegal aggressions, in which they do not differ greatly from the rest
+of mankind; and so the practical abandonment of impressment came with
+the war of 1812. The fact was officially stated by Webster, not many
+years later, when he announced that the flag covered and protected all
+those who lived or traded under it.
+
+But in 1794 impressment was a negotiable question, because we were not
+ready to go to war about it then and there. So Jay, wisely enough,
+allowed this especial from of bullying to drift aside, along with the
+exclusion from the West India trade, and addressed himself to the
+two points which it was essential to have settled at that particular
+moment. These questions were: the retention of the western posts, and
+neutral rights at sea. In return for the agreement on our part to pay
+the British debts, as determined by arbitration, England agreed
+to surrender the posts on June 1, 1796. There was to be mutual
+reciprocity in inland trade on the North American continent; but
+coastwise, while we opened all our harbors and rivers to the British,
+they shut us out from theirs in the colonies and the territory of the
+Hudson's Bay Company. In the eighteen articles, limited in duration
+to two years after the conclusion of the existing war, a treaty of
+commerce was practically formed and neutral rights dealt with. We were
+to be admitted to British ports in Europe and the East Indies on terms
+of equality with British vessels, but we were refused admission to the
+East Indian coasting trade, and to that between East India and Europe.
+We gained the right to trade to the West Indies, but only on condition
+that we should give up the transportation from America to Europe of
+any of the principal products of the colonies. These were enumerated,
+and besides sugar, molasses, coffee, and cocoa, included cotton, which
+had just become an export from the southern States, and which already
+promised to assume the importance that it afterwards reached. The
+vexed questions of privateers, prizes, and contraband of war were also
+settled and determined.
+
+The treaty as a whole was not a very brilliant one for the United
+States, but its treatment was far worse than its deserts, and it was
+received with such a universal outburst of indignation that even to
+this day it has never freed itself from the bad name it then acquired.
+Nobody, not even its supporters, liked it, and yet it may be doubted
+whether anything materially better was possible at the time. The
+admirers of Hamilton, from that day to this, have believed that if
+he had been sent, his boldness, ability, and force would have wrung
+better terms from England. This is not at all improbable; but that
+they would have been materially improved, even by Hamilton, does not
+seem very likely. The treaty, in reality, was by no means bad; on the
+contrary, it had many good points. It disposed satisfactorily and
+fairly of all the minor questions which were vexatious and threatening
+to the peaceful relation of the two countries. It settled the British
+debts, gave us the western posts, which was a matter of the utmost
+importance, and arranged the disputed and thorny question of neutral
+rights, for the time being at least. It left impressment totally
+unsettled, simply because we were still too weak to be ready to fight
+England profitably on that theme. It opened to us the West Indian
+ports, which was the matter most nearly affecting our interests and
+our pockets, but it did so under limitations and concessions which
+were excessive and even humiliating. We were obliged to pay a price
+far too high for this coveted privilege, and it was on this point that
+the controversy finally hinged.
+
+The treaty reached Philadelphia on March 7. Nothing was said of its
+arrival, which does not seem to have been known to any one but the
+President and Randolph, who had meantime succeeded Jefferson as
+Secretary of State. Three months later, on June 8, the Senate was
+called together in special session, and the treaty was laid before
+them. Washington did not like it and never changed his feeling in that
+respect, but he had made up his mind upon full reflection to accept
+it; and the Senate, after most careful consideration, voted by exactly
+the necessary two thirds to ratify it, provided that the objectionable
+West Indian article could be modified. On no terms could we consent to
+forego the exportation of cotton, and it is difficult to see how
+the Senate could have taken any other ground upon this point. Their
+action, however, opened some delicate questions. Washington wrote to
+Randolph: "First, is or is not that resolution intended to be the
+final act of the Senate; or do they expect that the new article which
+is proposed shall be submitted to them before the treaty takes effect?
+Secondly, does or does not the Constitution permit the President to
+ratify the treaty, without submitting the new article, after it shall
+be agreed to by the British King, to the Senate for their further
+advice and consent?"
+
+These questions were carefully considered, and Washington had made
+up his mind to ratify conditionally on the modification of the West
+Indian article, when news arrived which caused him to suspend action.
+England, having made the treaty, and before any news could have been
+received of our attitude in regard to it, took steps to render its
+ratification both difficult and offensive, if not impossible. The mode
+adopted was to renew the "provision order," as it was called, which
+directed the seizure of all vessels carrying food products to France,
+and thus give to the Jay treaty the interpretation it was designed to
+avoid, that provisions could be declared contraband at the pleasure of
+one of the belligerents. It was a stupid thing to do, for if England
+desired to have peace with us, as her making the treaty indicated,
+she should not have renewed the most irritating of all her past
+performances before we had had opportunity even to sign and ratify.
+Washington, on hearing of this move, withheld his signature, bade
+Randolph prepare a strong memorial against the provision order, and
+then betook himself to Mount Vernon on some urgent private business.
+
+Before he started, however, the storm of popular rage had begun to
+break. Bache had the substance of the treaty in the "Aurora" on June
+29, and Mr. Stevens Thomson Mason, senator from Virginia, was so
+pained by some slight inaccuracies in this version that he wrote Mr.
+Bache a note, and sent him a copy of the treaty despite the injunction
+of secrecy by which he as a senator was bound. Mr. Mason gained great
+present glory by this frank breach of promise, and curiously enough
+this single discreditable act is the only thing that keeps his name
+and memory alive in history. All that he achieved at the moment was to
+hurry the inevitable disclosure of the contents of a treaty which no
+one desired to conceal, except in deference to official form. Mason's
+note and copy of the treaty, made up into a pamphlet, were issued
+from Bache's press on July 2, and hundreds of copies were soon being
+carried by eager riders north and south throughout the Union.
+
+Everywhere, as the treaty traveled, the popular wrath was kindled. The
+first explosion came in Boston, Federalist Boston, devoted beyond any
+other town in the country to Washington and his administration. There
+was a town meeting in Faneuil Hall, violent speeches were made, and a
+committee was appointed to draw up a memorial to the President against
+ratification. This remonstrance was despatched at once by special
+messenger, who seemed to carry the torch of Malise instead of a set of
+dry resolutions. Everywhere the anger and indignation flamed forth.
+The ground had been carefully prepared, for, ever since Jay sailed,
+the partisans of the French had been denouncing him and his mission,
+predicting failure, and, in one case at least, burning him in effigy
+before it was known whether he had done anything at all. As soon as
+the news spread that the treaty had actually arrived, the attacks
+were multiplied in number and grew ever more bitter as the Senate
+consulted. The popular mind was so worked up that in Boston a British
+vessel had been burned on suspicion that she was a privateer, while in
+New York there had been street fights and rioting because of an insult
+to a French flag. In such a state of feeling, artificially stimulated
+and ingeniously misled, the most brilliant diplomatic triumph would
+have had but slight chance of approval. Jay's moderate achievement
+was better than his enemies expected, but it was sufficient for their
+purpose, and the popular fury blazed up and ran through the country,
+like a whirlwind of fire over the parched prairie. Everywhere the
+example of Boston was followed, meetings were held, committees
+appointed, and memorials against the treaty sent to the President. In
+New York Hamilton was stoned when he attempted to speak in favor of
+ratification; and less illustrious persons, who ventured to differ
+from the crowd, were ducked and otherwise maltreated. Jay was hanged
+and burned in effigy in every way that imagination could devise,
+and copies of his treaty suffered the same fate at the hands of the
+hangman. Feeling ran highest in the larger towns where there was a
+mob, but even some of the smaller places and those most Federal in
+their politics were carried away. The excitement seems also to have
+been confined for the most part to the seaboard, but after all that
+was where the bulk of the population lived. The crowd, moreover,
+was not led by obscure agitators or by violent and irresponsible
+partisans. The Livingstons in New York, Rodney in Delaware, Gadsden
+and the Rutledges in South Carolina, were some of the men who guided
+the meetings and denounced the treaty. On the other hand, the friends
+and supporters of the administration appeared stunned, and for weeks
+no opposition to the popular movement except that attempted by
+Hamilton was apparent. Even the administration was divided, for
+Randolph was as hostile to the treaty as it was possible for a man of
+his temperament to be.
+
+The crisis was indeed a serious one. There have been worse in our
+history, but this was one of the gravest; and never did a President
+stand, so far as any one could see, so utterly alone. With his own
+party silenced and even divided, with the opposition rampant, and with
+popular excitement at fever heat, Washington was left to take his
+course alone and unsupported. It was the severest trial of his
+political life, but he met it, as he met the reverses of 1776,
+calmly and without flinching. He was always glad to have advice and
+suggestions. No man ever sought them or benefited from them more
+than he; yet no man ever lived so little dependent on others and so
+perfectly capable of standing alone as Washington. After the Senate
+had acted, he made up his mind to conditional ratification. He
+withheld his signature on hearing of the provision order, and was
+ready to sign as soon as that order was withdrawn. Whether he would
+make its withdrawal another condition of his signature he had not
+determined when he left Philadelphia for Mount Vernon, and on his
+arrival he wrote to Randolph: "The conditional ratification (if the
+late order, which we have heard of, respecting provision vessels
+is not in operation) may, on all fit occasions, be spoken of as my
+determination. Unless, from anything you have heard or met with since
+I left you, it should be thought more advisable to communicate further
+with me on the subject, my opinion respecting the treaty is the same
+now that it was, namely, not favorable to it; but that it is better
+to ratify it in the manner the Senate have advised, and with the
+reservation already mentioned, than to suffer matters to remain as
+they are, unsettled." He had already received the Boston resolutions,
+and had sent them to his cabinet for their consideration. He did not
+for a moment underrate their importance, and he saw that they were
+the harbingers of others of like character, although he could not yet
+estimate the full violence of the storm of popular disapprobation. On
+July 28 he sent his answer to the selectmen of Boston, and it is such
+an important paper that it must be given in full. It was as follows:--
+
+ UNITED STATES, _28th of July_, 1795.
+
+ GENTLEMEN: In every act of my administration I have sought the
+ happiness of my fellow-citizens. My system for the attainment of
+ this object has uniformly been to overlook all personal, local,
+ and partial considerations; to contemplate the United States
+ as one great whole; to confide that sudden impressions, and
+ erroneous, would yield to candid reflections; and to consult only
+ the substantial and permanent interests of our country.
+
+ Nor have I departed from this line of conduct on the occasion
+ which has produced the resolutions contained in your letter of the
+ 13th inst.
+
+ Without a predilection for my own judgment, I have weighed with
+ attention every argument which has at any time been brought into
+ view. But the Constitution is the guide which I never can abandon.
+ It has assigned to the President the power of making treaties with
+ the advice and consent of the Senate. It was doubtless supposed
+ that these two branches of government would combine, without
+ passion and with the best means of information, those facts and
+ principles upon which the success of our foreign relations will
+ always depend; that they ought not to substitute for their own
+ convictions the opinions of others, or to seek truth through any
+ channel but that of a temperate and well-informed investigation.
+
+ Under this persuasion, I have resolved on the manner of executing
+ the duty before me. To the high responsibility attached to it, I
+ fully submit; and you, gentlemen, are at liberty to make these
+ sentiments known as the grounds of my procedure. While I feel the
+ most lively gratitude for the many instances of approbation from
+ my country, I can no otherwise deserve it than by obeying the
+ dictates of my conscience. With due respect, I am, etc.
+
+It will be noticed that this letter is dated "The United States, 28th
+of July," which is, I think, the only instance of the sort to be found
+in his letters. In all his vast correspondence there possibly may be
+other cases in which he used this method of dating, but one cannot
+help feeling that on this occasion at least it had a particular
+significance. It was not George Washington writing from Mount Vernon,
+but the President, who represented the whole country, pointing out
+to the people of Boston that the day of small things and of local
+considerations had gone by. This letter served also as a model for
+many others. The Boston address had a multitude of successors, and
+they were all answered in the same strain. Washington was not a man to
+underrate popular feeling, for he knew that the strongest bulwark of
+the government was in sound public opinion. On the other hand, he
+was one of the rare men who could distinguish between a temporary
+excitement, no matter how universal, and an abiding sentiment. In this
+case he quietly resisted the noisy popular demand, believing that the
+sober second thought of the people would surely be with him; but at
+the same time the outcry against the treaty, while it could not make
+him waver in his determination to do what he believed to be right,
+caused him deep anxiety. The day after he sent his answer to Boston he
+wrote to Randolph:--
+
+ "I view the opposition which the treaty is receiving from the
+ meetings in different parts of the Union in a very serious light;
+ not because there is more weight in any of the objections which
+ are made to it than was foreseen at first, for there is none in
+ some of them, and gross misrepresentations in others; nor as it
+ respects myself personally, for this shall have no influence on
+ my conduct, plainly perceiving, and I am accordingly preparing my
+ mind for it, the obloquy which disappointment and malice are
+ collecting to heap upon me. But I am alarmed at the effect it may
+ have on and the advantage the French government may be disposed to
+ make of, the spirit which is at work to cherish a belief in them
+ that the treaty is calculated to favor Great Britain at their
+ expense.... To sum the whole up in a few words I have never,
+ since I have been in the administration of the government,
+ a crisis, which, in my judgment, has been so pregnant with
+ interesting events, nor one from which more is to be apprehended,
+ whether viewed on one side or the other."
+
+He already felt that it might be necessary for him to return to
+Philadelphia at any moment; and, writing to Randolph to this effect
+two days later, he said:--
+
+ "To be wise and temperate, as well as firm, the present crisis
+ most eminently calls for. There is too much reason to believe,
+ from the pains which have been taken before, at, and since the
+ advice of the Senate respecting the treaty, that the prejudices
+ against it are more extensive than is generally imagined. This I
+ have lately understood to be the case in this quarter from men who
+ are of no party, but well-disposed to the present administration.
+ Nor should it be otherwise, when no stone has been left unturned
+ that could impress on the minds of the people the most arrant
+ misrepresentation of facts; that their rights have not only been
+ _neglected_, but absolutely _sold_; that there are no reciprocal
+ advantages in the treaty; that the benefits are all on the side of
+ Great Britain; and, what seems to have had more weight with them
+ than all the rest, and to have been most pressed, that the treaty
+ is made with the design to oppress the French, in open violation
+ of our treaty with that nation, and contrary, too, to every
+ principle of gratitude and sound policy. In time, when passion
+ shall have yielded to sober reason, the current may possibly turn;
+ but, in the mean while, this government, in relation to France and
+ England, may be compared to a ship between the rocks of Scylla and
+ Charybdis. If the treaty is ratified, partisans of the French, or
+ rather of war and confusion, will excite them to hostile measures,
+ or at least to unfriendly sentiments; if it is not, there is no
+ foreseeing all the consequences which may follow, as it respects
+ Great Britain.
+
+ "It is not to be inferred from hence that I am disposed to quit
+ the ground I have taken, unless circumstances more imperious than
+ have yet come to my knowledge should compel it; for there is but
+ one straight course, and that is to seek truth, and pursue it
+ steadily. But these things are mentioned to show that a close
+ investigation of the subject is more than ever necessary, and
+ that there are strong evidences of the necessity of the most
+ circumspect conduct in carrying the determination of government
+ into effect, with prudence, as it respects our own people, and
+ with every exertion to produce a change for the better from Great
+ Britain.
+
+ "The memorial seems well designed to answer the end proposed,
+ and by the time it is revised and new-dressed, you will probably
+ (either in the resolutions which are or will be handed to me, or
+ in the newspaper publications, which you promise to be attentive
+ to) have seen all the objections against the treaty which have
+ any real force in them, and which may be fit subjects for
+ representation in a memorial, or in the instructions, or both. But
+ how much longer the presentation of the memorial can be delayed
+ without exciting unpleasant sensations here, or involving serious
+ evils elsewhere, you, who are at the scene of information and
+ action, can decide better than I. In a matter, however, so
+ interesting and pregnant with consequences as this treaty, there
+ ought to be no precipitation; but on the contrary, every step
+ should be explored before it is taken, and every word weighed
+ before it is uttered or delivered in writing.
+
+ "The form of the ratification requires more diplomatic experience
+ and legal knowledge than I possess, or have the means of acquiring
+ at this place, and therefore I shall say nothing about it."
+
+Three days later, on August 3, he wrote again to Randolph to say that
+the mails had been delayed, and that he had not received the Baltimore
+resolutions. He then continued:--
+
+ "The like may be expected from Richmond, a meeting having been
+ had there also, at which Mr. Wythe, it is said, was seated as
+ moderator; by chance more than design, it is added. A queer chance
+ this for the chancellor of the state.
+
+ "All these things do not shake my determination with respect to
+ the proposed ratifications, nor will they, unless something more
+ imperious and unknown to me should, in the judgment of yourself
+ and the gentlemen with you, make it advisable for me to pause."
+
+A few days later Washington was recalled by a letter from Randolph,
+and also by a private note from Pickering, which said, mysteriously,
+that there was a "special reason" for his immediate return. He had
+been expecting to be recalled at any moment, and he now hastened to
+Philadelphia, reaching there on August 11. He little dreamed, however,
+of what had led his two secretaries, one ignorantly and the other
+wittingly, to hasten his return. On the very day when he dated his
+letter to the selectmen of Boston as from the United States, the
+British minister placed in the hands of Mr. Wolcott, the Secretary of
+the Treasury, an intercepted letter from Fauchet, the French minister,
+to his own government. This dispatch, bearing the number 10, had come
+into the possession of Mr. Hammond by a series of accidents; but the
+British government and its representatives were quick to perceive that
+the chances of the sea had thrown into their hands a prize of much
+more value than many French merchantmen. The dispatch thus rescued
+from the water, where its bearer had cast it, was filled with a long
+and somewhat imaginative dissertation on political parties in the
+United States, and with an account of the whiskey rebellion. It also
+gave the substance of some conversations held by the writer with the
+Secretary of State. This is not the place, nor would space serve, to
+examine the details of this famous dispatch, with reference to the
+American statesman whom it incriminated. On its face it showed that
+Randolph had held conversations with the French minister which no
+American Secretary of State ought to have held with any representative
+of a foreign government, and it appeared further that the most obvious
+interpretation of certain sentences, in view of the readiness of man
+to think ill of his neighbor, was that Randolph had suggested corrupt
+practices. Such was the document, implicating in a most serious way
+the character of his chief cabinet officer, which Pickering and
+Wolcott placed in Washington's hands on his arrival in Philadelphia.
+
+Mr. Conway, in his biography of Randolph, devotes many pages to
+explaining what now followed. His explanations show, certainly, a most
+refined ingenuity, and form the most elaborate discussion of this
+incident that has ever appeared. All this effort and ingenuity are
+needless, however, unless the object be to prove that Randolph was
+wholly without fault, which is an impossible task. There was
+nothing complicated about the affair, and nothing strange about the
+President's course, if we confine ourselves to the plain facts and the
+order of their occurrence.
+
+Before the treaty went to the Senate, Washington made up his mind to
+sign it, and when the Senate ratified conditionally, he still adhered
+to his former opinion. Then came the news of the provision order,
+and thereupon he paused and withheld his signature, at the same time
+ordering a memorial against the order to be prepared. But there is no
+evidence whatever that he changed his mind, or that he had determined
+to make his signature conditional upon the revocation of the order.
+To argue that he had is, in fact, misrepresentation. In the letter
+of July 22, on which so much stress was laid afterwards by Randolph,
+Washington said that his intention to ratify conditionally was to be
+announced, if the provision order was not in operation. Put in the
+converse form, his intention was not to be announced if the order
+was in operation; but this is very different from saying that his
+intention had altered, and that he would not sign unless the order was
+revoked. This last idea was Randolph's, but not Washington's. Indeed,
+in the very next lines of the same letter he said expressly that his
+opinion had not changed, that he did not like the treaty, but that
+it was best to ratify. It is a fair inference, no doubt, that he
+was considering whether he should change his intention and make his
+signature conditional; but if this was the case, it is sure beyond a
+peradventure that his original opinion was only confirmed as the days
+went by.
+
+He examined with the utmost care all the remonstrances and addresses
+that were poured in upon him, and found few solid objections, and none
+that he had not already weighed and disposed of. On July 31 he wrote
+to Randolph that it was not to be inferred that he was disposed to
+quit his ground unless more imperious circumstances than had yet come
+to his knowledge should compel him to do so. The provision order was
+of course within his knowledge, and therefore had not led him to
+change his mind. On August 3 he wrote even more strongly that nothing
+had come to his knowledge to shake his determination. In his letter to
+Randolph of October 21, giving him full liberty to have and publish
+everything he desired for his vindication, Washington said: "You
+know that it was my determination to ratify before submission to the
+Senate; that the doubts which arose proceeded from the provision
+order." Doubts are mentioned here, and not changes of intention. If
+he had changed his mind at any time he would have said so, for he was
+neither timid nor dishonest, but as a matter of fact he never had
+changed his mind. He came to Philadelphia with his mind made up to
+ratify, and that being the case, it was clear that further delay would
+be wrong and impolitic. The surest way to check the popular excitement
+and rally the friends of the administration was to act. Suspense
+fostered opposition more than ratification, for most people accept the
+inevitable when the deed is done.
+
+The Fauchet letter, therefore, although its revelations astounded and
+grieved him, had no effect upon his action, which would have been the
+same in any event; for he had said over and over again that he had not
+changed his first opinion. In the letter to Randolph, just quoted,
+he also said: "And finally you know the grounds on which my ultimate
+decision was taken, as the same were expressed to you, the other
+secretaries of departments, and the late attorney-general, after a
+thorough investigation of the subject in all the aspects in which it
+could be placed." As the Fauchet letter was not disclosed to Randolph
+until after the treaty had been signed, it was impossible that it
+should have been one of the grounds of the President's decision, for
+Washington said to him, "You knew the grounds." If we are to suppose
+that the Fauchet letter had anything to do with the ratification so
+far as the President himself was concerned, we must, in the face of
+this letter, set Washington down as a deliberate liar, which is so
+wholly impossible that it disposes at once of the theory that he was
+driven into signing by a clever British intrigue.
+
+Here as elsewhere the simple and obvious explanation is the true one,
+although the whole matter is sufficiently plain on the mere narration
+of facts. The treaty was a great public question, to be decided on its
+merits, and the only new point raised by the Fauchet dispatch was how
+to deal with Randolph himself at this particular juncture. To have
+shown the letter to him at once would have been to break the cabinet,
+with the treaty unsigned. It would have resulted in much delay,
+extending to weeks, unless the President was ready to have an acting
+secretary sign both treaty and memorial; and it would have added
+during the continued suspense a fresh subject of excitement to the
+popular mind. Washington's duty plainly was to carry out his policy
+and bring the matter to an immediate conclusion, and, as was his
+custom, he did his duty. If, as Mr. Conway thinks, the Fauchet letter
+was what compelled the ratification, Washington would have given it
+to the world at once, and then, having by this means discredited the
+opposition and roused a feeling against the French, would have signed
+the treaty. England, of course, had taken advantage of this letter,
+and equally of course her minister and his influence were against
+Randolph, who was thought to be unfriendly. Hammond intrigued with our
+public men just as all the French ministers did. It is humiliating
+that such should have been the case, but it was due to our recent
+escape from a colonial condition, and to the way in which we allowed
+our politics to turn on foreign affairs. Having made up his mind to
+ratify and end the question, Washington very properly kept silence
+as to the Fauchet letter until the work was done. To do this, it was
+necessary of course that he should make no change in his personal
+attitude toward Randolph, nor was he obliged to do so, for he was too
+just a man to assume Randolph's guilt until his defense had been made.
+The ratification was brought before the cabinet at once. There was a
+sharp discussion, in which it appeared that Randolph had advanced a
+good deal in his hostility to the treaty, a fact not tending to make
+the Fauchet business look better; and then ratification was voted, and
+a memorial against the provision order was adopted. On August 18 the
+treaty was signed, and on the 19th, Washington, in the presence of his
+cabinet, placed the Fauchet letter in Randolph's hands. Randolph read
+it, made some comments, and asked time to offer suitable explanations.
+He then withdrew, and in a few hours sent in his resignation.
+
+There would be no need, so far as Washington is concerned, to say more
+on this unfortunate affair of the Secretary of State, were it not for
+the recent statements made by Randolph's biographer. In order to clear
+his hero, Mr. Conway represents that Washington, knowing Randolph to
+be innocent, sacrificed him in great anguish of heart to an imperious
+political necessity, while the fact was, that nobody sacrificed
+Randolph except himself. He was represented in a dispatch written by
+the French minister in a light which, as Washington said, gave rise to
+strong suspicions; a moderate statement in which every candid man
+who knew anything about the matter has agreed from that day to this.
+According to Fauchet, Randolph not only had held conversations wholly
+unbecoming his position, but on the same authority he was represented
+to have asked for money. That the Secretary of State was corrupt, no
+one who knew him, as Jefferson said, for one moment believed. Whether
+he disposed of this charge or not, it was plain to his friends, as
+it is to posterity, that Randolph was a perfectly honorable man. But
+neither his own vindication nor that of his biographer have in the
+least palliated or even touched the real error which he committed.
+
+As Secretary of State, the head of the cabinet, and in charge of our
+foreign relations, he had, according to Fauchet's dispatch and to his
+own admissions, entered into relations with a foreign minister which
+ought to have been as impossible as they were discreditable to an
+American statesman. That Fauchet believed that Randolph deceived him
+did not affect the merits of the case, nor, if true, did it excuse
+Randolph, especially as everybody with whom he was brought into
+close contact seems at some time or other to have had doubts of his
+sincerity. As a matter of fact, Randolph could find no defense except
+to attack Washington and discuss our foreign relations, and his
+biographer has followed the same line. What was it then that
+Washington had actually done which called for assault? He had been put
+in possession of an official document which on its face implicated
+his Secretary of State in the intrigues of a foreign minister, and
+suggested that he was open to corruption. These were the views which
+the public, having no personal knowledge of Randolph, would be sure to
+take, and as a matter of fact actually took, when the affair became
+known. There was a great international question to be settled, and
+settled without delay. This was done in a week, during which time
+Washington kept silent, as his public duty required. The moment the
+treaty was signed he handed Fauchet's dispatch to Randolph and asked
+for an explanation. None knew of the dispatch except the cabinet
+officers, through whom it had necessarily come. Washington did not
+prejudge the case; he did not dismiss Randolph with any mark of his
+pleasure, as he would have been quite justified in doing. He simply
+asked for explanation, and threw open his own correspondence and
+the archives of the department, so that Randolph might have every
+opportunity for defense. It is difficult to see how Washington could
+have done less in dealing with Randolph, or in what way he could have
+shown greater consideration.
+
+Randolph resigned of his own motion, and then cried out against
+Washington because he had been obliged to pay the penalty of his own
+errors. When it is considered that Washington did absolutely nothing
+to Randolph except to hand him Fauchet's dispatch and accept his
+consequent resignation, the talk about Randolph's forgiving him
+becomes simply ludicrous. Randolph saw his own error, was angry with
+himself, and, like the rest of humanity, proceeded to vent his anger
+on somebody else, but unfortunately he had the bad taste to turn at
+the outset to the newspapers. Like Mr. Snodgrass, he took off his coat
+in public and announced in a loud voice that he was going to begin.
+The President's only response was to open the archives and bid him
+publish everything he desired. Randolph then wrote the President a
+private letter, which was angry and impertinent; "full of innuendoes,"
+said the recipient. Washington drafted a sharp reply, and then out
+of pure kindness withheld it, and let the private letter drop into
+silence, whither the bulky "Vindication," which vindicated nobody,
+soon followed it. The fact was, that Washington treated Randolph with
+great kindness and forbearance. He had known him long; he was fond
+of him on his own account as well as his father's; he appreciated
+Randolph's talents; but he knew on reading that dispatch, if he had
+never guessed it before, that Randolph, although honest and clever,
+and certainly not bad, was a dangerously weak man. Others among
+our public men had put themselves into relations with foreign
+representatives which it is now intolerable to contemplate, but
+Randolph, besides being found out at the moment, had, after the
+fashion of weak natures, gone further and shown more feebleness than
+any one else had. Washington's conduct was so perfectly simple, and
+the facts of the case were so plain, that it would seem impossible to
+complicate them. The contemporary verdict was harsh, crushing, and
+unjust in many respects to Randolph. The verdict of posterity, which
+is both gentler and fairer to the secretary, will certainly at the
+same time sustain Washington's course at every point as sensible,
+direct, and proper.
+
+Only one question remains which demands a word before tracing briefly
+the subsequent fate of the Jay treaty, and that is, to know exactly
+why the President signed it. The answer is fortunately not difficult.
+There was a choice of evils. When Washington determined to send a
+special envoy, he said: "My objects are, to prevent a war, if justice
+can be obtained by fair and strong representations (to be made by a
+special envoy) of the injuries which this country has sustained from
+Great Britain in various ways; to put it into a complete state
+of military defense; and to provide eventually such measures for
+execution as seem to be now pending in Congress, if negotiation in
+a reasonable time proves unsuccessful." From these views he never
+varied. The treaty was not a perfect one, but it had good features and
+was probably, as has been said, the best that could then be obtained.
+It settled some vexed questions, and it gave us time. If the United
+States could only have time without making undue sacrifice, they could
+pass beyond the stage when a foreign war with its consequent suffering
+and debt would endanger our national existence. If they could only
+have time to grow into a nation, there would be no difficulty in
+settling all their disputes with other people satisfactorily, either
+by war or negotiation. But if the national bonds were loosened, then
+all was lost. It was in this spirit that Washington signed the Jay
+treaty; and although there was much in it that he did not like,
+and although men were bitterly divided about the ratification, a
+dispassionate posterity has come to believe that he was right at the
+most difficult if not the most perilous crisis in his career.
+
+The signature of the treaty, however, did not put an end to the
+attacks upon it, or upon the action of the Senate and the Executive.
+Nevertheless, it turned the tide, and, as Washington foresaw, brought
+out a strong movement in its favor. Hamilton began the work by the
+publication of the letters of "Camillus." The opposition newspapers
+sneered, but after Jefferson had read a few numbers he begged Madison
+in alarm to answer them. His fears were well grounded, for the letters
+were reprinted in newspapers throughout the country, and their
+powerful and temperate arguments made converts and strengthened the
+friends of the administration everywhere. The approaching surrender of
+the posts gratified the western people when they at last stopped to
+think about it. The obnoxious provision order was revoked, and the
+traders and merchants found that security and commerce even under
+unpleasant restrictions were a great deal better than the uncertainty
+and the vexatious hostilities to which they had before been exposed.
+Those who had been silent, although friendly to the policy of the
+government, now began to meet in their turn and send addresses to
+Congress; for in the House of Representatives the last battle was to
+be fought.
+
+That body came together under the impression of the agitation and
+excitement which had been going on all through the summer. There was a
+little wrangling at the opening over the terms to be employed in the
+answer to the President's message, and then the House relapsed into
+quiet, awaiting the formal announcement of the treaty. At last the
+treaty arrived with the addition of the suspending article, and the
+President proclaimed it to be the law of the land, and sent a copy to
+the House. Livingston, of New York, at once moved a resolution, asking
+the President to send in all the papers relating to the negotiation,
+and boldly placed the motion on the ground that the House was vested
+with a discretionary power as to carrying the treaty into execution.
+On this principle the debate went on for three weeks, and then the
+resolution passed by 62 to 37. A great constitutional question was
+thus raised, for there was no pretense that the papers were really
+needed, inasmuch as committees had seen them all, and they contained
+practically nothing which was not already known.
+
+Washington took the request into consideration, and asked his cabinet
+whether the House had the right, as set forth in the resolutions, to
+call for the papers, and if not, whether it was expedient to furnish
+them. Both questions were unanimously answered in the negative. The
+inquiry was largely formal, and Washington had no real doubts on the
+point involved. He wrote to Hamilton: "I had from the first moment,
+and from the fullest conviction in my own mind, resolved _to resist
+the principle_, which was evidently intended to be established by the
+call of the House of Representatives; and only deliberated on the
+manner in which this could be done with the least bad consequences."
+His only question was as to the method of resistance, and he finally
+decided to refuse absolutely, and did so in a message setting forth
+his reasons. He said that the intention of the constitutional
+convention was known to him, and that they had intended to vest the
+treaty-making power exclusively in the Executive and Senate. On
+that principle he had acted, and in that belief foreign nations had
+negotiated, and the House had hitherto acquiesced. He declared further
+that the assent of the House was not necessary to the validity of
+treaties; that they had all necessary information; and "as it is
+essential to the due administration of the government that the
+boundaries fixed by the Constitution should be preserved, a just
+regard to the Constitution and to the duty of my office, under all the
+circumstances of this case, forbid a compliance with your request."
+The question was a difficult one, but there could be no doubt as to
+Washington's opinion, and the weight of authority has sustained his
+view. From the practical and political side there can be little
+question that his position was extremely sound. In a letter to
+Carrington he gave the reasons for his action, and no better statement
+of the argument in a general way has ever been made. He wrote:--
+
+ "No candid man in the least degree acquainted with the progress
+ of this business will believe for a moment that the _ostensible_
+ dispute was about papers, or whether the British treaty was a good
+ one or a bad one, but whether there should be a treaty at all
+ without the concurrence of the House of Representatives. This
+ was striking at once, and that boldly, too, at the fundamental
+ principles of the Constitution; and, if it were established, would
+ render the treaty-making power not only a nullity, but such an
+ absolute absurdity as to reflect disgrace on the framers of it.
+ For will any one suppose that they who framed, or those who
+ adopted, that instrument ever intended to give the power to the
+ President and Senate to make treaties, and, declaring that when
+ made and ratified they should be the supreme law of the land,
+ would in the same breath place it in the power of the House of
+ Representatives to fix their vote on them, unless apparent marks
+ of fraud or corruption (which in equity would set aside any
+ contract) accompanied the measure, or such striking evidence of
+ national injury attended their adoption as to make a war or any
+ other evil preferable? Every unbiased mind will answer in the
+ negative.
+
+ "What the source and what the object of all this struggle is, I
+ submit to my fellow-citizens. Charity would lead me to hope that
+ the motives to it would be pure. Suspicions, however, speak
+ a different language, and my tongue for the present shall be
+ silent."
+
+No man who has ever held high office in this country had a more real
+deference for the popular will than Washington. But he also had always
+a keen sensitiveness to the dignity and the prerogatives of the office
+which he happened to hold, whether it was that of president or general
+of the armies. This arose from no personal feeling, for he was too
+great a man ever to worry about his own dignity; but he esteemed the
+great offices to which he was called to be trusts, which were to
+suffer no injury while in his hands. He regarded the attempt of the
+House of Representatives to demand the papers as a matter of right
+as an encroachment on the rights of the Executive Department, and he
+therefore resisted it at once, and after his usual fashion left no one
+in any doubt as to his views. So far as the President was concerned,
+the struggle ended here; but it was continued for some time longer in
+the House, where the debate went on for a fortnight, with the hostile
+majority surely and steadily declining. The current out-doors ran more
+and more strongly every day in favor of the administration, until
+at last the contest ended with Ames's great speech, and then the
+resolution to carry out the treaty prevailed. Washington's policy had
+triumphed, and was accepted by the country.
+
+The Jay treaty and its ratification had, however, other results
+than mere domestic conflicts. Spain, acting under French influence,
+threatened to rescind the Pinckney treaty which had just been made
+so advantageously to the United States; but, like most Spanish
+performances at that time, these threats evaporated in words, and the
+Mississippi remained open. With France, however, the case was very
+different. Our demand for the recall of Genet had been met by a
+counter-demand for the recall of Morris, to which, of course, we were
+obliged to accede, and the question as to the latter's successor was
+a difficult and important one. Washington himself had been perfectly
+satisfied with the conduct of Morris, but he was also aware that the
+known dislike of that brilliant diplomatist to the revolutionary
+methods then dominant in Paris had seriously complicated our relations
+with France. He wished by all fair means to keep France in good humor,
+and he therefore determined that Morris's successor should be a man
+whose friendship toward the French republic was well known. His first
+choice was Madison, which would have answered admirably, for Madison
+was preeminently a safe man. Very unluckily, however, Madison either
+could not or would not go, and the President's final choice was by no
+means equally good.
+
+It was, of course, most desirable that the new minister should be
+_persona grata_ to the republic, but it was vastly more important that
+he should be in cordial sympathy with the administration at home,
+for no administration ought ever to select for a foreign mission,
+especially at a critical moment, any one outside the ranks of its own
+supporters. This was the mistake which Washington, from the best of
+motives, now committed by appointing James Monroe to be minister to
+France. It is one of the puzzles of our history to reconcile the
+respectable and common-place gentleman, who for two terms as President
+of the United States had less opposition than ever fell to the lot
+of any other man in that office, with the violent, unscrupulous, and
+extremely light-headed politician who figured as senator from Virginia
+and minister to France at the close of the last century. Monroe at
+the time of his appointment had distinguished himself chiefly by his
+extreme opposition to the administration, and by his intrigues against
+Hamilton, which were so dishonestly conducted that they ultimately
+compelled the publication of the "Reynolds Pamphlet," a sore trial to
+its author, and a lasting blot on the fame of the enemy who made the
+publication necessary. From such a man loyalty to the President who
+appointed him was hardly to be expected. But there was no reason
+to suppose that he would lose his head, and forget that he was an
+American, and not a French citizen.
+
+Monroe reached Paris in the summer of 1794. He was publicly received
+by the Convention, made an undignified and florid speech, received
+the national embrace from the president of the Convention, and then
+effected an exchange of flags with more embracings and addresses.
+But when he came to ask redress for the wrongs committed against our
+merchants, he got no satisfaction. So far as he was concerned, this
+appears to have been a matter of indifference, for he at once occupied
+himself with the French proposition that we should lend France five
+millions of dollars, and France in return was to see to it that we
+obtained control of the Spanish possessions in North America. Monroe
+fell in with this precious scheme to make the United States a
+dependency of France, and received as a reward vast promises as to
+what the great republic would do for us. Meantime he regarded with
+suspicion Jay's movements in England, and endeavored to obtain
+information, if not control, of that negotiation. In this he
+completely failed; but he led the French government to believe, first,
+that the English treaty would not be made, then that it would not be
+ratified, and finally that the House would not make the appropriations
+necessary to carry it into effect; and all the time he was
+compromising his own government by his absurd efforts to involve it in
+an offensive alliance with France. The upshot of it all was that he
+was disowned at home, discredited in France, and brought our relations
+with that nation into a state of dangerous complication, without
+obtaining any redress for our injuries.
+
+Washington at first, little as he liked the theatrical performances
+with which Monroe opened his mission, wrote about him with great
+moderation to Jay, who was naturally much annoyed by the manner in
+which Monroe had tried to interfere with his negotiations. Six months
+later, however, Washington saw only too plainly that he had been
+mistaken in his minister to France. He wrote to Randolph on July 24,
+1795: "The conduct of Mr. Monroe is of a piece with that of the other;
+and one can scarcely forbear thinking that these acts are part of a
+premeditated system to embarrass the executive government." When it
+became clear that Monroe had omitted to explain properly our reasons
+for treating with England, that he had held out hopes to the French
+government which were totally unauthorized, that he had brought on a
+renewal of the hostilities of that government, and that he had placed
+us in all ways in the most unenviable light, Washington recalled him,
+and appointed Charles Cotesworth Pinckney in his place. By this time
+too he was thoroughly disgusted with Monroe's performances, and in his
+letter to Pinckney, on July 8, 1796, offering him the appointment to
+Paris, he said: "It is a fact too notorious to be denied that the
+greatest embarrassments under which the administration of this
+government labors proceed from the counter-action of people among
+ourselves, who are more disposed to promote the views of another
+nation than to establish a national character of their own; and that,
+unless the virtuous and independent men of this country will come
+forward, it is not difficult to predict the consequences. Such is my
+decided opinion." He felt, as he wrote to Hamilton at the close of his
+administration, that "the conduct of France towards this country is,
+according to my ideas of it, outrageous beyond conception; not to
+be warranted by her treaty with us, by the law of nations, by any
+principle of justice, or even by a regard to decent appearances." This
+was after we had begun to reap the humiliations which Monroe's folly
+had prepared for us, and it is easy to understand that Washington
+regarded their author with anything but satisfaction or approval.
+
+The culprit himself took a very different view, came home presently
+in great wrath, and proceeded to pose as a martyr and compile
+a vindication, which he entitled "A View of the Conduct of the
+Executive," and which surpassed in bulk any of the vindications in
+which that period of our history was prolific. It was published after
+Washington had retired to private life, and did not much disturb his
+serenity. In a letter to Nicholas, on March 8, 1798, he said: "If the
+executive is chargeable with 'premeditating the destruction of Mr.
+Monroe in his appointment, because he was the _centre_ around which
+the Republican party rallied in the Senate' (a circumstance quite new
+to me), it is to be hoped he will give it credit for its lenity toward
+that gentleman in having designated several others, not of the Senate,
+as victims to this office _before_ the sacrifice of Mr. Monroe was
+even had in contemplation. As this must be some consolation to him and
+his friends, I hope they will embrace it."
+
+Washington apparently did not think Monroe was worthy of anything more
+serious than a little sarcasm, and he was quite content, as he said,
+to leave the book to the tribunal to which the author himself had
+appealed. He read the book, however, with care, and in his methodical
+way he appended a number of notes, which are worth consideration
+by all persons interested in the character of Washington. They are
+especially to be commended to those who think that he was merely good
+and wise and solemn, for it would be difficult to find a better piece
+of destructive criticism, or a more ready and thorough knowledge of
+complicated foreign relations, than are contained in these brief
+notes. His own opinion of Monroe is concisely stated in one of them.
+Referring to one of that gentleman's statements he said: "For this
+there is no better proof than his own opinion; whilst there is
+abundant evidence of his being a mere tool in the hands of the French
+government, cajoled and led away always by unmeaning assurances of
+friendship." With this brief comment we may leave the Monroe incident.
+His appointment was a mistake, and increased existing complications,
+which were not finally settled until the next administration.
+
+Monroe's recall was the last act, however, in the long contest of the
+Jay treaty, and it was also, as it happened, the last important act in
+Washington's foreign policy. That policy has been traced here in its
+various branches, but it is worth while to look at it as a whole
+before leaving it, in order to see just what the President aimed at
+and just what he effected. The guiding principle, which had been with
+him from the day when he took command of the army at Cambridge, was to
+make the United States independent. The war had achieved this so far
+as our connection with England was concerned, but it still remained to
+prove to the world that we were an independent nation in fact as well
+as in name. For this the neutrality policy was adopted and carried
+out. We were not only to cease from dependence on the nations of
+Europe, but we were to go on our own way with a policy of our own
+wholly apart from them. It was also necessary to lift up our own
+politics, to detach our minds from those of other nations, and to make
+us truly Americans. All this Washington's policy did so far as it was
+possible to do it in the time given to him. A new generation had to
+come upon the stage before our politics were finally taken out of
+colonialism and made national and American, but the idea was that
+of the first President. It was the foresight and the courage of
+Washington which at the outset placed the United States in their
+relations with foreign nations on the ground of a firm, independent,
+and American policy.
+
+His foreign policy had, however, some immediate practical results
+which were of vast importance. In December, 1795, he wrote to Morris:
+"It is well known that peace has been (to borrow a modern phrase)
+the order of the day with me since the disturbances in Europe first
+commenced. My policy has been, and will continue to be while I have
+the honor to remain in the administration, to maintain friendly terms
+with, but to be independent of, all the nations of the earth; to share
+in the broils of none; to fulfill our own engagements; to supply the
+wants and be carriers for them all; being thoroughly convinced that it
+is our policy and interest to do so. Nothing short of self-respect
+and that justice which is essential to a national character ought to
+involve us in war; for sure I am, if this country is preserved in
+tranquillity twenty years longer, it may bid defiance in a just cause
+to any power whatever; such in that time would be its population,
+wealth, and resources."
+
+He wanted time, but he wanted space also for his country; and if we
+look for a moment at the results of his foreign policy we see clearly
+how he got both. The time gained by peace without any humiliating
+concessions is plain enough. If we look a little further and a little
+deeper, we can see how he compassed his other object. The true and the
+first mission of the American people was, in Washington's theory, the
+conquest of the continent which stretched away wild and silent behind
+them, for in that direction lay the sure road to national greatness.
+The first step was to bind by interest, trade, and habit of
+communication the Atlantic States with the settlements beyond the
+mountains, and for this he had planned canals and highways in the days
+of the confederation. The next step was to remove every obstacle which
+fettered the march of American settlement; and for this he rolled
+back the Indian tribes, patiently negotiated with Spain until the
+Mississippi was opened, and at great personal sacrifice and trial
+signed the Jay treaty, and obtained the surrender of the British
+posts. When Washington went out of office, the way was open to the
+western movement; the dangers of disintegration by reason of foreign
+intrigues on the frontier were removed; peace had been maintained; and
+the national sentiment had had opportunity for rapid growth. France
+had discovered that, although she had been our ally, we were not her
+dependants; other nations had been brought to perceive that the United
+States meant to have a foreign policy all its own; and the American
+people were taught that their first duty was to be Americans and
+nothing else. There is no need to comment on or to praise the
+greatness of a policy with such objects and results as these. The mere
+summary is enough, and it speaks for itself and for its author in a
+way which makes words needless.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+WASHINGTON AS A PARTY MAN
+
+
+Washington was not chosen to office by a political party; he
+considered parties to be perilous things, and he entered the
+presidency determined to have nothing to do with them. Yet, as has
+already been pointed out, he took the members of his cabinet entirely
+from one of the two parties which then existed, and which had been
+produced by the divisions over the Constitution and its adoption. To
+this charge he would no doubt have replied that the parties caused
+by the constitutional differences had ceased to exist when that
+instrument went into operation, and that it was to be supposed that
+all men were then united in support of the government. Accepting this
+view of it, it only remains to see how he fared when new and purely
+political parties, as was inevitable, sprang into active life.
+
+Whatever his own opinions may have been as to parties and
+party-strife, Washington was under no delusions in regard either to
+human nature or to himself, and he had no expectation that everything
+he said or did would meet with universal approbation. He well knew
+that there would be dissatisfaction, and no man ever took high office
+with a mind more ready to bear criticism and to profit by it. Three
+months after his inauguration he wrote to his friend David Stuart:
+"I should like to be informed of the public opinion of both men and
+measures, and of none more than myself; not so much of what may be
+thought commendable parts, if any, of my conduct, as of those which
+are conceived to be of a different complexion. The man who means to
+commit no wrong will never be guilty of enormities; consequently he
+can never be unwilling to learn what are ascribed to him as foibles.
+If they are really such, the knowledge of them in a well-disposed mind
+will go half-way towards a reform. If they are not errors, he can
+explain and justify the motives of his actions." This readiness
+to hear criticism and this watching of public opinion were
+characteristic, for his one desire was to know the truth and never
+deceive himself. His journey through New England in the autumn of that
+year, his visit to Rhode Island a year later, and his trip through the
+southern States in the spring of 1791, had a double motive. He wished
+to bring home to the people the existence and the character of the new
+government by his appearance among them as its representative; and he
+desired also to learn from his own observation, and from inquiries
+made on the spot, what the people thought of the administration and
+its policies, and of the doings of Congress. He was a keen observer
+and a good gatherer of information; for he was patient and persistent,
+and had that best of all gifts for getting at public opinion, an
+absolute and cheerful readiness to listen to advice from any one. His
+travels all had the same result. In the South as in New England he
+found that the people were pleased with the new government, and
+contented with the prosperity which began at once to flow from the
+adoption of a stable national system.
+
+More credit, if anything, was given to it than it really deserved;
+for, as he had written to Lafayette before the Constitution went into
+effect, "Many blessings will be attributed to our new government which
+are now taking their rise from that industry and frugality into which
+the people have been forced from necessity." Whether this were true or
+not, the new government was entitled to the benefit of all accidents,
+and Washington's correct conclusion was that the great body of the
+people were heartily with him and his administration. But he was
+also quite aware that all the criticism was not friendly, and as
+the measures of the government one by one passed Congress, he saw
+divisions of sentiment appear, slight at first, but deepening and
+hardening with each successive contest. Indeed, he had not been in
+office a year when he wrote a long letter to Stuart deploring the
+sectionalism which had begun to show itself. The South was complaining
+that everything was done in the interest of the northern and eastern
+States, and against this idea Washington argued with great force. He
+was especially severe on the unreasonable and childish character of
+such grievances, and he attributed the feeling in certain States
+largely to the outcries of persons who had come home disappointed
+in some personal matter from the seat of government. "It is to be
+lamented," he said, "that the editors of the different gazettes in the
+Union do not more generally and more correctly (instead of stuffing
+their papers with scurrility and nonsensical declamation, which few
+would read if they were apprised of the contents) publish the debates
+in Congress on all great national questions. And this, with no
+uncommon pains, every one of them might do." Washington evidently
+believed that there was no serious danger of the people going wrong
+if they were only fully informed. But the able editors of that day no
+doubt felt that they and their correspondents were better fitted to
+enlighten the public than any one else could be, and there is no
+evidence that any of them ever followed the President's suggestion.
+
+The jealousies and the divisions in Congress, which Washington watched
+with hearty dislike on account of their sectional character, began, as
+is well known, with the financial measures of the Treasury. As time
+went on they became steadily more marked and better defined, and at
+last they spread to the cabinet. Jefferson had returned to take his
+place as Secretary of State after an absence of many years, and
+during that time he had necessarily dropped out of the course of
+home politics. He came back with a very moderate liking for the
+Constitution, and an intention undoubtedly to do his best as a member
+of the cabinet. His first and most natural impulse, of course, was
+to fall in with the administration of which he was a part; and so
+completely did he do this that it was at his table that the famous
+bargain was made which assumed the state debts and took the capital to
+the banks of the Potomac.
+
+Exactly what led to the first breach between Jefferson and Hamilton,
+whose financial policy was then in the full tide of success, is not
+now very easy to determine. Jefferson's action was probably due to a
+mixture of motives and a variety of causes, as is generally the case
+with men, even when they are founders of the democratic party. In the
+first place, Jefferson very soon discovered that Hamilton was
+looked upon as the leader in the cabinet and in the policies of the
+administration, and this fact excited a very natural jealousy on his
+part, because he was the official head of the President's advisers.
+In the second place, it was inevitable that Jefferson should dislike
+Hamilton, for there never were two men more unlike in character and in
+their ways of looking at things. Hamilton was bold, direct, imperious,
+and masculine; he went straight to his mark, and if he encountered
+opposition he either rode over it or broke it down. When Jefferson
+met with opposition he went round it or undermined it; he was adroit,
+flexible, and extremely averse to open fighting. There was also good
+ground for a genuine difference of opinion between the two secretaries
+in regard to the policy of the government. Jefferson was a thorough
+representative of the great democratic movement of the time. At bottom
+his democracy was of the sensible, practical American type, but he
+had come home badly bitten by many of the wild notions which at that
+moment pervaded Paris. A man of much less insight than Jefferson would
+have had no difficulty in perceiving that Hamilton and his
+friends were not in sympathy with these ideas. They hoped for the
+establishment of a republic, but they desired for it a highly
+energetic and centralized government not devoid of aristocratic
+tendencies. This fundamental difference of opinion, increased as it
+was by personal jealousies, soon put Jefferson, therefore, into an
+attitude of hostility to the men who were then guiding the policy of
+the government. The new administration had been so successful that
+there was at first practically no party of opposition, and the task
+before Jefferson involved the creation of a party, the formulation of
+principles, and the definition of issues, with appropriate shibboleths
+for popular consumption. Jefferson knew that Hamilton and all who
+fought with him were as sincerely in favor of a republic as he himself
+was; but his unerring genius in political management told him that he
+could never raise a party or make a party-cry out of the statement
+that, while he favored a democratic republic, the men to whom he was
+opposed preferred one of a more aristocratic caste. It was necessary
+to have something much more highly seasoned than this. So he took the
+ground that his opponents were monarchists, bent on establishing a
+monarchy in this country, and were backed by a "corrupt squadron"
+in Congress in the pay of the Treasury. This was of course utter
+nonsense, but it served its purpose admirably. Jefferson, indeed,
+shouted these cries so much that he almost came to believe in them
+himself, and sympathetic writers to this day repeat them as if they
+had reality instead of having been mere noise to frighten the unwary.
+The prime object of it all was to make the great leaders odious by
+connecting them in the popular mind with the royal government that had
+been overthrown.
+
+Jefferson's first move was a covert one. In the spring of 1791 he
+received Thomas Paine's "Rights of Man," and straightway sent the
+pamphlet to the printer with a note of approbation reflecting upon
+John Adams. The pamphlet promptly appeared in a reprint with the
+note prefixed. It made much stir, and the published approval of the
+Secretary of State excited a great deal of criticism, much of which
+was very hostile. Jefferson thereupon expressed extreme surprise that
+his note had been printed, and on the plea of explaining the matter
+wrote to Washington a letter, in which he declared that his friend
+Mr. Adams, for whom he had a most cordial esteem, was an apostate to
+hereditary monarchy and nobility. He further described his old friend
+as a political heretic and as the bellwether Davila, upon whom and
+whose writings Mr. Adams had recently been publishing some discourses.
+It is but fair to say that no more ingenious attack on the
+Vice-President could have been made, but the purpose of it was simply
+to arrest the public attention for the real struggle which was to
+follow.
+
+The true object of all these movements was to rally a party and break
+down Jefferson's great colleague in the cabinet. The "Rights of Man"
+served to start the discussion; and the next step was to bring on from
+New York Philip Freneau, a verse-writer and journalist, and make him
+translating clerk in the State Department, and editor of an opposition
+newspaper known as the "National Gazette." The new journal proceeded
+to do its work after the fashion of the time. It teemed with abuse
+not only of Hamilton and Adams and all the supporters of the treasury
+measures, denouncing them as "monarchists," "aristocrats," and "a
+corrupt squadron," but it even began a series of coarse assaults
+upon the President himself. Jefferson, of course, denied that he had
+anything to do with the writing in the newspaper, and Freneau made
+oath at the time that the Secretary wrote nothing; but in his old age
+he declared that Jefferson wrote or dictated all the most abusive
+articles, and he showed a file of the "Gazette" with these articles
+marked. Strict veracity was not the strongest characteristic of either
+Freneau or Jefferson, and it is really of but little consequence
+whether Freneau was lying in his old age or in the prime of life. The
+undoubted facts of the case are enough to fix the responsibility upon
+Jefferson, where it belongs. The editor of a newspaper devoted
+to abusing the administration was brought to Philadelphia by the
+Secretary of State, was given a place in his department, and was his
+confidential friend. Jefferson himself took advantage of his
+position to gather material for attacks upon his chief, and upon his
+colleagues, to whom he was bound to be loyal by every rule which
+dictates the conduct of honorable men. He did not, moreover, content
+himself with this outside work. It has been too much overlooked that
+Jefferson, in addition to forming a party and organizing attacks upon
+the Secretary of the Treasury and his friends, sought in the first
+instance to break down Hamilton in the cabinet, to deprive him of the
+confidence of Washington, and by driving him from the administration
+to get control himself. At no time did Jefferson ever understand
+Washington, but he knew him well enough to be quite aware that he
+would never give up a friend like Hamilton on account of any newspaper
+attacks. He therefore took a more insidious method.
+
+Knowing that Washington was in the habit of consulting with old
+friends at home of all shades of opinion in regard to public affairs,
+he contrived through their agency to have his own charges against
+Hamilton laid before the President. He also, to make perfectly sure,
+wrote himself to Washington, candidly setting forth outside criticism,
+and his letter took the form of a well-arranged indictment of the
+Treasury measures. This method had the advantage of assailing Hamilton
+without incurring any responsibility, and the charges were skilfully
+formulated and ingeniously constructed to raise in the mind of the
+reader every possible suspicion. At this point Washington comes for
+the first time into the famous controversy from which our two great
+political parties were born. He did exactly what Jefferson would not
+have done, sent the charges all duly formulated to Hamilton, and asked
+him his opinion about them. As the accusations thus made against the
+policies of the government and the Secretary of the Treasury were all
+mere wind of the "monarchist" and "corrupt squadron" order, Hamilton
+disposed of them with very little difficulty. The whole proceeding,
+if Jefferson was aware of it at the time, must have been a great
+disappointment to him. But his mistake was the natural error of an
+ingenious man wasting his efforts on one of great directness and
+perfect simplicity of character. Hamilton's answer was what Washington
+undoubtedly expected. He knew the hollowness of the attack, but none
+the less he was made anxious by it as an indication of the serious
+party divisions rising about him. This, however, was but the
+beginning, and he was soon to have much more direct evidence of the
+grave nature of a political conflict, which he then could not bring
+himself to believe was irrepressible.
+
+Hamilton, on his side, was not the most patient of men, and although
+he bore the attacks of Frenean for some time in silence he finally
+retaliated. He did not get any one to do his fighting for him, but
+under a thin disguise proceeded to answer in Fenno's newspaper the
+abuse of the "National Gazette." He was the best political writer in
+the country, and when he struck, his blows told. Jefferson winced and
+cried out under the punishment, but it would have been more dignified
+in Hamilton to have kept out of the newspapers. Still there was the
+fight. It had gone from the cabinet to the press, and the public knew
+that the two principal secretaries were at swords' points and were
+marshaling behind them strong political forces. The point had been
+reached where the President was compelled to interfere unless he
+wished his administration to be thoroughly discredited by the bitter
+and open conflicts of its members.
+
+He wrote to both secretaries in a grave and almost pathetic tone of
+remonstrance, urging them to abandon their quarrel, and, sinking minor
+differences, to work with him for the success of the Constitution to
+which they were both devoted. Each man replied after his fashion.
+Hamilton's letter was short and straight-forward. He could not profess
+to have changed his opinion as to the conduct or purpose of his
+colleague, but he regretted the strife which had arisen, and promised
+to do all that was in his power to allay it by ceasing from further
+attacks. Jefferson wrote at great length, controverting Hamilton's
+published letters in a way which showed that he was still smarting
+from the well-aimed shafts. He also contrived to make his own defense
+the vehicle for a renewal of all his accusations against the Treasury,
+and he wound up by saying that he looked forward to retirement with
+the longing of "a wave-worn mariner," and that he should reserve any
+further fighting that he had to do until he was out of office. Soon
+after he followed this letter with another, containing a collection
+of extracts from his own correspondence while in Paris, to show his
+devotion to the Constitution. One is irresistibly reminded by all
+this of the Player Queen--"The lady protests too much, methinks."
+Washington had not accused Jefferson of lack of loyalty to the
+Constitution, indeed he had made no accusations against him of any
+kind; but Jefferson knew that his own position was a false one, and
+he could not refrain from taking a defensive tone. Washington, in his
+reply, said that he needed no proofs of Jefferson's fidelity to the
+Constitution, and reiterated his earnest desire for an accommodation
+of all differences. "I will frankly and solemnly declare," he said,
+"that I believe the views of both of you to be pure and well-meant,
+and that experience only will decide with respect to the salutariness
+of the measures which are the subjects of dispute.... I could, and
+indeed was about to, add more on this interesting subject, but will
+forbear, at least for the present, after expressing a wish that the
+cup which has been presented to us may not be snatched from our
+lips by a discordance of action, when I am persuaded there is no
+discordance in your views."
+
+The difficulty was that there was not only discordance in the views of
+the two secretaries, but a fundamental political difference, extending
+throughout the people, which they typified. The accommodation of views
+and the support of the Constitution could only mean a support of
+Washington's administration and its measures. Those measures not
+only had the President's approval, but they were in many respects
+peculiarly his own, and in them he rightly saw the success and
+maintenance of the Constitution. But, unfortunately for the interests
+of harmony, these measures were either devised or ardently sustained
+by the Secretary of the Treasury. They were not the measures of the
+Secretary of State, and received from him either lukewarm support
+or active, if furtive, hostility. The only peace possible was in
+Jefferson's giving in his entire adherence to the policies of
+Washington and Hamilton, which were radically opposed to his own. In
+one word, a real, profound, and inevitable party division had come,
+and it had found the opposing chiefs side by side in the cabinet.
+
+Against this conclusion Washington struggled hard. He had come in as
+the representative and by the votes of the whole people, and he shrank
+from any step which would seem to make him lean on a party for support
+in his administration. He had made up his cabinet with what he very
+justly considered the strongest material. He believed that a breaking
+up of the cabinet or a change in its membership would be an injury to
+the cause of good government, and he was so entirely single-minded
+in his own views and wishes, that, with all his knowledge of human
+nature, he found it difficult to understand how any one could differ
+from him materially. Moreover, having started with the firm intention
+of governing without party, he determined, with his usual persistence,
+to carry it through, if it were possible. When party feeling had
+once developed, and division had sprung up between the two principal
+officers of his cabinet, no greater risk could have been run than
+that which Washington took in refusing to make the changes which were
+necessary to render the administration harmonious. With any lesser
+man, such a perilous experiment would have failed and brought with it
+disastrous consequences. There is no greater proof of the force of his
+will and the weight and strength of his character than the fact that
+he held in his cabinet Jefferson and Hamilton, despite their hatred
+for each other and each other's principles, and that he not only
+prevented any harm, but actually drew great results from the
+talents of each of them. Yet, with all his strength of grasp, this
+ill-assorted combination could not last, although Washington resisted
+the inevitable in a surprising way, and he even begged Jefferson to
+remain when the impossibility of doing so had become quite clear to
+that gentleman.
+
+The remonstrance in regard to the Freneau matter had but a temporary
+effect. Hamilton stopped his attacks, it is true; but Jefferson did
+not discontinue his, and he set on foot a movement which was designed
+to destroy his rival's public and private reputation. Hamilton met
+this attack in Congress, where he refuted it signally; and although
+the ostensible movers were members of the House, the defeat recoiled
+on the Secretary of State. Having failed in Congress and before the
+public to ruin his opponent, and having failed equally to shake
+Washington's confidence in Hamilton or the latter's influence in the
+administration, Jefferson made up his mind that the cabinet was no
+longer the place for him. He became more than ever satisfied that
+he was a "wave-worn mariner," and after some hesitation he finally
+resigned and transferred his political operations to another field. A
+year later Hamilton, from very different reasons of a purely private
+character, followed him.
+
+Meantime many events had occurred which all tended to show the growing
+intensity of party divisions, and which were not without their effect
+upon the mind of the President. In 1792 it became necessary to
+consider the question of the approaching election, and all elements
+united in urging upon Washington the absolute necessity of accepting
+the presidency a second time. Hamilton and the Federalists, of course,
+desired Washington's reelection, because they regarded him as their
+leader, as the friend and supporter of their measures, and as the
+great bulwark of the government. Jefferson, who was equally urgent,
+felt that in the unformed condition of his own party the withdrawal of
+Washington, in addition to its injury to the general welfare,
+would leave his incoherent forces at the mercy of an avowed and
+thorough-going Federalist administration.
+
+So it came about that Washington received another unanimous election.
+He had no great longing for public office, but at this time he seems
+to have been not without a desire to continue President, in order that
+he might carry his measures to completion. In the unanimity of the
+choice he took a perfectly natural pleasure, for besides the personal
+satisfaction, he could not but feel that it greatly strengthened his
+hands in doing the work which he had at heart. On January 20, 1793,
+he wrote to Henry Lee: "A mind must be insensible, indeed, not to be
+gratefully impressed by so distinguished and honorable a testimony of
+public approbation and confidence; and as I suffered my name to be
+contemplated on this occasion, it is more than probable that I should,
+for a moment, have experienced chagrin if my reelection had not been
+by a pretty respectable vote. But to say I feel pleasure from the
+prospect of commencing another tour of duty would be a departure from
+the truth." Some time was still to pass before Washington, either by
+word or deed, would acknowledge himself to be the chief or even a
+member of a party; but before he entered the presidency a second time,
+he had no manner of doubt that a party existed which was opposed to
+him and to all his measures.
+
+The establishment of the government and the treasury measures had
+very quickly rallied a strong party, which kept the name that it had
+adopted while fighting the battles of the Constitution. They were
+known in their own day, and have been known ever since to history, as
+the Federalists. The opposition, composed chiefly of those who had
+resisted the adoption of the Constitution, were discredited at the
+very start by the success of the union and the new government. When
+Jefferson took hold of them they were disorganized and even nameless,
+having no better appellation than that of "Anti-Federalists." In
+the process of time their great chief gave them a name, a set of
+principles, a war-cry, an organization, and at last an overwhelming
+victory. They began to take on something like form and coherence in
+resisting Hamilton's financial measures; but the success of his policy
+was so dazzling that they were rather cowed by it, and were left by
+their defeat little better off in the way of discipline than before.
+The French Revolution and its consequences, including a war with
+England, gave them a much better opportunity. It is melancholy to
+think that American parties should have entered upon their first
+struggle purely on questions of foreign politics. The only explanation
+is to repeat that we were still colonists in all but name and
+allegiance, and it was Washington's task not only to establish a
+dignified and independent policy of his own abroad, but to beat down
+colonial politics at home.
+
+In the first burst of rejoicing over the uprising of the French
+people, no divisions were apparent; but the arrival of Genet was the
+signal for their beginning. The extraordinary spectacle was then
+presented of an American party arrayed against the administration
+under the lead of the French minister, and with the strong, although
+covert sympathy of the Secretary of State. The popular feeling in fact
+was so strongly with France that the new party seemed on the
+surface to have almost universal support. The firm attitude of the
+administration and Washington's unyielding adherence to his policy of
+neutrality gave them their first serious check, but also embittered
+their attacks. In the first three years of the government almost every
+one refrained from attacking Washington personally. The unlimited love
+and respect in which he was held were the principal causes of this
+moderation, but even those opponents who were not influenced by
+feelings of respect were restrained by a wholesome prudence from
+bringing upon themselves the odium of being enemies of the President.
+
+The fiction that the king could do no wrong was carried to the last
+extreme by the Long Parliament when they made war on Charles in order
+to remove him from evil counselors. It was, no doubt, the exercise of
+a wise conservatism in that instance; but in the United States, and
+in the ordinary condition of politics, such a position was of course
+untenable. The President was responsible for his cabinet and for the
+measures of his administration, and it was impossible to separate them
+long, even when the chief magistrate was so great and so well-beloved
+as Washington. Freneau, editing his newspaper from the office of the
+Secretary of State, seems to have been the first to break the line. He
+passed speedily from attacks on measures to attacks on men, and among
+the latter he soon included the President. Washington had had too much
+experience of slander and abuse during the revolutionary war to be
+worried by them. But Freneau took pains to send him copies of his
+newspapers, a piece of impertinence which apparently led to a little
+vigorous denunciation, the account of which seems probable, although
+our only authority is in Jefferson's "Ana." As the attacks went on and
+were extended, and when Bache joined in with the "Aurora," Washington
+was not long in coming to the unpleasant conclusion that all this
+opposition proceeded from a well-formed plan, and was the work of
+a party which designed to break down his measures and ruin his
+administration. All statesmen intrusted in a representative system
+with the work of government are naturally prone to think that their
+opponents are also the enemies of the public welfare, and Washington
+was no exception to the rule. Such an opinion is indeed unavoidable,
+for a public man must have faith that his own measures are the best
+for the country, and if he did not, he would be but a faint-hearted
+representative, unfit to govern and unable to lead. History has agreed
+with Washington in his view of the work of his administration, and has
+set it down as essential to the right and successful foundation of the
+government. It is not to be wondered at that at the moment Washington
+should regard a party swayed by the French minister and seeking to
+involve us in war as unpatriotic and dangerous. He even thought that
+one probable solution of Genet's conduct was that he was the tool and
+not the leader of the party which sustained him. In fact, his general
+view of the opposition was marked by that perfect clearness which was
+characteristic of all his opinions when he had fully formed them. In
+July, 1793, he wrote to Henry Lee:--
+
+"That there are in this as well as in all other countries,
+discontented characters, I well know; as also that these characters
+are actuated by very different views: some good, from an opinion that
+the general measures of the government are impure; some bad, and, if I
+might be allowed to use so harsh an expression, diabolical, inasmuch
+as they are not only meant to impede the measures of that government
+generally, but more especially, as a great means toward the
+accomplishment of it, to destroy the confidence which it is necessary
+for the people to place, until they have unequivocal proof of demerit,
+in their public servants. In this light I consider myself whilst I
+am an occupant of office; and if they were to go further and call me
+their slave during this period, I would not dispute the point.
+
+"But in what will this abuse terminate? For the result, as it respects
+myself, I care not; for I have a consolation within that no earthly
+efforts can deprive me of, and that is, that neither ambition
+nor interested motives have influenced my conduct. The arrows of
+malevolence, therefore, however barbed and well pointed, never can
+reach the most vulnerable part of me; though, whilst I am up as a
+_mark_, they will be continually aimed. The publications in Freneau's
+and Bache's papers are outrages on common decency, and they progress
+in that style in proportion as their pieces are treated with contempt,
+and are passed by in silence by those at whom they are aimed. The
+tendency of them, however, is too obvious to be mistaken by men of
+cool and dispassionate minds, and, in my opinion, ought to alarm them,
+because it is difficult to prescribe bounds to the effect."
+
+He was not much given, however, to talking about his assailants. If he
+said anything, it was usually only in the way of contemptuous sarcasm,
+as when he wrote to Morris: "The affairs of this country _cannot go
+amiss_. There are _so many watchful guardians of them_, and such
+_infallible guides_, that one is at no loss for a director at every
+turn. But of these matters I shall say little." If these attacks had
+any effect on him, it was only to make him more determined in carrying
+out his purposes. In the first skirmish, which ended in the recall
+of Genet, he not only prevailed, but the French minister's audacity
+especially in venturing to appeal to the people against their
+President, demoralized the opposition and brought public opinion round
+to the side of the administration with an overwhelming force.
+
+Genet's mischief, however, did not end with him. He had sown the seeds
+of many troubles, and among others the idea of societies on the model
+of the famous Jacobin Club of Paris. That American citizens should
+have so little self-respect as to borrow the political jargon and ape
+the political manners of Paris was sad enough. To put on red caps,
+drink confusion to tyrants, sing _Ca ira_, and call each other
+"citizen," was foolish to the verge of idiocy, but it was at least
+harmless. When, however, they began to form "democratic societies"
+on the model of the Jacobins, for the defense of liberty against a
+government which the people themselves had made, they ceased to be
+fatuous and became mischievous. These societies, senseless imitations
+of French examples, and having no real cause to defend liberty, became
+simply party organizations, with a strong tendency to foster license
+and disorder. Washington regarded them with unmixed disgust, for he
+attributed to them the agitation and discontent of the settlers beyond
+the mountains, which threatened to embroil us with Spain, and he
+believed also that the much more serious matter of the whiskey
+rebellion was their doing. After having exhausted every reasonable
+means of concession and compromise, and having concentrated the best
+public opinion of the country behind him, he resolved to put down this
+"rebellion" with a strong hand, and he wrote to Henry Lee, just as
+he was preparing to take the last step: "It is with equal pride and
+satisfaction I add that, as far as my information extends, this
+insurrection is viewed with universal indignation and abhorrence,
+except by those who have never missed an opportunity, by side-blows
+or otherwise, to attack the general government; and even among these
+there is not a spirit hardy enough yet openly to justify the daring
+infractions of law and order; but by palliatives they are attempting
+to suspend all proceedings against the insurgents, until Congress
+shall have decided on the case, thereby intending to gain time, and,
+if possible, to make the evil more extensive, more formidable, and, of
+course, more difficult to counteract and subdue.
+
+"I consider this insurrection as the first formidable fruit of the
+democratic societies, brought forth, I believe, too prematurely for
+their own views, which may contribute to the annihilation of them."
+
+The insurrection vanished on the advance of the forces of the United
+States. It had been formidable enough to alarm all conservative
+people, and its inglorious end left the opposition, which had given it
+a certain encouragement, much discredited. This matter being settled,
+Washington determined to strike next at what he considered the chief
+sources of the evil, the clubs, which, to use his own words, "were
+instituted for the express purpose of poisoning the minds of the
+people of this country, and making them discontented with the
+government." Accordingly, in his speech to the next Congress he
+denounced the democratic societies. After tracing the course of the
+whiskey rebellion, he said:--
+
+"And when in the calm moments of reflection they [the citizens of
+the United States] shall have traced the origin and progress of the
+insurrection, let them determine whether it has not been fomented by
+combinations of men, who, careless of consequences, and disregarding
+the unerring truth, that those who rouse cannot always appease a civil
+convulsion, have disseminated, from an ignorance or perversion
+of facts, suspicions, jealousies, and accusations of the whole
+government."
+
+The opposition both in Congress and in the newspapers shrieked loudly
+over this plain speaking; but when Washington struck a blow, it was
+usually well timed, and the present instance was no exception. Coming
+immediately after the failure of the insurrection, and the triumph of
+the government, this strong expression of the President's disapproval
+had a fatal effect upon the democratic societies. They withered away
+with the rapidity of weeds when their roots have been skillfully cut.
+
+After this, even if Washington still refused to consider himself the
+head of a party, the opposition no longer had any doubts on that
+point. They not only regarded him as the chief of the Federalists, but
+also, and with perfect justice, as their own most dangerous enemy,
+and the man who had dealt them and their cause the most deadly blows.
+Whatever restraint they may have hitherto placed upon themselves in
+dealing with him personally, they now abandoned, and the opportunity
+for open war soon came to them in the vexed question of the British
+treaty, where they occupied much better ground than in the Genet
+affair, and commanded much more popular sympathy. Their orators did
+not hesitate to say that the conduct of the President in this affair
+had been improper and monarchical, and that he ought to be impeached.
+After the treaty was signed, the "Aurora" declared that the President
+had violated the Constitution, and made a treaty with a nation
+abhorred by our people; that he answered the respectful remonstrances
+of Boston and New York as if he were the omnipotent director of a
+seraglio, and had thundered contempt upon the people with as much
+confidence as if he sat upon the throne of "Industan."
+
+All these remarks and many more of like tenor have been gathered
+together and very picturesquely arranged by Mr. McMaster, in whose
+volumes they may be studied with advantage by any one who has doubts
+as to Washington's political position. It is not probable that the
+writer of the brilliant diatribe just quoted had any very distinct
+idea about either seraglios or "Industan," but he, and others of like
+mind, probably took pleasure in the words, as did the old woman who
+always loved to hear Mesopotamia mentioned. Other persons, however,
+were more definite in their statements. John Beckley, who had once
+been clerk of the House, writing under the very opposite signature of
+"A Calm Observer," declared that Washington had been overdrawing his
+salary in defiance of law, and had actually stolen in this way $4,750.
+Such being the case, the "Calm Observer" very naturally inquired:
+"What will posterity say of the man who has done this thing? Will it
+not say that the mask of political hypocrisy has been worn by Caesar,
+by Cromwell, and by Washington?" Another patriot, also of the
+Democratic party, declared that the President had been false to
+a republican government. He said that Washington maintained the
+seclusion of a monk and the supercilious distance of a tyrant; and
+that the concealing carriage drawn by supernumerary horses expressed
+the will of the President, and defined the loyal duty of the people.
+
+The support of Genet, the democratic societies, and now this concerted
+and bitter opposition to the Jay treaty, convinced Washington, if
+conviction were needed, that he could carry on his administration only
+by the help of those who were thoroughly in sympathy with his policy
+and purposes. When Jefferson left the State Department, the President
+promoted Randolph, and put Bradford, a Federalist, in the place of
+Attorney-General. When Hamilton left the Treasury, Oliver Wolcott,
+Hamilton's right-hand man, and the staunchest of party men, was
+given the position thus left vacant. If Randolph had remained in the
+cabinet, he would have become a Federalist. Like all men disposed to
+turn, when he was compelled to jump he sprang far, as was shown by
+his signing the treaty and memorial, both of which he strongly
+disapproved. He was quite ready to fall in with the rest of the
+cabinet, but on account of the Fauchet dispatch he resigned. Then
+Washington, after offering the portfolio to several persons known to
+be in hearty sympathy with him, took the risk of giving it to Timothy
+Pickering, who was by no means a safe leader, rather than take any
+chance of getting another adviser who was not entirely of his own way
+of thinking. At the same time he gave the secretaryship of war to
+James McHenry, a most devoted personal friend and follower. He still
+held back from calling himself a party chief, but he had discovered,
+as William of Orange discovered, that he could not, even with his iron
+will and lofty intent, overcome the impossible, alter human nature,
+or carry on a successful government under a representative system,
+without the assistance of a party. He stated his conclusion with his
+wonted plainness in a letter to Pickering written in September, 1795,
+in the midst of the struggle over the treaty. "I shall not," he said,
+"whilst I have the honor to administer the government, bring a man
+into any office of consequence knowingly, whose political tenets are
+adverse to the measures which the general government are pursuing; for
+this, in my opinion, would be a sort of political suicide. That it
+would embarrass its movements is most certain." A terser statement of
+the doctrine of party government it would be difficult to find, and
+in the conduct of Monroe and the course of the opposition journals
+Washington had ample proofs of the soundness of his theory.
+
+If he had needed to be strengthened in his determination, his
+opponents furnished the requisite aid. In February, 1796, the House
+refused to adjourn on his birthday for half an hour, in order to go
+and pay him their respects, as had been the pleasant custom up to that
+time. The Democrats of that day were in no confusion of mind as to the
+party to which Washington belonged, and they did not hesitate to put
+this deliberate slight upon him in order to mark their dislike. This
+was not the utterance of a newspaper editor, but the well-considered
+act of the representatives of a party in Congress. Party feeling,
+indeed, could hardly have gone further; and this single incident is
+sufficient to dispel the pleasing delusion that party strife and
+bitterness are the product of modern days, and of more advanced forms
+of political organization.
+
+Yet despite all these attacks there can be no doubt that Washington's
+hold upon the masses of the people was substantially unshaken. They
+would have gladly seen him assume the presidency for the third time,
+and if the test had been made, thousands of men who gave their votes
+to the opposition would have still supported him for the greatest
+office in their gift. But this time Washington would not yield to the
+wishes of his friends or of the country. He felt that he had done his
+work and earned the rest and the privacy for which he longed above all
+earthly things. In September, 1796, he published his farewell address,
+and no man ever left a nobler political testament. Through much
+tribulation he had done his great part in establishing the government
+of the Union, which might easily have come to naught without his
+commanding influence. He had imparted to it the dignity of his own
+great character. He had sustained the splendid financial policy of
+Hamilton. He had struck a fatal blow at the colonial spirit in our
+politics, and had lifted up our foreign policy to a plane worthy of an
+independent nation. He had stricken off the fetters which impeded the
+march of western settlement, and without loss of honor had gained time
+to enable our institutions to harden and become strong. He had made
+peace with our most dangerous enemies, and, except in the case of
+France, where there were perilous complications to be solved by his
+successor, he left the United States in far better and more honorable
+relations with the rest of the world than even the most sanguine would
+have dared to hope when the Constitution was formed. Now from the
+heights of great achievement he turned to say farewell to the people
+whom he so much loved, and whom he had so greatly served. Every word
+was instinct with the purest and wisest patriotism. "Be united," he
+said; "be Americans. The name which belongs to you, in your national
+capacity, must exalt the just pride of patriotism more than any
+appellation derived from local discriminations. Let there be no
+sectionalism, no North, South, East or West; you are all dependent one
+on another, and should be one in union. Beware of attacks, open or
+covert, upon the Constitution. Beware of the baneful effects of
+party spirit and of the ruin to which its extremes must lead. Do not
+encourage party spirit, but use every effort to mitigate and assuage
+it. Keep the departments of government separate, promote education,
+cherish the public credit, avoid debt. Observe justice and good faith
+toward all nations; have neither passionate hatreds nor passionate
+attachments to any; and be independent politically of all. In one
+word, be a nation, be Americans, and be true to yourselves."
+
+His admonitions were received by the people at large with profound
+respect, and sank deep into the public mind. As the generations have
+come and gone, the farewell address has grown dearer to the hearts of
+the people, and the children and the children's children of those to
+whom it was addressed have turned to it in all times and known that
+there was no room for error in following its counsel.
+
+Yet at the moment, notwithstanding the general sadness at Washington's
+retirement and the deep regard for his last words of advice, the
+opposition was so thoroughly hostile that they seized on the address
+itself as a theme for renewed attack upon its author. "His character,"
+said one Democrat, "can only be respectable while it is not known; he
+is arbitrary, avaricious, ostentatious; without skill as a soldier, he
+has crept into fame by the places he has held. His financial measures
+burdened the many to enrich the few. History will tear the pages
+devoted to his praise. France and his country gave him fame, and they
+will take that fame away." "His glory has dissolved in mist," said
+another writer, "and he has sunk from the high level of Solon or
+Lycurgus to the mean rank of a Dutch Stadtholder or a Venetian
+Doge. Posterity will look in vain for any marks of wisdom in his
+administration."
+
+To thoughtful persons these observations are not without a curious
+interest, as showing that even the wisest of men may be in error. The
+distinguished Democrat who uttered these remarks has been forgotten,
+and the page of history on which Washington's name was inscribed is
+still untorn. The passage of the address, however, which gave the most
+offense, as Mr. McMaster points out, was, as might have been expected
+from the colonial condition of our politics, that which declared it
+to be our true policy "to steer clear of permanent alliances with any
+portion of the foreign world." This, it was held, simply meant that,
+having made a treaty with England, we were to be stopped from making
+one with France. Another distinguished editor declared that the
+farewell address came from the meanest of motives; that the President
+knew he could not be reelected because the Republicans would have
+united to supersede him with Adams, who had the simplicity of a
+Republican, while Washington had the ostentation of an Eastern Pasha,
+and it was in order to save himself from this humiliation that he had
+cunningly resigned.
+
+When Washington met his last Congress, William Giles of Virginia took
+the opportunity afforded by the usual answer to the President's speech
+to assail him personally. It would be of course a gross injustice to
+suppose that a coarse political ruffian like Giles really represented
+the Democratic party. But he represented the extreme wing, and after
+he had declared in his place that Washington was neither wise nor
+patriotic, and that his retirement was anything but a calamity, he got
+twelve of his party friends to sustain his sentiments by voting
+with him. The press was even more unbridled, and it was said in the
+"Aurora" at this time that Washington had debauched and deceived
+the nation, and that his administration had shown that the mask of
+patriotism may be worn to conceal the foulest dangers to the liberties
+of the people. Over and over again it was said by these writers that
+he had betrayed France and was the slave of England.
+
+This charge of being a British sympathizer was the only one of all the
+abuse heaped upon him by the opposition that Washington seems really
+to have resented. In August, 1794, when this slander first started
+from the prolific source of all attacks against the government, he
+wrote to Henry Lee: "With respect to the words said to have been
+uttered by Mr. Jefferson, they would be enigmatical to those who are
+acquainted with the characters about me, unless supposed to be spoken
+ironically; and in that case they are too injurious to me, and have
+too little foundation in truth, to be ascribed to him. There could not
+be the trace of doubt in his mind of predilection in mine toward Great
+Britain or her politics, unless, which I do not believe, he has set me
+down as one of the most deceitful and uncandid men living; because,
+not only in private conversations between ourselves on this subject,
+but in my meetings with the confidential servants of the public, he
+has heard me often, when occasions presented themselves, express very
+different sentiments, with an energy that could not be mistaken by any
+one present.
+
+"Having determined, as far as lay within the power of the executive,
+to keep this country in a state of neutrality, I have made my public
+conduct accord with the system; and whilst so acting as a public
+character, consistency and propriety as a private man forbid those
+intemperate expressions in favor of one nation, or to the prejudice of
+another, which may have wedged themselves in, and, I will venture to
+add, to the embarrassment of government, without producing any good to
+the country."
+
+He had shown by his acts as well as by his words his real friendship
+for France, such as a proper sense of gratitude required. As has been
+already pointed out, rather than run the risk of seeming to reflect in
+the slightest degree upon the government of the French republic, he
+had refused even to receive distinguished _emigres_ like Noailles,
+Liancourt, and Talleyrand.[1] He was so scrupulous in this respect
+that he actually did violence to his own strong desires in not taking
+into his house at once the son of Lafayette; and when it became
+necessary to choose a successor to Morris, his anxiety was so great
+to select some one agreeable to France that he took such an avowed
+opponent of his administration as Monroe.
+
+[Footnote 1: See the Letter to the Due de Liancourt explaining the
+reasons for his not being received by the President. (Sparks, xi.
+161.)]
+
+On the other hand, he had never lost the strong feeling of hostility
+toward England which he, above all men, had felt during the
+Revolution. The conduct of England, when he was seeking an honorable
+peace with her, tried his patience severely. He wrote to Morris in
+1795: "I give you these details (and if you should again converse with
+Lord Grenville on the subject, you are at liberty, unofficially,
+to mention them, or any of them, according to circumstances), as
+evidences of the unpolitic conduct (for so it strikes me) of the
+British government towards these United States; that it may be
+seen how difficult it has been for the executive, under such an
+accumulation of irritating circumstances, to maintain the ground of
+neutrality which had been taken; and at a time when the remembrance
+of the aid we had received from France in the Revolution was fresh in
+every mind, and while the partisans of that country were continually
+contrasting the affections of _that_ people with the unfriendly
+disposition of the _British government_. And that, too, as I have
+observed before, while _their own_ sufferings during the war with the
+latter had not been forgotten." The one man in the country who above
+all others had the highest conception of American nationality, who
+was the first to seek to lift up our politics from the low level of
+colonialism, who was the author of the neutrality policy, had reason
+to resent the bitter irony of an attack which represented him as a
+British sympathizer. The truth is, that the only foreign party at that
+time was that which identified itself with France, and which was
+the party of Jefferson and the opposition. The Federalists and
+the administration under the lead of Washington and Hamilton were
+determined that the government should be American and not French, and
+this in the eyes of their opponents was equivalent to being in the
+control of England. In after years, when the Federalists fell from
+power and declined into the position of a factious minority, they
+became British sympathizers, and as thoroughly colonial in their
+politics as the party of Jefferson had been. If they had had the
+wisdom of their better days they would then have made themselves the
+champions of the American idea, and would have led the country in the
+determined effort to free itself once for all from colonial politics,
+even if they were obliged to fight somebody to accomplish it. They
+proved unequal to the task, and it fell to a younger generation led by
+Henry Clay and his contemporaries to sweep Federalist and Jeffersonian
+republican alike, with their French and British politics, out of
+existence. In so doing the younger generation did but complete the
+work of Washington, for he it was who first trod the path and marked
+the way for a true American policy in the midst of men who could not
+understand his purposes.
+
+Bitter and violent as had been the attacks upon Washington while he
+held office, they were as nothing compared to the shout of fierce
+exultation which went up from the opposition journals when he finally
+retired from the presidency. One extract will serve as an example of
+the general tone of the opposition journals throughout the country. It
+is to be found in the "Aurora" of March 6, 1797:--
+
+ "'Lord, now lettest Thou Thy servant depart in peace,' was the
+ pious ejaculation of a pious man who beheld a flood of happiness
+ rushing in upon mankind. If ever there was a time that would
+ license the reiteration of the ejaculation, that time has now
+ arrived, for the man who is the source of all the misfortunes
+ of our country is this day reduced to a level with his
+ fellow-citizens, and is no longer possessed of power to multiply
+ evils upon the United States. If ever there was a period for
+ rejoicing, this is the moment. Every heart in unison with the
+ freedom and happiness of the people ought to beat high with
+ exultation that the name of Washington ceases from this day to
+ give currency to political insults, and to legalize corruption. A
+ new era is now opening upon us, an era which promises much to the
+ people, for public measures must now stand upon their own merits,
+ and nefarious projects can no longer be supported by a name. When
+ a retrospect has been taken of the Washingtonian administration
+ for eight years, it is a subject of the greatest astonishment
+ that a single individual should have cankered the principles of
+ republicanism in an enlightened people just emerged from the gulf
+ of despotism, and should have carried his designs against the
+ public liberty so far as to have put in jeopardy its very
+ existence. Such, however, are the facts, and with these staring us
+ in the face, the day ought to be a JUBILEE in the United States."
+
+This was not the outburst of a single malevolent spirit. The article
+was copied and imitated in New York and Boston, and wherever the
+party that called Jefferson leader had a representative among the
+newspapers. It is not probable that stuff of this sort gave Washington
+himself a moment's anxiety, for he knew too well what he had done, and
+he was too sure of his own hold upon the hearts of the people, to be
+in the least disturbed by the attacks of hostile editors. But the
+extracts are of interest as showing that the opposition party of that
+time, the party organized and led by Jefferson, regarded Washington as
+their worst enemy, and assailed him and slandered him to the utmost.
+They even went so far as to borrow materials from the enemies of the
+country with whom we had lately been at war, by publishing the forged
+letters attributed to Washington, and circulated by the British in
+1777, in order to discredit the American general. One of Washington's
+last acts, on March 3, 1797, was to file in the State Department a
+solemn declaration that these letters, then republished by an American
+political party, were base forgeries, of English origin in a time of
+war. His own view of this performance is given in a letter to Benjamin
+Walker, in which he said: "Amongst other attempts, ... spurious
+letters, known at the time of their first publication (I believe in
+the year 1777) to be forgeries, are (or extracts from them) brought
+forward with the highest emblazoning of which they are susceptible,
+with a view to attach principles to me which every action of my life
+has given the lie to. But that is no stumbling-block with the editors
+of these papers and their supporters."
+
+Two or three extracts from private letters will show how Washington
+regarded the course of the opposition, and the interpretation he put
+upon their attacks. After sketching in a letter to David Stuart the
+general course of the hostilities toward his administration, he said:
+"This not working so well as was expected, from a supposition that
+there was too much confidence in, and perhaps personal regard for, the
+present chief magistrate and his politics, the batteries have lately
+been leveled against him particularly and personally. Although he is
+soon to become a private citizen, his opinions are knocked down, and
+his character reduced as low as they are capable of sinking it, even
+by resorting to absolute falsehoods." Again he said, just before
+leaving office: "To misrepresent my motives, to reprobate my
+politics, and to weaken the confidence which has been reposed in my
+administration, are objects which cannot be relinquished by those who
+will be satisfied with nothing short of a change in our political
+system." He at least labored under no misapprehension after eight
+years of trial as to the position or purposes of the party which had
+fought him and his administration, and which had savagely denounced
+his measures at every step, and with ever-increasing violence.
+
+Having defined the attitude of the opposition, we can now consider
+that of Washington himself after he had retired from office, and no
+longer felt restrained by the circumstances of his election to the
+presidency from openly declaring his views, or publicly identifying
+himself with a political party. He rightly regarded the administration
+of Mr. Adams as a continuation of his own, and he gave to it a cordial
+support. He was equally clear and determined in his distrust and
+dislike of the opposition. Not long before leaving office he had
+written a letter to Jefferson, which, while it exonerated that
+gentleman from being the author of certain peculiarly malicious
+attacks, showed very plainly that the writer completely understood the
+position occupied by his former secretary. It was a letter which
+must have been most unpleasant reading for the person to whom it
+was addressed. A year later he wrote to John Nicholas in regard
+to Jefferson: "Nothing short of the evidence you have adduced,
+corroborative of intimations which I had received long before through
+another channel, could have shaken my belief in the sincerity of a
+friendship which I had conceived was possessed for me by the person to
+whom you allude." There was no doubt in his mind now as to Jefferson's
+conduct, and he knew at last that he had been his foe even when a
+member of his political household.
+
+When the time came to fill the offices in the provisional army made
+necessary by the menace of war with France, Washington wrote to the
+President that he ought to have generals who were men of activity,
+energy, health, and "sound politics," carrying apparently his
+suspicion of the opposition even to disbelieving in them as soldiers.
+He repeated the same idea in a letter to McHenry, in which he said:
+"I do not conceive that a desirable set could be formed from the old
+generals, some having never displayed any talent for enterprise,
+and others having shown a general opposition to the government, or
+predilection to French measures, be their present conduct what it
+may."
+
+When the question arose in regard to the relative rank of the
+major-generals, Washington said to Knox: "No doubt remained in my mind
+that Colonel Hamilton was designated second in command (and first, if
+I should decline an acceptance) by the Federal characters of Congress;
+whence alone anything like a public sentiment relative thereto could
+be deduced." He was quite clear that there was no use in looking
+beyond the confines of the Federal party for any public sentiment
+worth considering. He had serious doubts also as to the advisability
+of having the opponents of the government in the army, and wrote to
+McHenry on September 30, 1798, that brawlers against the government in
+certain parts of Virginia had suddenly become silent and were seeking
+commissions in the army. "The motives ascribed to them are that in
+such a situation they would endeavor to divide and contaminate the
+army by artful and seditious discourses, and perhaps at a critical
+moment bring on confusion. What weight to give to these conjectures
+you can judge as well as I. But as there will be characters enough
+of an opposite description who are ready to receive appointments,
+circumspection is necessary. Finding the resentment of the people
+at the conduct of France too strong to be resisted, they have in
+appearance adopted their sentiments, and pretend that, notwithstanding
+the misconduct of the government has brought it upon us, yet if an
+invasion should take place, it will be found that _they_ will be among
+the first to defend it. This is their story at all elections and
+election meetings, and told in many instances with effect." He wrote
+again in the same strain to McHenry, on October 21: "Possibly no
+injustice would be done, if I were to proceed a step further, and give
+it as an opinion that most of the candidates [for the army] brought
+forward by the opposition members possess sentiments similar to their
+own, and might poison the army by disseminating them, if they were
+appointed." In this period of danger, when the country was on the
+verge of war, the attitude of the opposition gave Washington much food
+for thought because it appeared to him so false and unpatriotic. In
+a letter to Lafayette, written on Christmas day, 1798, he gave the
+following brief sketch of the opposition: "A party exists in the
+United States, formed by a combination of causes, which opposed the
+government in all its measures, and are determined, as all their
+conduct evinces, by clogging its wheels indirectly to change the
+nature of it, and to subvert the Constitution. The friends of
+government, who are anxious to maintain its neutrality and to preserve
+the country in peace, and adopt measures to secure these objects, are
+charged by them as being monarchists, aristocrats, and infractors of
+the Constitution, which according to their interpretation of it would
+be a mere cipher. They arrogated to themselves ... the sole merit of
+being the friends of France, when in fact they had no more regard for
+that nation than for the Grand Turk, further than their own views
+were promoted by it; denouncing those who differed in opinion (those
+principles are purely American and whose sole view was to observe
+a strict neutrality) as acting under British influence, and being
+directed by her counsels, or as being her pensioners."
+
+Shortly before this sharp definition was written, an incident had
+occurred which had given Washington an opportunity of impressing his
+views directly and personally upon a distinguished leader of the
+opposite party. Dr. Logan of Philadelphia, under the promptings of
+Jefferson, as was commonly supposed, had gone on a volunteer mission
+to Paris for the purpose of bringing about peace between the two
+republics. He had apparently a fixed idea that there was something
+very monstrous in our having any differences with France, and being
+somewhat of a busybody, although a most worthy man, he felt called
+upon to settle the international complications which were then
+puzzling the brains and trying the patience of the ablest men in
+America. It is needless to say that his mission was not a success, and
+he was eventually so unmercifully ridiculed by the Federalist editors
+that he published a long pamphlet in his own defense. Upon his return,
+however, he seems to have been not a little pleased with himself, and
+he took occasion to call upon Washington, who was then in Philadelphia
+on business. It would be difficult to conceive anything more
+distasteful to Washington than such a mission as Logan's, or that he
+could have a more hearty contempt for any one than for a meddler of
+this description, who by his interference might help to bring his
+country into contempt. He was sufficiently impressed, however, by Dr.
+Logan's call to draw up a memorandum, which gave a very realistic and
+amusing account of it. It may be surmised that when Washington wished
+to be cold in his manner, he was capable of being very freezing, and
+he was not very apt at concealing his emotions when he found himself
+in the presence of any one whom he disliked and disapproved. The
+memorandum is as follows:--
+
+"_Tuesday, November_ 13, 1798.--Mr. Lear, my secretary, being from our
+lodgings on business, one of my servants came into the room where
+I was writing and informed me that a gentleman in the parlor below
+desired to see me; no name was sent up. In a few minutes I went down,
+and found the Rev. Dr. Blackwell and Dr. Logan there. I advanced
+towards and gave my hand to the former; the latter did the same
+towards me. I was backward in giving mine. He, possibly supposing from
+hence that I did not recollect him, said his name was Logan. Finally,
+in a very cold manner, and with an air of marked indifference, I gave
+him my hand and asked _Dr. Blackwell to be seated_; the other _took_
+a seat at the same time. I addressed _all_ my conversation to Dr.
+Blackwell; the other all his to me, to which I only gave negative or
+affirmative answers as laconically as I could, except asking him how
+Mrs. Logan did. He seemed disposed to be very polite, and while Dr.
+Blackwell and myself were conversing on the late calamitous fever,
+offered me an asylum at his house, if it should return or I thought
+myself in any danger in the city, and two or three rooms, by way of
+accommodation. I thanked him slightly, observing there would be no
+call for it."
+
+"About this time Dr. Blackwell took his leave. We all rose from our
+seats, and I moved a few paces toward the door of the room, expecting
+the other would follow and take his leave also."
+
+The worthy Quaker, however, was not to be got rid of so easily. He
+literally stood his ground, and went on talking of a number of things,
+chiefly about Lafayette and his family, and an interview with Mr.
+Murray, our minister in Holland. Washington, meanwhile, stood facing
+him, and to use his own words, "showed the utmost inattention," while
+his visitor described his journey to Paris. Finally Logan said that
+his purpose in going to France was to ameliorate the condition of
+our relations with that country. "This," said Washington, "drew my
+attention more pointedly to what he was saying and induced me to
+remark that there was something very singular in this; that _he_,
+who could only be viewed as a private character, unarmed with proper
+powers, and presumptively unknown in France, should suppose he could
+effect what three gentlemen of the first respectability in our
+country, especially charged under the authority of the government,
+were unable to do." One is not surprised to be then told that Dr.
+Logan seemed a little confounded at this observation; but he recovered
+himself, and went on to say that only five persons knew of his going,
+and that his letters from Mr. Jefferson and Mr. McKean obtained for
+him an interview with M. Merlin, president of the Directory, who had
+been most friendly in his expressions. To this Washington replied
+with some very severe strictures on the conduct of France; and the
+conversation, which must by this time have become a little strained,
+soon after came to an end. One cannot help feeling a good deal of
+sympathy for the excellent doctor, although he was certainly a
+busybody and, one would naturally infer, a bore as well. It would have
+been, however, a pity to have lost this memorandum, and there is every
+reason to regret that Washington did not oftener exercise his evident
+powers for realistic reporting. Nothing, moreover, could bring out
+better his thorough contempt for the opposition and their attitude
+toward France than this interview with the volunteer commissioner.
+
+There were, however, much more serious movements made by the
+Democratic party than well-meant and meddling attempts to make
+peace with France. This was the year of the Kentucky and Virginia
+resolutions, the first note of that disunion sentiment which was
+destined one day to involve the country in civil war and be fought out
+on a hundred battlefields. Washington, with his love for the Union and
+for nationality ever uppermost in his heart, was quick to take alarm,
+and it cut him especially to think that a movement which he esteemed
+at once desperate and wicked should emanate from his own State, and as
+we now know, and as he perhaps suspected, from a great Virginian
+whom he had once trusted. He straightway set himself to oppose this
+movement with all his might, and he summoned to his aid that other
+great Virginian who in his early days had been the first to rouse the
+people against oppression, and who now in his old age, in response to
+Washington's appeal, came again into the forefront in behalf of the
+Constitution and the union of the States. The letter which Washington
+wrote to Patrick Henry on this occasion is one of the most important
+that he ever penned, but there is room to quote only a single passage
+here.
+
+"At such a crisis as this," he said, "when everything dear and
+valuable to us is assailed, when this party hangs upon the wheels of
+government as a dead weight, opposing every measure that is calculated
+for defense and self-preservation, abetting the nefarious views of
+another nation upon our rights, preferring, as long as they dare
+contend openly against the spirit and resentment of the people, the
+interest of France to the welfare of their own country, justifying
+the former at the expense of the latter; when every act of their own
+government is tortured, by constructions they will not bear, into
+attempts to infringe and trample upon the Constitution with a view to
+introduce monarchy; when the most unceasing and the purest exertions
+which were making to maintain a neutrality ... are charged with being
+measures calculated to favor Great Britain at the expense of France,
+and all those who had any agency in it are accused of being under
+the influence of the former and her pensioners; when measures are
+systematically and pertinaciously pursued, which must eventually
+dissolve the Union or produce coercion; I say, when these things have
+become so obvious, ought characters who are best able to rescue their
+country from the pending evil to remain at home?...
+
+"Vain will it be to look for peace and happiness, or for the security
+of liberty or property, if civil discord should ensue. And what else
+can result from the policy of those among us, who, by all the measures
+in their power, are driving matters to extremity, if they cannot be
+counteracted effectually? The views of men can only be known, or
+guessed at, by their words or actions. Can those of the _leaders_ of
+opposition be mistaken, then, if judged by this rule? That they are
+followed by numbers, who are unacquainted with their designs and
+suspect as little the tendency of their principles, I am fully
+persuaded. But if their conduct is viewed with indifference, if there
+are activity and misrepresentations on one side and supineness on
+the other, their numbers accumulated by intriguing and discontented
+foreigners under proscription, who were at war with their own
+government, and the greater part of them with _all_ governments, they
+will increase, and nothing short of omniscience can foretell the
+consequences."
+
+It would have been difficult to draw a severer indictment of the
+opposition party than that given in this letter, but there is one
+other letter even more striking in its contents, without which no
+account of the relation of Washington to the two great parties which
+sprang up under his administration would be complete. It was addressed
+to Governor Trumbull of Connecticut, was written on July 21, 1799,
+less than six months before his death, and although printed, has
+been hidden away in the appendix to the "Life of Benjamin Silliman."
+Governor Trumbull, who bore the name and filled the office of
+Washington's old revolutionary friend, had written to the general, as
+many other Federalists were writing at that time, urging him to come
+forward and stand once more for the presidency, that he might heal the
+dissensions in his own party and save the country from the impending
+disaster of Jefferson's election. That Washington refused all these
+requests is of course well known, but his reasons as stated to
+Trumbull are of great interest. "I come now," he said, "my dear sir,
+to pay particular attention to that part of your letter which respects
+myself.
+
+"I remember well the conversation which you allude to. I have not
+forgot the answer I gave you. In my judgment it applies with as much
+force _now_ as _then_; nay, more, because at that time the line
+between the parties was not so clearly drawn, and the views of the
+opposition so clearly developed as they are at present. Of course
+allowing your observation (as it respects myself) to be well founded,
+personal influence would be of no avail.
+
+"Let that party set up a broomstick, and call it a true son of
+liberty,--a democrat,--or give it any other epithet that will suit
+their purpose, and it will command their votes _in toto_![1] Will not
+the Federalists meet, or rather defend, their cause on the opposite
+ground? Surely they must, or they will discover a want of policy,
+indicative of weakness and pregnant of mischief, which cannot be
+admitted. Wherein, then, would lie the difference between the present
+gentleman in office and myself?
+
+[Footnote 1: "As an analysis of this position, look to the pending
+election of governor in Pennsylvania."]
+
+"It would be matter of grave regret to me if I could believe that a
+serious thought was turned toward me as his successor, not only as
+it respects my ardent wishes to pass through the vale of life in
+retirement, undisturbed in the remnant of the days I have to sojourn
+here, unless called upon to defend my country (which every citizen is
+bound to do); but on public grounds also; for although I have abundant
+cause to be thankful for the good health with which I am blessed, yet
+I am not insensible to my declination in other respects. It would
+be criminal, therefore, in me, although it should be the wish of my
+countrymen and I could be elected, to accept an office under this
+conviction which another would discharge with more ability; and this,
+too, at a time when I am thoroughly convinced I should not draw a
+_single_ vote from the anti-Federal side, and of course should stand
+upon no other ground _than any other Federal character_[1] well
+supported; and when I should become a mark for the shafts of envenomed
+malice and the basest calumny to fire at,--when I should be charged
+not only with irresolution but with concealed ambition, which waits
+only an occasion to blaze out, and, in short, with dotage and
+imbecility.
+
+[Footnote 1: These italics are mine.]
+
+"All this, I grant, ought to be like dust in the balance, when put in
+competition with a _great_ public good, when the accomplishment of it
+is apparent. But, as no problem is better defined in my mind than that
+principle, not men, is now, and will be, the object of contention; and
+that I could not obtain a _solitary_ vote from that party; _that any
+other respectable Federal character could receive the same suffrages
+that I should_;[1] that at my time of life (verging towards threescore
+and ten) I should expose myself without rendering any essential
+service to my country, or answering the end contemplated; prudence on
+my part must avert any attempt of the well-meant but mistaken views of
+my friends to introduce me again into the chair of government."
+
+[Footnote 1: These italics are mine.]
+
+It does not fall within the scope of this biography to attempt to
+portray the history or weigh the merits of the two parties which came
+into existence at the close of the last century, and which, under
+varying names, have divided the people of the United States ever
+since. But it is essential here to define the relation of Washington
+toward them because one hears it constantly said and sees it as
+constantly written down, that Washington belonged to no party, which
+is perhaps a natural, but is certainly a complete misconception.
+Washington came to the presidency by a unanimous vote. He had in his
+mind very strongly the idea of the framers of the Constitution that
+the President, by the method of his election and by his independence
+of the other departments of government, was to be above and beyond
+party, and the representative of the whole people. In addition to this
+he was so absorbed by the great conception which he had of the future
+of the country, and was so confident of the purity and rectitude of
+his own purposes, that he was loath to think that party divisions
+could arise while he held the chief magistracy. It was not long
+before he was undeceived on this point, and he soon found that party
+divisions sprang up from the measures of his own administration.
+Nevertheless, he clung to his determination to govern without the
+assistance of a party as such. When this, too, became impossible, he
+still felt that the unanimity of his election required that he should
+not declare himself to be the head of a party; but he had become
+thoroughly convinced that under the representative system of the
+Constitution party government could not be avoided. In his farewell
+address he warned the people against the excesses of that party
+spirit which he deplored; but he did not suggest that it could be
+extinguished. Being a wise and far-seeing man, he saw that if party
+government was an evil, it also was under a free representative
+system, and in the present condition of human nature a necessary evil,
+furnishing the only machinery by which public affairs could be carried
+on.
+
+In a time of deep political excitement and strong party feeling,
+Washington was the last man in the world not to be decidedly on one
+side or the other. He was possessed of too much sense, force, and
+virility to be content to hold himself aloof and croak over the
+wickedness of people, who were trying to do something, even if
+they did not always try in the most perfect way. He was himself
+preeminently a doer of deeds, and not a critic or a phrase-maker, and
+we can read very distinctly in the extracts which have been brought
+together in this chapter what he thought on party and public
+questions. He was opposed to the party which had resisted all the
+great measures of his administration from the foundation of the
+government of the United States. They had assailed and maligned him
+and his ministers, and he regarded them as political enemies. He
+believed in the principles of that party which had supported the
+financial policy of Hamilton and his own policy of neutrality toward
+foreign nations. He was opposed to the party which introduced the
+interests of France as the leading issue of American politics, and
+which embodied the doctrines of nullification and separatism in the
+resolutions of Kentucky and Virginia. In one word, Washington, in
+policies and politics, was an American and a Nationalist; and the
+National and American party, from 1789 to 1801, was the Federalist
+party. It may be added that it was the only party which, at that
+precise time, could claim those qualities. While he remained in the
+presidency he would not declare himself to be of any party; but as
+soon as this fetter was removed, he declared himself freely after his
+fashion, expressing in words what he had formerly only expressed in
+action. His feelings warmed and strengthened as the controversy with
+France deepened, and as the attitude of the opposition became more
+un-American and leaned more and more to separatism. They culminated
+at last in the eloquent letter to Patrick Henry, and in the carefully
+weighed words with which he tells Trumbull that he can hope for no
+more votes than "any other Federal character."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+THE LAST YEARS
+
+
+Washington had entered upon the presidency with the utmost reluctance,
+and at the sacrifice of all he considered pleasantest and best in
+life. He took it and held it for eight years from a sense of duty,
+and with no desire to retain it beyond that which every man feels
+who wishes to finish a great work that he has undertaken. He looked
+forward to the approaching end of his second term with a feeling of
+intense relief, and compared himself to the wearied traveler who sees
+the resting-place where he is at length to have repose. On March 3 he
+gave a farewell dinner to the President and Vice-President elect, the
+foreign ministers and their wives, and other distinguished persons,
+from one of whom we learn that it was a very pleasant and lively
+gathering. When the cloth was removed Washington filled his glass and
+said: "Ladies and gentlemen, this is the last time I shall drink
+your health as a public man. I do it with sincerity, wishing you all
+possible happiness." The company did not take the same cheerful view
+as their host of this leave-taking. There was a pause in the gayety,
+some of the ladies shed tears, and the little incident only served to
+show the warm affection felt for Washington by every one who came in
+close contact with him.
+
+The next day the last official ceremonies were performed. After
+Jefferson had taken the oath as Vice-President and had proceeded with
+the Senate to the House of Representatives, which was densely crowded,
+Washington entered and was received with cheers and shouts, the waving
+of handkerchiefs, and an enthusiasm which seemed to know no bounds.
+Mr. Adams followed him almost immediately and delivered his inaugural
+address, in which he paid a stately compliment to the great virtues of
+his predecessor. It was the setting and not the rising sun, however,
+that drew the attention of the multitude, and as Washington left the
+hall there was a wild rush from the galleries to the corridors and
+then into the streets to see him pass. He took off his hat and bowed
+to the people, but they followed him even to his own door, where
+he turned once more and, unable to speak, waved to them a silent
+farewell.
+
+In the evening of the same day a great banquet was given to him by
+the merchants of Philadelphia, and when he entered the band played
+"Washington's March," and a series of emblematic paintings were
+disclosed, the chief of which represented the ex-President at Mount
+Vernon surrounded by the allegorical figures then so fashionable.
+After the festivities Washington lingered for a few days in
+Philadelphia to settle various private matters and then started for
+home. Whether he was going or coming, whether he was about to take the
+great office of President or retire to the privacy of Mount Vernon,
+the same popular enthusiasm greeted him. When he was really brought in
+contact with the people, the clamors of the opposition press and the
+attacks of the Jeffersonian editors all faded away and were forgotten.
+On March 12 he reached Baltimore, and the local newspaper of the next
+day said:--
+
+"Last evening arrived in this city, on his way to Mount Vernon, the
+illustrious object of veneration and gratitude, GEORGE WASHINGTON. His
+excellency was accompanied by his lady and Miss Custis, and by the son
+of the unfortunate Lafayette and his preceptor. At a distance from
+the city, he was met by a crowd of citizens, on horse and foot, who
+thronged the road to greet him, and by a detachment from Captain
+Hollingsworth's troop, who escorted him in through as great a
+concourse of people as Baltimore ever witnessed. On alighting at the
+Fountain Inn, the general was saluted with reiterated and thundering
+huzzas from the spectators. His excellency, with the companions of his
+journey, leaves town, we understand, this morning."
+
+Thus with the cheers and the acclamations still ringing in his ears
+he came home again to Mount Vernon, where he found at once plenty
+of occupation, which in some form was always a necessity to him. An
+absence of eight years had not improved the property. On April 3 he
+wrote to McHenry: "I find myself in the situation nearly of a new
+beginner; for, although I have not houses to build (except one, which
+I must erect for the accommodation and security of my military, civil,
+and private papers, which are voluminous and may be interesting),
+yet I have scarcely anything else about me that does not require
+considerable repairs. In a word, I am already surrounded by joiners,
+masons, and painters; and such is my anxiety to get out of their
+hands, that I have scarcely a room to put a friend into or to sit
+in myself without the music of hammers or the odoriferous scent of
+paint." He easily dropped back into the round of country duties and
+pleasures, and the care of farms and plantations, which had always
+had for him so much attraction. "To make and sell a little flour
+annually," he wrote to Wolcott, "to repair houses going fast to ruin,
+to build one for the security of my papers of a public nature, will
+constitute employment for the few years I have to remain on this
+terrestrial globe." Again he said to McHenry: "You are at the source
+of information, and can find many things to relate, while I have
+nothing to say that would either inform or amuse a secretary of war at
+Philadelphia. I might tell him that I begin my diurnal course with the
+sun; that if my hirelings are not in their places by that time I send
+them messages of sorrow for their indisposition; that having put these
+wheels in motion I examine the state of things further; that the more
+they are probed the deeper I find the wounds which my buildings have
+sustained by an absence and neglect of eight years; that by the time
+I have accomplished these matters breakfast (a little after seven
+o'clock, about the time I presume that you are taking leave of Mrs.
+McHenry) is ready; that this being over I mount my horse and ride
+round my farms, which employs me until it is time to dress for dinner,
+at which I rarely miss seeing strange faces, come, as they say, out of
+respect for me. Pray, would not the word curiosity answer as well?
+And how different this from having a few social friends at a cheerful
+board. The usual time of sitting at table, a walk, and tea bring me
+within the dawn of candle-light; previous to which, if not prevented
+by company, I resolve that as soon as the glimmering taper supplies
+the place of the great luminary I will retire to my writing-table and
+acknowledge the letters I have received; that when the lights
+are brought I feel tired and disinclined to engage in this work,
+conceiving that the next night will do as well. The next night comes
+and with it the same causes for postponement, and so on. Having given
+you the history of a day, it will serve for a year, and I am persuaded
+you will not require a second edition of it. But it may strike you
+that in this detail no mention is made of any portion of time allotted
+for reading. The remark would be just, for I have not looked into a
+book since I came home; nor shall I be able to do it until I have
+discharged my workmen; probably not before the nights grow longer,
+when possibly I may be looking in Doomsday book."
+
+There is not much that can be added to his own concise description of
+the simple life he led at home. The rest and quiet were very pleasant,
+but still there was a touch of sadness in his words. The long interval
+of absence made the changes which time had wrought stand out more
+vividly than if they had come one by one in the course of daily life
+at home. Washington looked on the ruins of Belvoir, and sighed to
+think of the many happy hours he had passed with the Fairfaxes, now
+gone from the land forever. Other old friends had been taken away
+by death, and the gaps were not filled by the new faces of which he
+speaks to McHenry. Indeed, the crowd of visitors coming to Mount
+Vernon from all parts of his own country and of the world, whether
+they came from respect or curiosity, brought a good deal of weariness
+to a man tired with the cares of state and longing for absolute
+repose. Yet he would not close his doors to any one, for the Virginian
+sense of hospitality, always peculiarly strong in him, forbade such
+action. To relieve himself, therefore, in this respect, he sent
+for his nephew Lawrence Lewis, who took the social burden from
+his shoulders. But although the visitors tired him when he felt
+responsible for their pleasure, he did not shut himself up now any
+more than at any other time in self-contemplation. He was constantly
+thinking of others; and the education of his nephews, the care of
+young Lafayette until he should return to France, as well as the
+happy love-match of Nellie Custis and his nephew, supplied the human
+interest without which he was never happy.
+
+Before we trace his connection with public affairs in these
+closing years, let us take one look at him, through the eyes of a
+disinterested but keen observer. John Bernard, an English actor,
+who had come to this country in the year when Washington left the
+presidency, was playing an engagement with his company at Annapolis,
+in 1798. One day he mounted his horse and rode down below Alexandria,
+to pay a visit to an acquaintance who lived on the banks of the
+Potomac. When he was returning, a chaise in front of him, containing a
+man and a young woman, was overturned, and the occupants were thrown
+out. As Bernard rode to the scene of the accident, another horseman
+galloped up from the opposite direction. The two riders dismounted,
+found that the driver was not hurt, and succeeded in restoring the
+young woman to consciousness; an event which was marked, Bernard tells
+us, by a volley of invectives addressed to her unfortunate husband.
+"The horse," continues Bernard, "was now on his legs, but the vehicle
+still prostrate, heavy in its frame, and laden with at least half a
+ton of luggage. My fellow-helper set me an example of activity in
+relieving it of the internal weight; and when all was clear, we
+grasped the wheel between us, and to the peril of our spinal columns
+righted the conveyance. The horse was then put in, and we lent a
+hand to help up the luggage. All this helping, hauling, and lifting
+occupied at least half an hour, under a meridian sun, in the middle of
+July, which fairly boiled the perspiration out of our foreheads." The
+possessor of the chaise beguiled the labor by a full personal history
+of himself and his wife, and when the work was done invited the two
+Samaritans to go with him to Alexandria, and take a drop of "something
+sociable." This being declined, the couple mounted into the chaise and
+drove on. "Then," says Bernard, "my companion, after an exclamation at
+the heat, offered very courteously to dust my coat, a favor the return
+of which enabled me to take deliberate survey of his person. He was
+a tall, erect, well-made man, evidently advanced in years, but who
+appeared to have retained all the vigor and elasticity resulting from
+a life of temperance and exercise. His dress was a blue coat buttoned
+to his chin, and buckskin breeches. Though the instant he took off his
+hat I could not avoid the recognition of familiar lineaments, which
+indeed I was in the habit of seeing on every sign-post and over every
+fireplace, still I failed to identify him, and to my surprise I found
+that I was an object of equal speculation in his eyes." The actor
+evidently did not have the royal gift of remembering faces, but the
+stranger possessed that quality, for after a moment's pause he said,
+"Mr. Bernard, I believe," and mentioned the occasion on which he had
+seen him play in Philadelphia. He then asked Bernard to go home with
+him for a couple of hours' rest, and pointed out the house in the
+distance. At last Bernard knew to whom he was speaking. "'Mount
+Vernon!' I exclaimed; and then drawing back with a stare of wonder,
+'Have I the honor of addressing General Washington?' With a smile
+whose expression of benevolence I have rarely seen equaled, he offered
+his hand and replied: 'An odd sort of introduction, Mr. Bernard; but
+I am pleased to find you can play so active a part in private, and
+without a prompter.'" So they rode on together to the house and had a
+chat, to which we must recur further on.
+
+There is no contemporary narrative of which I am aware that shows
+Washington to us more clearly than this little adventure with Bernard,
+for it is in the common affairs of daily life that men come nearest
+to each other, and the same rule holds good in history. We know
+Washington much better from these few lines of description left by
+a chance acquaintance on the road than we do from volumes of state
+papers. It is such a pleasant story, too. There is the great man,
+retired from the world, still handsome and imposing in his old age,
+with the strong and ready hand to succor those who had fallen by the
+wayside; there are the genuine hospitality, the perfect manners, and
+the well-turned little sentence with which he complimented the actor,
+put him at his ease, and asked him to his house. Nothing can well be
+added to the picture of Washington as we see him here, not long before
+the end of all things came. We must break off, however, from the quiet
+charm of home life, and turn again briefly to the affairs of state.
+Let us, therefore, leave these two riding along the road together in
+the warm Virginia sunshine to the house which has since become one of
+the Meccas of humanity, in memory of the man who once dwelt in it.
+
+The highly prized retirement to Mount Vernon did not now, more than
+at any previous time, separate Washington from the affairs of the
+country. He continued to take a keen interest in all that went on,
+to correspond with his friends, and to use his influence for what he
+thought wisest and best for the general welfare. These were stirring
+times, too, and the progress of events brought him to take a more
+active part than he had ever expected to play again; for France,
+having failed, thanks to his policy, to draw us either by fair words
+or trickery from our independent and neutral position, determined,
+apparently, to try the effect of force and ill usage. Pinckney, sent
+out as minister, had been rebuffed; and then Adams, with the cordial
+support of the country, had made another effort for peace by sending
+Pinckney, Marshall, and Gerry as a special commission. The history of
+that commission is one of the best known episodes in our history. Our
+envoys were insulted, asked for bribes, and browbeaten, until the two
+who retained a proper sense of their own and their country's dignity
+took their passports and departed. The publication of the famous X, Y,
+Z letters, which displayed the conduct of France, roused a storm of
+righteous indignation from one end of the United States to the other.
+The party of France and of the opposition bent before the storm, and
+the Federalists were at last all-powerful. A cry for war went up from
+every corner, and Congress provided rapidly for the formation of an
+army and the beginning of a navy.
+
+Then the whole country turned, as a matter of course, to one man to
+stand at the head of the national forces of the United States,
+and Adams wrote to Washington, urging him to take command of the
+provisional army. To any other appeal to come forward Washington would
+have been deaf, but he could never refuse a call to arms. He wrote to
+Adams on July 4, 1798: "In case of _actual invasion_ by a formidable
+force, I certainly should not intrench myself under the cover of age
+or retirement, if my services should be required by my country to
+assist in repelling it." He agreed, therefore, to take command of the
+army, provided that he should not be called into active service
+except in the case of actual hostilities, and that he should have the
+appointment of the general's staff. To these terms Adams of course
+acceded. But out of the apparently simple condition relating to the
+appointment of officers there grew a very serious trouble. There were
+to be three major-generals, the first of them to have also the rank of
+inspector-general, and to be the virtual commander-in-chief until the
+army was actually called into the field. For these places, Washington
+after much reflection selected Hamilton, Pinckney, and Knox, in the
+order named, and in doing so he very wisely went on the general
+principle that the army was to be organized _de novo_, without
+reference to prior service. Apart from personal and political
+jealousies, nothing could have been more proper and more sound than
+this arrangement; but at this point the President's dislike of
+Hamilton got beyond control, and he made up his mind to reverse the
+order, and send in Knox's name first. The Federalist leaders were of
+course utterly disgusted by this attempt to set Hamilton aside, which
+was certainly ill-judged, and which proved to be the beginning of the
+dissensions that ended in the ruin of the Federalist party. After
+every effort, therefore, to move Adams had failed, Pickering and
+others, including Hamilton himself, appealed to Washington. At a
+distance from the scene of action, and unfamiliar with the growth of
+differences within the party, Washington was not only surprised, but
+annoyed by the President's conduct. In addition to the evils which he
+believed would result in a military way from this change, he felt that
+the conditions which he had made had been violated, and that he had
+not been treated fairly. He therefore wrote to the President with
+his wonted plainness, on September 25, and pointed out that his
+stipulations had not been complied with, that the change of order
+among the major-generals was thoroughly wrong, and that the
+President's meddling with the inferior appointments had been hurtful
+and injudicious. His views were expressed in the most courteous
+way, although with an undertone of severe disapproval. There was no
+mistaking the meaning of the letter, however, and Adams, bold man and
+President as he was, gave way at once. Mr. Adams thought at the time
+that there had been about this matter of the major-generals too much
+intrigue, by which Washington had been deceived and he himself made a
+victim; but there seems no good reason to take this view of it, for
+there is no indication whatever that Washington did not know and
+understand the facts; and it was on the facts that he made his
+decision, and not on the methods by which they were conveyed to him.
+The propriety of the decision will hardly now be questioned, although
+it did not tend to make the relations between the ex-President and
+his successor very cordial. They had always a great respect for
+each other, but not much sympathy, for they differed too widely in
+temperament. Even if Washington would have permitted it, it would have
+been impossible for the President to have quarreled with him, but at
+the same time he felt not a little awkwardness in dealing with his
+successor, and was inclined to think that that gentleman did not show
+him all the respect that was due. He wrote to McHenry on October 1:
+"As no mode is yet adopted by the President by which the battalion
+officers are to be appointed, and as I think I stand on very
+precarious ground in my relation to him, I am not over-zealous
+in taking _unauthorized_ steps when those that I thought _were
+authorized_ are not likely to meet with much respect."
+
+[Illustration: HENRY KNOX]
+
+There was, however, another consequence of this affair which gave
+Washington much more pain than any differences with the President. His
+old friend and companion in arms, General Knox, was profoundly hurt at
+the decision which placed Hamilton at the head of the army. One cannot
+be surprised at Knox's feelings, for he had been a distinguished
+officer, and had outranked both Hamilton and Pinckney. He felt that he
+ought to command the army, and that he was quite capable of doing so;
+and he did not relish being told in this official manner that he had
+grown old, and that the time had come for younger and abler men to
+pass beyond him. The archbishop in "Gil Blas" is one of the most
+universal types of human nature that we have. Nobody feels kindly to
+the monitor who points out the failings which time has brought, and we
+are all inclined to dismiss him with every wish that he may fare well
+and have a little more taste. Poor Knox could not dismiss his Gil
+Blas, and he felt the unpleasant admonition all the more bitterly from
+the fact that the blow was dealt by the two men whom he most loved and
+admired. Hamilton wrote him the best and most graceful of letters, but
+failed to soothe him; and Washington was no more fortunate. He tried
+with the utmost kindliness, and in his most courteous manner, to
+soften the disappointment, and to show Knox how convincing were the
+reasons for his action. But the case was not one where argument could
+be of avail, and when Knox persisted in his refusal to take the place
+assigned him, Washington, with all his sympathy, was perfectly frank
+in expressing his views.
+
+In a second letter, complaining of the injustice with which he had
+been treated, Knox intimated that he would be willing to serve on the
+personal staff of the commander-in-chief. This was all very well; but
+much as Washington grieved for his old friend's disappointment, there
+was to be no misunderstanding in the matter. He wrote Knox on October
+21: "After having expressed these sentiments with the frankness of
+undisguised friendship, it is hardly necessary to add that, if you
+should finally decline the appointment of major-general, there is none
+to whom I would give a more decided preference as an aide-de-camp, the
+offer of which is highly flattering, honorable, and grateful to my
+feelings, and for which I entertain a high sense. But, my dear General
+Knox, and here again I speak to you in a language of candor and
+friendship, examine well your mind upon this subject. Do not unite
+yourself to the suite of a man whom you may consider as the primary
+cause of what you call a degradation, with unpleasant sensations.
+This, while it was gnawing upon you, would, if I should come to the
+knowledge of it, make me unhappy; as my first wish would be that my
+military family and the whole army should consider themselves a band
+of brothers, willing and ready to die for each other."
+
+Knox would not serve; and his ill temper, irritated still further
+by the apparent preference of the President and by the talk of his
+immediate circle, prevailed. On the other hand, Pinckney, one of the
+most generous and patriotic of men, accepted service at once without a
+syllable of complaint on the score that he had ranked Hamilton in the
+former war. It was with these two, therefore, that Washington
+carried on the work of organizing the provisional army. Despite his
+determination to remain in retirement until called to the field, his
+desire for perfection in any work that he undertook brought him out,
+and he gave much time and attention not only to the general questions
+which were raised, but to the details of the business, and on November
+10 he addressed a series of inquiries, both general and particular,
+to Hamilton and Pinckney. These inquiries covered the whole scope of
+possible events, probable military operations, and the formation of
+the army. They were written in Philadelphia, whither he had gone, and
+where he passed a month with the two major-generals in the discussion
+of plans and measures. The result of their conferences was an
+elaborate and masterly report on army organization drawn up by
+Hamilton, upon whom, throughout this period of impending war, the
+brunt of the work fell.
+
+Careful and painstaking, however, as Washington was in the matter of
+appointments and organization, dealing with them as if he was about to
+take the field at the head of the army, there was never a moment when
+he felt that there was danger of actual war. He had studied foreign
+affairs and the conditions of Europe too well to be much deceived
+about them, and least of all in regard to France. He felt from the
+beginning that the moment we displayed a proper spirit, began to arm,
+and fought one or two French ships successfully, that France would
+leave off bullying and abusing us, and make a satisfactory peace. The
+declared adherent of the maxim that to prepare for war was the most
+effectual means of preserving peace, he felt that never was it more
+important to carry out this doctrine than now; and it was for this
+reason that he labored so hard and gave so much thought to army
+organization at a time when he felt more than ever the need of repose,
+and shrank from the least semblance of a return to public life. In
+all his long career there was never a better instance of his devoted
+patriotism than his coming forward in this way at the sacrifice of
+every personal wish after his retirement from the presidency.
+
+Yet, although he closely watched the course of politics, and gave, as
+has been said, a cordial support to the administration, his sympathies
+were rather with the opponents of the President within the ranks
+of their common party. The conduct of Gerry, who had been Adams's
+personal selection for a commissioner, was very distasteful to
+Washington, and was very far from exciting in his mind the approval
+which it drew from Mr. Adams. He wrote to Pickering on October 18:
+"With respect to Mr. Gerry, his own character and public satisfaction
+require better evidence than his letter to the minister of foreign
+relations to prove the propriety of his conduct during his envoyship."
+He did not believe that we were to have war with France, but he was
+very confident that a bold and somewhat uncompromising attitude was
+the best one for the country, and that above all we should not palter
+with France after the affronts to which we had been subjected. When
+President Adams, therefore, made his sudden change of policy by
+nominating Murray as a special envoy, Washington, despite his desire
+for peace, was by no means enthusiastic in his approval of the methods
+by which it was sought. The President wrote him announcing the
+appointment of Murray, and Washington acknowledged the letter and
+the information without any comment. He saw, of course, that as the
+President had seen fit to take the step he must be sustained, and he
+wrote to Murray to impress upon him the gravity of the mission with
+which he was intrusted; but he had serious doubts as to the success of
+such a mission under such conditions, and when delays occurred he was
+not without hopes of a final abandonment. The day after his letter to
+Murray he wrote to Hamilton: "I was surprised at the _measure_,
+how much more so at the manner of it! This business seems to have
+commenced in an evil hour, and under unfavorable auspices. I wish
+mischief may not tread in all its steps, and be the final result of
+the measure. A wide door was open, through which a retreat might have
+been made from the first _faux pas_, the shutting of which, to those
+who are not behind the curtain and are as little acquainted with
+the secrets of the cabinet as I am, is, from the present aspect of
+European affairs, quite incomprehensible." He hoped but little good
+from the mission, although it had his fervent wishes for its success,
+expressed repeatedly in letters to members of the cabinet; and while
+he was full of apprehension, he had a firm faith that all would end
+well.
+
+For this anxiety, indeed, there was abundant reason. A violent change
+of policy toward France, the disorders occasioned by political
+dissensions at home, and the sudden appearance of the deadly doctrine
+of nullification, all combined to excite alarm in the mind of a man
+who looked as far into the future and as deep beneath the surface of
+things as did Washington. It was then that he urged Patrick Henry to
+reenter public life, and exerted his own influence wherever he could
+to check the separatist movement set on foot by Jefferson. He was
+deeply disturbed, too, by the tendencies of the times in other
+directions. The delirium of the French Revolution was not confined
+to France. Her soldiers bore with them the new doctrines, while far
+beyond the utmost reach of her armies flew the ideas engendered in
+the fevered air of Paris. Wherever they alighted they touched men and
+stung them to madness, and the madness that they bred was not confined
+to those who believed the new gospel, but was shared equally by those
+who resisted and loathed it. Burke, in his way, was as much crazed as
+Camille Desmoulins, and it seemed impossible for people living in the
+midst of that terrific convulsion of society to retain their judgment.
+Nowhere ought men to have been better able to withstand the contagion
+of the revolution than in America, and yet even here it produced the
+same results as in countries nearly affected by it. The party
+of opposition to the government became first ludicrous and then
+dangerous, in their wild admiration and senseless imitation of ideas
+and practices as utterly alien to the people of the United States as
+cannibalism or fire-worship. Then the Federalists, on their side, fell
+beneath the spell. The overthrow of religion, society, property, and
+morals, which they beheld in Paris, seemed to them to be threatening
+their own country, and they became as extreme as their opponents in
+the exactly opposite direction. Federalist divines came to look
+upon Jefferson, the most timid and prudent of men, as a Marat or
+Robespierre, ready to reproduce the excesses of his prototypes; while
+Pickering, Wolcott, and all their friends in public life regarded
+themselves as engaged in a struggle for the preservation of order and
+society and of all that they held most dear. They were in the habit of
+comparing French principles to a pestilence, and the French republic
+to a raging tiger. Even Hamilton was so moved as to believe that the
+United States were on the verge of anarchy, and he laid down his life
+at last in a senseless duel because he thought that his refusal to
+fight would disable him for leading the forces of order when the final
+crash came.
+
+Washington, with his strong, calm judgment and his penetrating vision,
+was less affected than any of those who had followed and sustained
+him; but he was by no means untouched, and if we try to put ourselves
+in his place, his views seem far from unreasonable. He had at the
+outset wished well to the great movement in France, although even then
+he doubted its final success. Very soon, however, doubts changed
+to suspicions, and suspicions to conviction. As he saw the French
+revolution move on in its inevitable path, he came to hate and dread
+its deeds, its policies, and its doctrines. To a man of his temper it
+could not have been otherwise, for license and disorder were above all
+things detestable to him. They were the immediate fruits of the French
+revolution, and when he saw a party devoted to France preaching the
+same ideas in the United States, he could not but feel that there was
+a real and practical danger confronting the country. This was why he
+felt that we needed an energetic policy, and it was on this account
+that he distrusted the President's renewed effort for peace. The
+course of the opposition, as he saw it, threatened not merely the
+existence of the Union, but wittingly or unwittingly struck at the
+very foundations of society. His anxiety did not make him violent, as
+was the case with lesser men, but it convinced him of the necessity of
+strong measures, and he was not a man to shrink from vigorous action.
+He was quite prepared to do all that could be done to maintain the
+authority of the government, which he considered equivalent to the
+protection of society, and for this reason he approved of the Alien
+and Sedition acts.
+
+In the process of time these two famous laws have come to be
+universally condemned, and those who have not questioned their
+constitutionality have declared them wrong, inexpedient and impolitic,
+and the immediate cause of the overthrow of the party responsible for
+them. Everybody has made haste to disown them, and there has been a
+general effort on the part of Federalist sympathizers to throw the
+blame for them on persons unknown. Biographers, especially, have tried
+zealously to clear the skirts of their heroes from any connection with
+these obnoxious acts; but the truth is, that, whether right or wrong,
+wise or unwise, these laws had the entire support of the ruling party
+from the President down. Hamilton, who objected to the first draft
+because it was needlessly violent, approved the purpose and principle
+of the legislation; and Washington was no exception to the general
+rule. He was calm about it, but his approbation was none the less
+distinct, and he took pains to circulate a sound argument, when he
+met with one, in justification of the Alien and Sedition acts.[1] In
+November, 1798, Alexander Spotswood wrote to him, asking his judgment
+on those laws. As the writer announced himself to be thoroughly
+convinced of their unconstitutionally, Washington, with a little
+sarcasm, declined to enter into argument with him. "But," he
+continued, "I will take the liberty of advising such as are not
+'thoroughly convinced,' and whose minds are yet open to conviction,
+to read the pieces and hear the arguments which have been adduced
+in favor of, as well as those against, the constitutionality and
+expediency of those laws, before they decide and consider to what
+lengths a certain description of men in our country have already
+driven, and seem resolved further to drive matters, and then ask
+themselves if it is not time and expedient to resort to protecting
+laws against aliens (for citizens, you certainly know, are not
+affected by that law), who acknowledge no allegiance to this country,
+and in many instances are sent among us, as there is the best
+circumstantial evidence to prove, for the express purpose of poisoning
+the minds of our people and sowing dissensions among them, in order to
+alienate their affections from the government of their choice, thereby
+endeavoring to dissolve the Union, and of course the fair and happy
+prospects which are unfolding to our view from the Revolution."
+
+[Footnote 1: See letter to Bushrod Washington, Sparks, vi. p. 387.]
+
+With these strong and decided feelings as to the proper policy to
+be adopted, and with such grave apprehensions as to the outcome
+of existing difficulties, Washington was deeply distressed by the
+divisions which he saw springing up among the Federalists. From his
+point of view it was bad enough to have the people of the country
+divided into two great parties; but that one of those parties, that
+which was devoted to the maintenance of order and the preservation
+of the Union, should be torn by internal dissensions, seemed to him
+almost inconceivable. He regarded the conduct of the party and of its
+leaders with quite as much indignation as sorrow, for it seemed to him
+that they were unpatriotic and false to their trust in permitting for
+a moment these personal factions which could have but one result. He
+wrote to Trumbull on August 30, 1799:--
+
+"It is too interesting not to be again repeated, that if principles
+instead of men are not the steady pursuit of the Federalists, their
+cause will soon be at an end; if these are pursued they will not
+_divide_ at the next election of President; if they do divide on
+so _important_ a point, it would be dangerous to trust them on any
+other,--and none except those who might be solicitous to fill the
+chair of government would do it."[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: _Life of Silliman_, vol. ii. p. 385.]
+
+He was a true prophet, but he did not live to see the verification
+of his predictions, which would have been to him a source of so much
+grief. In the midst of his anxieties about public affairs, and of
+the quiet, homely interests which made the days at Mount Vernon so
+pleasant, the end suddenly came. There was no more forewarning than if
+he had been struck down by accident or violence. He had always been a
+man of great physical vigor, and although he had had one or two acute
+and dangerous illnesses arising from mental strain and much overwork,
+there is no indication that he had any organic disease, and since his
+retirement from the presidency he had been better than for many years.
+There was not only no sign of breaking up, but he appeared full of
+health and activity, and led his usual wholesome outdoor life with
+keen enjoyment.
+
+The morning of December 12 was overcast. He wrote to Hamilton warmly
+approving the scheme for a military academy; and having finished this,
+which was probably the last letter he ever wrote, he mounted his horse
+and rode off for his usual round of duties. He noted in his diary,
+where he always described the weather with methodical exactness, that
+it began to snow about one o'clock, soon after to hail, and then
+turned to a settled cold rain. He stayed out notwithstanding for about
+two hours, and then came back to the house and franked his letters.
+Mr. Lear noticed that his hair was damp with snow, and expressed a
+fear that he had got wet; but the General said no, that his coat had
+kept him dry, and sat down to dinner without changing his clothes. The
+next morning snow was still falling so that he did not ride, and he
+complained of a slight sore throat, but nevertheless went out in the
+afternoon to mark some trees that were to be cut down. His hoarseness
+increased toward night, yet still he made light of it, and read the
+newspapers and chatted with Mrs. Washington during the evening.
+
+When he went to bed Mr. Lear urged him to take something for his cold.
+"No," he replied, "you know I never take anything for a cold. Let
+it go as it came." In the night he had a severe chill, followed by
+difficulty in breathing; and between two and three in the morning he
+awoke Mrs. Washington, but would not allow her to get up and call a
+servant lest she should take cold. At daybreak Mr. Lear was summoned,
+and found Washington breathing with difficulty and hardly able to
+speak. Dr. Craik, the friend and companion of many years, was sent
+for at once, and meantime the General was bled slightly by one of the
+overseers. A futile effort was also made to gargle his throat, and
+external applications were tried without affording relief. Dr. Craik
+arrived between eight and nine o'clock with two other physicians, when
+other remedies were tried and the patient was bled again, all without
+avail. About half-past four he called Mrs. Washington to his bedside
+and asked her to get two wills from his desk. She did so, and after
+looking them over he ordered one to be destroyed and gave her the
+other to keep. He then said to Lear, speaking with the utmost
+difficulty, but saying what he had to say with characteristic
+determination and clearness: "I find I am going; my breath cannot last
+long. I believed from the first that the disorder would prove fatal.
+Do you arrange and record all my late military letters and papers.
+Arrange my accounts and settle my books, as you know more about them
+than any one else; and let Mr. Rawlins finish recording my other
+letters, which he has begun." He then asked if Lear recollected
+anything which it was essential for him to do, as he had but a very
+short time to continue with them. Lear replied that he could recollect
+nothing, but that he hoped the end was not so near. Washington smiled,
+and said that he certainly was dying, and that as it was the
+debt which we must all pay, he looked to the event with perfect
+resignation.
+
+The disease which was killing him was acute oedematous laryngitis,[1]
+which is as simple as it is rare and fatal,[2] and he was being
+slowly strangled to death by the closing of the throat. He bore
+the suffering, which must have been intense, with his usual calm
+self-control, but as the afternoon wore on the keen distress and the
+difficulty of breathing made him restless. From time to time Mr. Lear
+tried to raise him and make his position easier. The General said,
+"I fear I fatigue you too much;" and again, on being assured to the
+contrary, "Well, it is a debt we must pay to each other, and I hope
+when you want aid of this kind you will find it." He was courteous and
+thoughtful of others to the last, and told his servant, who had been
+standing all day in attendance upon him, to sit down. To Dr. Craik he
+said: "I die hard, but I am not afraid to go. I believed from my first
+attack that I should not survive it. My breath cannot last long." When
+a little later the other physicians came in and assisted him to sit
+up, he said: "I feel I am going. I thank you for your attentions, but
+I pray you will take no more trouble about me. Let me go off quietly.
+I cannot last long." He lay there for some hours longer, restless and
+suffering, but utterly uncomplaining, taking such remedies as the
+physicians ordered in silence. About ten o'clock he spoke again to
+Lear, although it required a most desperate effort to do so. "I am
+just going," he said. "Have me decently buried, and do not let my body
+be put into the vault in less than three days after I am dead." Lear
+bowed, and Washington said, "Do you understand me?" Lear answered,
+"Yes." "'Tis well," he said, and with these last words again fell
+silent. A little later he felt his own pulse, and, as he was counting
+the strokes, Lear saw his countenance change. His hand dropped back
+from the wrist he had been holding, and all was over. The end had
+come. Washington was dead. He died as he had lived, simply and
+bravely, without parade and without affectation. The last duties
+were done, the last words said, the last trials borne with the quiet
+fitness, the gracious dignity, that even the gathering mists of the
+supreme hour could neither dim nor tarnish. He had faced life with a
+calm, high, victorious spirit. So did he face death and the unknown
+when Fate knocked at the door.
+
+[Footnote 1: It was called at the time a quinsy.]
+
+[Footnote 2: See Memoir on _The Last Sickness of Washington_, by James
+Jackson, M.D. In response to an inquiry as to the modern treatment of
+this disease, the late Dr. F.H. Hooper of Boston, well known as
+an authority on diseases of the throat, wrote me: "Washington's
+physicians are not to be criticised for their treatment, for they
+acted according to their best light and knowledge. To treat such
+a case in such a manner in the year 1889 would be little short
+of criminal. At the present time the physicians would use the
+laryngoscope and _look_ and _see_ what the trouble was. (The
+laryngoscope has only been used since 1857.) In this disease the
+function most interfered with is breathing. The one thing which saves
+a patient in this disease is a _timely tracheotomy_. (I doubt if
+tracheotomy had ever been performed in Virginia in Washington's time.)
+Washington ought to have been tracheotomized, or rather that is the
+way cases are saved to-day. No one would think of antimony, calomel,
+or bleeding now. The point is to let in the air, and not to let out
+the blood. After tracheotomy has been performed, the oedema and
+swelling of the larynx subside in three to six days. The tracheotomy
+tube is then removed, and respiration goes on again through the
+natural channels."]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+GEORGE WASHINGTON
+
+
+This last chapter cannot begin more fitly than by quoting again the
+words of Mr. McMaster: "George Washington is an unknown man." Mr.
+McMaster might have added that to no man in our history has greater
+injustice of a certain kind been done, or more misunderstanding been
+meted out, than to Washington, and although this sounds like the
+merest paradox, it is nevertheless true. From the hour when the door
+of the tomb at Mount Vernon closed behind his coffin to the present
+instant, the chorus of praise and eulogy has never ceased, but has
+swelled deeper and louder with each succeeding year. He has been set
+apart high above all other men, and reverenced with the unquestioning
+veneration accorded only to the leaders of mankind and the founders
+of nations; and in this very devotion lies one secret at least of the
+fact that, while all men have praised Washington, comparatively
+few have understood him. He has been lifted high up into a lonely
+greatness, and unconsciously put outside the range of human sympathy.
+He has been accepted as a being as nearly perfect as it is given to
+man to be, but our warm personal interest has been reserved for other
+and lesser men who seemed to be nearer to us in their virtues and
+their errors alike. Such isolation, lofty though it be, is perilous
+and leads to grievous misunderstandings. From it has come the
+widespread idea that Washington was cold, and as devoid of human
+sympathies as he was free from the common failings of humanity.
+
+Of this there will be something to say presently, but meantime there
+is another more prolific source of error in regard to Washington to
+be considered. Men who are loudly proclaimed to be faultless always
+excite a certain kind of resentment. It is a dangerous eminence
+for any one to occupy. The temples of Greece are in ruins, and her
+marvelous literature is little more than a collection of fragments,
+but the feelings of the citizens who exiled Aristides because they
+were weary of hearing him called "just," exist still, unchanged and
+unchangeable. Washington has not only been called "just," but he
+has had every other good quality attributed to him by countless
+biographers and eulogists with an almost painful iteration, and the
+natural result has followed. Many persons have felt the sense of
+fatigue which the Athenians expressed practically by their oyster
+shells, and have been led to cast doubts on Washington's perfection
+as the only consolation for their own sense of injury. Then, again,
+Washington's fame has been so overshadowing, and his greatness so
+immutable, that he has been very inconvenient to the admirers and the
+biographers of other distinguished men. From these two sources, from
+the general jealousy of the classic Greek variety, and the particular
+jealousy born of the necessities of some other hero, much adverse and
+misleading criticism has come. It has never been a safe or popular
+amusement to assail Washington directly, and this course usually has
+been shunned; but although the attacks have been veiled they have none
+the less existed, and they have been all the more dangerous because
+they were insidious.
+
+In his lifetime Washington had his enemies and detractors in
+abundance. During the Revolution he was abused and intrigued against,
+thwarted and belittled, to a point which posterity in general scarcely
+realizes. Final and conclusive victory brought an end to this, and
+he passed to the presidency amid a general acclaim. Then the attacks
+began again. Their character has been shown in a previous chapter, but
+they were of no real moment except as illustrations of the existence
+and meaning of party divisions. The ravings of Bache and Freneau,
+and the coarse insults of Giles, were all totally unimportant in
+themselves. They merely define the purposes and character of the party
+which opposed Washington, and but for him would be forgotten. Among
+his eminent contemporaries, Jefferson and Pickering, bitterly opposed
+in all things else, have left memoranda and letters reflecting upon
+the abilities of their former chief. Jefferson disliked him because he
+blocked his path, but with habitual caution he never proceeded beyond
+a covert sneer implying that Washington's mental powers, at no time
+very great, were impaired by age during his presidency, and that he
+was easily deceived by practised intriguers. Pickering, with more
+boldness, set Washington down as commonplace, not original in his
+thought, and vastly inferior to Hamilton, apparently because he was
+not violent, and did not make up his mind before he knew the facts.
+
+Adverse contemporary criticism, however, is slight in amount and vague
+in character; it can be readily dismissed, and it has in no case
+weight enough to demand much consideration. Modern criticism of the
+same kind has been even less direct, but is much more serious and
+cannot be lightly passed over. It invariably proceeds by negations
+setting out with an apparently complete acceptance of Washington's
+greatness, and then assailing him by telling us what he was not. Few
+persons who have not given this matter a careful study realize how far
+criticism of this sort has gone, and there is indeed no better way
+of learning what Washington really was than by examining the various
+negations which tell us what he was not.
+
+Let us take the gravest first. It has been confidently asserted that
+Washington was not an American in anything but the technical sense.
+This idea is more diffused than, perhaps, would be generally supposed,
+and it has also been formally set down in print, in which we are more
+fortunate than in many other instances where the accusation has not
+got beyond the elusive condition of loose talk.
+
+In that most noble poem, the "Commemoration Ode," Mr. Lowell speaks of
+Lincoln as "the first American." The poet's winged words fly far, and
+find a resting-place in many minds. This idea has become widespread,
+and has recently found fuller expression in Mr. Clarence King's
+prefatory note to the great life of Lincoln by Hay and Nicolay.[1] Mr.
+King says: "Abraham Lincoln was the first American to reach the lonely
+height of immortal fame. Before him, within the narrow compass of our
+history, were but two preeminent names,--Columbus the discoverer, and
+Washington the founder; the one an Italian seer, the other an English
+country gentleman. In a narrow sense, of course, Washington was an
+American.... For all that he was English in his nature, habits, moral
+standards, and social theories; in short, in all points which,
+aside from mere geographical position, make up a man, he was as
+thorough-going a British colonial gentleman as one could find anywhere
+beneath the Union Jack. The genuine American of Lincoln's type came
+later.... George Washington, an English commoner, vanquished George,
+an English king."
+
+[Footnote 1: Mr. Matthew Arnold, and more recently Professor Goldwin
+Smith, have both spoken of Washington as an Englishman. I do not
+mention this to discredit the statements of Mr. Lowell or Mr. King,
+but merely to indicate how far this mistaken idea has traveled.]
+
+In order to point his sentence and prove his first postulate, Mr.
+King is obliged not only to dispose of Washington, but to introduce
+Columbus, who never was imagined in the wildest fantasy to be an
+American, and to omit Franklin. The omission of itself is fatal to Mr.
+King's case. Franklin has certainly a "preeminent name." He has, too,
+"immortal fame," although of course of a widely different character
+from that of either Washington or Lincoln, but he was a great man
+in the broad sense of a world-wide reputation. Yet no one has ever
+ventured to call Benjamin Franklin an Englishman. He was a colonial
+American, of course, but he was as intensely an American as any man
+who has lived on this continent before or since. A man of the people,
+he was American by the character of his genius, by his versatility,
+the vivacity of his intellect, and his mental dexterity. In his
+abilities, his virtues, and his defects he was an American, and so
+plainly one as to be beyond the reach of doubt or question. There were
+others of that period, too, who were as genuine Americans as Franklin
+or Lincoln. Such were Jonathan Edwards, the peculiar product of New
+England Calvinism; Patrick Henry, who first broke down colonial lines
+to declare himself an American; Samuel Adams, the great forerunner
+of the race of American politicians; Thomas Jefferson, the idol of
+American democracy. These and many others Mr. King might exclude on
+the ground that they did not reach the lonely height of immortal fame.
+But Franklin is enough. Unless one is prepared to set Franklin down
+as an Englishman, which would be as reasonable as to say that Daniel
+Webster was a fine example of the Slavic race, it must be admitted
+that it was possible for the thirteen colonies to produce in the
+eighteenth century a genuine American who won immortal fame. If they
+could produce one of one type, they could produce a second of another
+type, and there was, therefore, nothing inherently impossible in
+existing conditions to prevent Washington from being an American.
+
+Lincoln was undoubtedly the first great American of his type, but that
+is not the only type of American. It is one which, as bodied forth in
+Abraham Lincoln, commands the love and veneration of the people of the
+United States, and the admiration of the world wherever his name is
+known. To the noble and towering greatness of his mind and character
+it does not add one hair's breadth to say that he was the first
+American, or that he was of a common or uncommon type. Greatness like
+Lincoln's is far beyond such qualifications, and least of all is it
+necessary to his fame to push Washington from his birthright. To say
+that George Washington, an English commoner, vanquished George, an
+English king, is clever and picturesque, but like many other pleasing
+antitheses it is painfully inaccurate. Allegiance does not make race
+or nationality. The Hindoos are subjects of Victoria, but they are not
+Englishmen.
+
+Franklin shows that it was possible to produce a most genuine American
+of unquestioned greatness in the eighteenth century, and with all
+possible deference to Mr. Lowell and Mr. King, I venture the assertion
+that George Washington was as genuine an American as Lincoln or
+Franklin. He was an American of the eighteenth and not of the
+nineteenth century, but he was none the less an American. I will go
+further. Washington was not only an American of a pure and noble type,
+but he was the first thorough American in the broad, national sense,
+as distinct from the colonial American of his time.
+
+After all, what is it to be an American? Surely it does not consist in
+the number of generations merely which separate the individual from
+his forefathers who first settled here. Washington was fourth in
+descent from the first American of his name, while Lincoln was in
+the sixth generation. This difference certainly constitutes no real
+distinction. There are people to-day, not many luckily, whose families
+have been here for two hundred and fifty years, and who are as utterly
+un-American as it is possible to be, while there are others, whose
+fathers were immigrants, who are as intensely American as any one can
+desire or imagine. In a new country, peopled in two hundred and fifty
+years by immigrants from the Old World and their descendants, the
+process of Americanization is not limited by any hard and fast rules
+as to time and generations, but is altogether a matter of individual
+and race temperament. The production of the well-defined American
+types and of the fixed national characteristics which now exist has
+been going on during all that period, but in any special instance the
+type to which a given man belongs must be settled by special study and
+examination.
+
+Washington belonged to the English-speaking race. So did Lincoln. Both
+sprang from the splendid stock which was formed during centuries from
+a mixture of the Celtic, Teutonic, Scandinavian, and Norman peoples,
+and which is known to the world as English. Both, so far as we can
+tell, had nothing but English blood, as it would be commonly called,
+in their veins, and both were of that part of the English race which
+emigrated to America, where it has been the principal factor in the
+development of the new people called Americans. They were men of
+English race, modified and changed in the fourth and sixth generations
+by the new country, the new conditions, and the new life, and by the
+contact and admixture of other races. Lincoln, a very great man, one
+who has reached "immortal fame," was clearly an American of a type
+that the Old World cannot show, or at least has not produced. The idea
+of many persons in regard to Washington seems to be, that he was a
+great man of a type which the Old World, or, to be more exact, which
+England, had produced. One hears it often said that Washington was
+simply an American Hampden. Such a comparison is an easy method of
+description, nothing more. Hampden is memorable among men, not for
+his abilities, which there is no reason to suppose were very
+extraordinary, but for his devoted and unselfish patriotism, his
+courage, his honor, and his pure and lofty spirit. He embodied what
+his countrymen believe to be the moral qualities of their race in
+their finest flower, and no nation, be it said, could have a nobler
+ideal. Washington was conspicuous for the same qualities, exhibited
+in like fashion. Is there a single one of the essential attributes of
+Hampden that Lincoln also did not possess? Was he not an unselfish
+and devoted patriot, pure in heart, gentle of spirit, high of honor,
+brave, merciful, and temperate? Did he not lay down his life for
+his country in the box at Ford's Theatre as ungrudgingly as Hampden
+offered his in the smoke of battle upon Chalgrove field? Surely we
+must answer Yes. In other words, these three men all had the great
+moral attributes which are the characteristics of the English race in
+its highest and purest development on either side of the Atlantic.
+Yet no one has ever called Lincoln an American Hampden simply because
+Hampden and Washington were men of ancient family, members of an
+aristocracy by birth, and Lincoln was not. This is the distinction
+between them; and how vain it is, in the light of their lives and
+deeds, which make all pedigrees and social ranks look so poor and
+worthless! The differences among them are trivial, the resemblances
+deep and lasting.
+
+I have followed out this comparison because it illustrates perfectly
+the entirely superficial character of the reasons which have led men
+to speak of Washington as an English country gentleman. It has been
+said that he was English in his habits, moral standards, and social
+theories, which has an important sound, but which for the most part
+comes down to a question of dress and manners. He wore black velvet
+and powdered hair, knee-breeches and diamond buckles, which are
+certainly not American fashions to-day. But they were American
+fashions in the last century, and every man wore them who could afford
+to, no matter what his origin. Let it be remembered, however, that
+Washington also wore the hunting-shirt and fringed leggins of the
+backwoodsman, and that it was he who introduced this purely American
+dress into the army as a uniform.
+
+His manners likewise were those of the century in which he lived,
+formal and stately, and of course colored by his own temperament. His
+moral standards were those of a high-minded, honorable man. Are we
+ready to say that they were not American? Did they differ in any vital
+point from those of Lincoln? His social theories were simple in the
+extreme. He neither overvalued nor underrated social conventions, for
+he knew that they were a part of the fabric of civilized society, not
+vitally important and yet not wholly trivial. He was a member of an
+aristocracy, it is true, both by birth and situation. There was a
+recognized social aristocracy in every colony before the Revolution,
+for the drum-beat of the great democratic march had not then sounded.
+In the northern colonies it was never strong, and in New England
+it was especially weak, for the governments and people there were
+essentially democratic, although they hardly recognized it themselves.
+In Virginia and the southern colonies, on the other hand, there was a
+vigorous aristocracy resting on the permanent foundation of slavery.
+Where slaves are there must be masters, and where there are masters
+there are aristocrats; but it was an American and not an English
+aristocracy. Lineage and family had weight in the south as in the
+north, but that which put a man undeniably in the ruling class was the
+ownership of black slaves and the possession of a white skin. This
+aristocracy lasted with its faults and its virtues until it perished
+in the shock of civil war, when its foundation of human slavery was
+torn from under it. From the slave-holding aristocracy of Virginia
+came, with the exception of Patrick Henry, all the great men of that
+State who did so much for American freedom, and who rendered such
+imperishable service to the republic in law, in politics, and in war.
+From this aristocracy came Marshall, and Mason, and Madison, the Lees,
+the Randolphs, the Harrisons, and the rest. From it came also Thomas
+Jefferson, the hero of American democracy; and to it was added Patrick
+Henry, not by lineage or slave-holding, but by virtue of his brilliant
+abilities, and because he, too, was an aristocrat by the immutable
+division of race. It was this aristocracy into which Washington was
+born, and amid which he was brought up. To say that it colored his
+feelings and habits is simply to say that he was human; but to urge
+that it made him un-American is to exclude at once from the ranks
+of Americans all the great men given to the country by the South.
+Washington, in fact, was less affected by his surroundings, and rose
+above them more quickly, than any other man of his day, because he was
+the greatest man of his time, with a splendid breadth of vision.
+
+When he first went among the New England troops at the siege of
+Boston, the rough, democratic ways of the people jarred upon him, and
+offended especially his military instincts, for he was not only a
+Virginian but he was a great soldier, and military discipline is
+essentially aristocratic. These volunteer soldiers, called together
+from the plough and the fishing-smack, were free and independent men,
+unaccustomed to any rule but their own, and they had still to learn
+the first rudiments of military service. To Washington, soldiers who
+elected and deposed their officers, and who went home when they felt
+that they had a right to do so, seemed well-nigh useless and quite
+incomprehensible. They angered him and tried his patience almost
+beyond endurance, and he spoke of them at the outset in harsh terms by
+no means wholly unwarranted. But they were part of his problem, and he
+studied them. He was a soldier, but not an aristocrat wrapped up in
+immutable prejudices, and he learned to know these men, and they came
+to love, obey, and follow him with an intelligent devotion far better
+than anything born of mere discipline. Before the year was out, he
+wrote to Lund Washington praising the New England troops in the
+highest terms, and at the close of the war he said that practically
+the whole army then was composed of New England soldiers. They stayed
+by him to the end, and as they were steadfast in war so they remained
+in peace. He trusted and confided in New England, and her sturdy
+democracy gave him a loyal and unflinching support to the day of his
+death.
+
+This openness of mind and superiority to prejudice were American in
+the truest and best sense; but Washington showed the same qualities in
+private life and toward individuals which he displayed in regard to
+communities. He was free, of course, from the cheap claptrap which
+abuses the name of democracy by saying that birth, breeding, and
+education are undemocratic, and therefore to be reckoned against a
+man. He valued these qualities rightly, but he looked to see what a
+man was and not who he was, which is true democracy. The two men who
+were perhaps nearest to his affections were Knox and Hamilton. One
+was a Boston bookseller, who rose to distinction by bravery and good
+service, and the other was a young adventurer from the West Indies,
+without either family or money at his back. It was the same with much
+humbler persons. He never failed, on his way to Philadelphia, to stop
+at Wilmington and have a chat with one Captain O'Flinn, who kept a
+tavern and had been a Revolutionary soldier; and this was but a single
+instance among many of like character. Any soldier of the Revolution
+was always sure of a welcome at the hands of his old commander.
+Eminent statesmen, especially of the opposition, often found his
+manner cold, but no old soldier ever complained of it, no servant ever
+left him, and the country people about Mount Vernon loved him as a
+neighbor and friend, and not as the distant great man of the army and
+the presidency.
+
+He believed thoroughly in popular government. One does not find in his
+letters the bitter references to democracy and to the populace which
+can be discovered in the writings of so many of his party friends,
+legacies of pre-revolutionary ideas inflamed by hatred of Parisian
+mobs. He always spoke of the people at large with a simple respect,
+because he knew that the future of the United States was in their
+hands and not in that of any class, and because he believed that they
+would fulfill their mission. The French Revolution never carried him
+away, and when it bred anarchy and bloodshed he became hostile to
+French influence, because license and disorder were above all
+things hateful to him. Yet he did not lose his balance in the other
+direction, as was the case with so many of his friends. He resisted
+and opposed French ideas and French democracy, so admired and so
+loudly preached by Jefferson and his followers, because he esteemed
+them perilous to the country. But there is not a word to indicate that
+he did not think that such dangers would be finally overcome, even
+if at the cost of much suffering, by the sane sense and ingrained
+conservatism of the American people. Other men talked more noisily
+about the people, but no one trusted them in the best sense more than
+Washington, and his only fear was that evils might come from their
+being misled by false lights.
+
+Once more, what is it to be an American? Putting aside all the outer
+shows of dress and manners, social customs and physical peculiarities,
+is it not to believe in America and in the American people? Is it not
+to have an abiding and moving faith in the future and in the destiny
+of America?--something above and beyond the patriotism and love which
+every man whose soul is not dead within him feels for the land of his
+birth? Is it not to be national and not sectional, independent and not
+colonial? Is it not to have a high conception of what this great new
+country should be, and to follow out that ideal with loyalty and
+truth?
+
+Has any man in our history fulfilled these conditions more perfectly
+and completely than George Washington? Has any man ever lived who
+served the American people more faithfully, or with a higher and truer
+conception of the destiny and possibilities of the country? Born of an
+old and distinguished family, he found himself, when a boy just out of
+school, dependent on his mother, and with an inheritance that promised
+him more acres than shillings. He did not seek to live along upon what
+he could get from the estate, and still less did he feel that it was
+only possible for him to enter one of the learned professions. Had
+he been an Englishman in fact or in feeling, he would have felt very
+naturally the force of the limitations imposed by his social position.
+But being an American, his one idea was to earn his living honestly,
+because it was the creed of his country that earning an honest living
+is the most creditable thing a man can do. Boy as he was, he went out
+manfully into the world to win with his own hands the money which
+would make him self-supporting and independent. His business as a
+surveyor took him into the wilderness, and there he learned that the
+first great work before the American people was to be the conquest of
+the continent. He dropped the surveyor's rod and chain to negotiate
+with the savages, and then took up the sword to fight them and the
+French, so that the New World might be secured to the English-speaking
+race. A more purely American training cannot be imagined. It was not
+the education of universities or of courts, but that of hard-earned
+personal independence, won in the backwoods and by frontier fighting.
+Thus trained, he gave the prime of his manhood to leading the
+Revolution which made his country free, and his riper years to
+building up that independent nationality without which freedom would
+have been utterly vain.
+
+He was the first to rise above all colonial or state lines, and grasp
+firmly the conception of a nation to be formed from the thirteen
+jarring colonies. The necessity of national action in the army was of
+course at once apparent to him, although not to others; but he carried
+the same broad views into widely different fields, where at the time
+they wholly escaped notice. It was Washington, oppressed by a thousand
+cares, who in the early days of the Revolution saw the need of Federal
+courts for admiralty cases and for other purposes. It was he who
+suggested this scheme, years before any one even dreamed of the
+Constitution; and from the special committees of Congress, formed for
+this object in accordance with this advice, came, in the process of
+time, the Federal judiciary of the United States.[1] Even in that
+early dawn of the Revolution, Washington had clear in his own mind the
+need of a continental system for war, diplomacy, finance, and law, and
+he worked steadily to bring this policy to fulfilment.
+
+[Footnote 1: See the very interesting memoir on this subject by the
+Hon. J.C. Bancroft Davis.]
+
+When the war was over, the thought that engaged his mind most was
+of the best means to give room for expansion, and to open up the
+unconquered continent to the forerunners of a mighty army of settlers.
+For this purpose all his projects for roads, canals, and surveys were
+formed and forced into public notice. He looked beyond the limits of
+the Atlantic colonies. His vision went far over the barriers of the
+Alleghanies; and where others saw thirteen infant States backed by the
+wilderness, he beheld the germs of a great empire. While striving thus
+to lay the West open to the march of the settler, he threw himself
+into the great struggle, where Hamilton and Madison, and all who
+"thought continentally," were laboring for that union without which
+all else was worse than futile.
+
+From the presidency of the convention that formed the Constitution, he
+went to the presidency of the government which that convention brought
+into being; and in all that followed, the one guiding thought was to
+clear the way for the advance of the people, and to make that people
+and their government independent in thought, in policy, and in
+character, as the Revolution had made them independent politically.
+The same spirit which led him to write during the war that our battles
+must be fought and our victories won by Americans, if victory and
+independence were to be won at all, or to have any real and solid
+worth, pervaded his whole administration. We see it in his Indian
+policy, which was directed not only to pacifying the tribes, but
+to putting it out of their power to arrest or even delay western
+settlement. We see it in his attitude toward foreign ministers, and in
+his watchful persistence in regard to the Mississippi, which ended in
+our securing the navigation of the great river. We see it again in his
+anxious desire to keep peace until we had passed the point where war
+might bring a dissolution; and how real that danger was, and how clear
+and just his perception of it, is shown by the Kentucky and Virginia
+Resolutions and by the separatist movement in New England during the
+later war of 1812. Even in 1812 the national existence was menaced,
+but the danger would have proved fatal if it had come twenty years
+earlier, with parties divided by their sympathies with contending
+foreign nations. It was for the sake of the Union that Washington was
+so patient with France, and faced so quietly the storm of indignation
+aroused by the Jay treaty.
+
+In his whole foreign policy, which was so peculiarly his own, the
+American spirit was his pole star; and of all the attacks made upon
+him, the only one which really tried his soul was the accusation that
+he was influenced by foreign predilections. The blind injustice, which
+would not comprehend that his one purpose was to be American and to
+make the people and the government American, touched him more deeply
+than anything else. As party strife grew keener over the issues raised
+by the war between France and England, and as French politics and
+French ideas became more popular, his feelings found more frequent
+utterance, and it is interesting to see how this man, who, we are now
+told, was an English country gentleman, wrote and felt on this matter
+in very trying times. Let us remember, as we listen to him now in his
+own defense, that he was an extremely honest man, silent for the most
+part in doing his work, but when he spoke meaning every word he said,
+and saying exactly what he meant. This was the way in which he
+wrote to Patrick Henry in October, 1795, when he offered him the
+secretaryship of State:--
+
+"My ardent desire is, and my aim has been as far as depended upon the
+executive department, to comply strictly with all our engagements,
+foreign and domestic; but to keep the United States free from
+political connection with every other country, to see them independent
+of all and under the influence of none. In a word, I want an
+_American_ character, that the powers of Europe may be convinced that
+we act for _ourselves_, and not for others. This, in my judgment, is
+the only way to be respected abroad and happy at home; and not, by
+becoming partisans of Great Britain or France, create dissensions,
+disturb the public tranquillity, and destroy, perhaps forever, the
+cement which binds the Union."
+
+Not quite a year later, when the Jay treaty was still agitating the
+public mind in regard to our relations with France, he wrote to
+Pickering:--
+
+"The Executive has a plain road to pursue, namely, to fulfill all the
+engagements which duty requires; be influenced beyond this by none of
+the contending parties; maintain a strict neutrality unless obliged
+by imperious circumstances to depart from it; do justice to all, and
+never forget that we are Americans, the remembrance of which will
+convince us that we ought not to be French or English."
+
+After leaving the presidency, when our difficulties with France seemed
+to be thickening, and the sky looked very dark, he wrote to a friend
+saying that he firmly believed that all would come out well, and then
+added: "To me this is so demonstrable, that not a particle of doubt
+could dwell on my mind relative thereto, if our citizens would
+advocate their own cause, instead of that of any other nation under
+the sun; that is, if, instead of being Frenchmen or Englishmen in
+politics they would be Americans, indignant at every attempt of either
+or any other powers to establish an influence in our councils or
+presume to sow the seeds of discord or disunion among us."
+
+A few days later he wrote to Thomas Pinckney:
+
+"It remains to be seen whether our country will stand upon independent
+ground, or be directed in its political concerns by any other nation.
+A little time will show who are its true friends, or, what is
+synonymous, who are true Americans."
+
+But this eager desire for a true Americanism did not stop at our
+foreign policy, or our domestic politics. He wished it to enter into
+every part of the life and thought of the people, and when it was
+proposed to bring over the entire staff of a Genevan university to
+take charge of a national university here, he threw his influence
+against it, expressing grave doubts as to the advantage of importing
+an entire "seminary of foreigners," for the purpose of American
+education. The letter on this subject, which was addressed to John
+Adams, then continued:--
+
+"My opinion with respect to emigration is that except of useful
+mechanics, and some particular descriptions of men or professions,
+there is no need of encouragement; while the policy or advantage of
+its taking place in a body (I mean the settling of them in a body) may
+be much questioned; for by so doing they retain the language, habits,
+and principles, good or bad, which they bring with them. Whereas by
+an intermixture with our people, they or their descendants get
+assimilated to our customs, measures, and laws; in a word, soon become
+one people."
+
+He had this thought so constantly in his mind that it found expression
+in his will, in the clause bequeathing certain property for the
+foundation of a university in the District of Columbia. "I proceed,"
+he said, "after this recital for the more correct understanding of the
+case, to declare that it has always been a source of serious regret
+with me to see the youth of these United States sent to foreign
+countries for the purposes of education, often before their minds were
+formed, or they had imbibed any adequate ideas of the happiness of
+their own; contracting too frequently not only habits of dissipation
+and extravagance, but _principles unfriendly to republican government
+and to the true and genuine liberties of mankind_, which thereafter
+are rarely overcome; for these reasons it has been my ardent wish to
+see a plan devised on a liberal scale, which would have a tendency
+to spread systematic ideas through all parts of this rising empire,
+thereby to do away with local attachments and state prejudices, as
+far as the nature of things would or indeed ought to admit, from our
+national councils."
+
+Were these the words of an English country gentleman, who chanced to
+be born in one of England's colonies? Persons of the English country
+gentleman pattern at that time were for the most part loyalists;
+excellent people, very likely, but not of the Washington type. Their
+hopes and ideals, their policies and their beliefs were in the mother
+country, not here. The faith, the hope, the thought, of Washington
+were all in the United States. His one purpose was to make America
+independent in thought and action, and he strove day and night to
+build up a nation. He labored unceasingly to lay the foundations of
+the great empire which, with almost prophetic vision, he saw beyond
+the mountains, by opening the way for the western movement. His
+foreign policy was a declaration to the world of a new national
+existence, and he strained every nerve to lift our politics from the
+colonial condition of foreign issues. He wished all immigration to
+be absorbed and moulded here, so that we might be one people, one in
+speech and in political faith. His last words, given to the world
+after the grave had closed over him, were a solemn plea for a home
+training for the youth of the Republic, so that all men might think
+as Americans, untainted by foreign ideas, and rise above all local
+prejudices. He did not believe that mere material development was the
+only or the highest goal; for he knew that the true greatness of a
+nation was moral and intellectual, and his last thoughts were for the
+up-building of character and intelligence. He was never a braggart,
+and mere boasting about his country as about himself was utterly
+repugnant to him. He never hesitated to censure what he believed to be
+wrong, but he addressed his criticisms to his countrymen in order to
+lead them to better things, and did not indulge in them in order
+to express his own discontent, or to amuse or curry favor with
+foreigners. In a word, he loved his country, and had an abiding faith
+in its future and in its people, upon whom his most earnest thoughts
+and loftiest aspirations were centred. No higher, purer, or more
+thorough Americanism than his could be imagined. It was a conception
+far in advance of the time, possible only to a powerful mind, capable
+of lifting itself out of existing conditions and alien influences, so
+that it might look with undazzled gaze upon the distant future. The
+first American in the broad national sense, there has never been a man
+more thoroughly and truly American than Washington. It will be a sorry
+day when we consent to take that noble figure from "the forefront of
+the nation's life," and rank George Washington as anything but an
+American of Americans, instinct with the ideas, as he was devoted to
+the fortunes of the New World which gave him birth.
+
+There is another class of critics who have attacked Washington from
+another side. These are the gentlemen who find him in the way of their
+own heroes. Washington was a man of decided opinions about men as well
+as measures, and he was extremely positive. He had his enemies as
+well as his friends, his likes and his dislikes, strong and clear,
+according to his nature. The respect which he commanded in his life
+has lasted unimpaired since his death, and it is an awkward thing for
+the biographers of some of his contemporaries to know that Washington
+opposed, distrusted, or disliked their heroes. Therefore, in one way
+or another they have gone round a stumbling-block which they could
+not remove. The commonest method is to eliminate Washington by
+representing him vaguely as the great man with whom every one agreed,
+who belonged to no party, and favored all; then he is pushed quietly
+aside. Evils and wrong-doing existed under his administration from the
+opposition point of view, but they were the work of his ministers and
+of wicked advisers. The king could do no wrong, and this pleasant
+theory, which is untrue in fact, amounts to saying that Washington had
+no opinions, but was simply a grand and imposing figure-head. The only
+ground for it which is even suggested is that he sought advice, that
+he used other men's ideas, and that he made up his mind slowly. All
+this is true, and these very qualities help to show his greatness,
+for only small minds mistake their relations with the universe, and
+confuse their finite powers with omniscience. The great man, who
+sees facts and reads the future, uses other men, knows the bounds of
+possibility in action, can decide instantly if need be, but leaves
+rash conclusions to those who are incapable of reaching any others.
+In reality there never was a man who had more definite and vigorous
+opinions than Washington, and the responsibility which he bore he
+never shifted to other shoulders. The work of the Revolution and the
+presidency, whether good or bad, was his own, and he was ready to
+stand or fall by it.
+
+There is a still further extension of the idea that Washington
+represented all parties and all views, and had neither party nor
+opinions of his own. This theory is to the effect that he was great by
+character alone, but that in other respects he did not rise above the
+level of dignified common-place. Such, for instance, is apparently the
+view of Mr. Parton, who in a clever essay discusses in philosophical
+fashion the possible advantages arising from the success attained by
+mere character, as in the case of Washington. Mr. Parton points his
+theory by that last incident of counting the pulse as death drew nigh.
+How characteristic, he exclaims, of the methodical, common-place
+man, is such an act. It was not common, be it said, even were it
+common-place. It was certainly a very simple action, but rare enough
+so far as we know on the every-day deathbed, or in the supreme hour of
+dying greatness, and it was wholly free from that affectation which
+Dr. Johnson thought almost inseparable from the last solemn moment.
+Irregularity is not proof of genius any more than method, and of the
+two, the latter is the surer companion of greatness. The last hour of
+Washington showed that calm, collected courage which had never failed
+in war or peace; and so far it was proof of character. But was it not
+something more? The common-place action of counting the pulse was in
+reality profoundly characteristic, for it was the last exhibition of
+the determined purpose to know the truth, and grasp the fact. Death
+was upon him; he would know the fact. He had looked facts in the face
+all his life, and when the mists gathered, he would face them still.
+
+High and splendid character, great moral qualities for after-ages to
+admire, he had beyond any man of modern times. But to suppose that in
+other respects he belonged to the ranks of mediocrity is not only a
+contradiction in terms, but utterly false. It was not character that
+fought the Trenton campaign and carried the revolution to victory.
+It was military genius. It was not character that read the future of
+America and created our foreign policy. It was statesmanship of the
+highest order. Without the great moral qualities which he possessed,
+his career would not have been possible; but it would have been quite
+as impossible if the intellect had not equaled the character. There is
+no need to argue the truism that Washington was a great man, for that
+is universally admitted. But it is very needful that his greatness
+should be rightly understood, and the right understanding of it is by
+no means universal. His character has been exalted at the expense of
+his intellect, and his goodness has been so much insisted upon both by
+admirers and critics that we are in danger of forgetting that he had a
+great mind as well as high moral worth.
+
+This false attitude both of praise and criticism has been so persisted
+in that if we accept the premises we are forced to the conclusion that
+Washington was actually dull, while with much more openness it is
+asserted that he was cold and at times even harsh. "In the mean time,"
+says Mr. McMaster, "Washington was deprived of the services of the
+only two men his cold heart ever really loved." "A Cromwell with the
+juice squeezed out," says Carlyle somewhere, in his rough and summary
+fashion. Are these judgments correct? Was Washington really, with
+all his greatness, dull and cold? He was a great general and a great
+President, first in war and first in peace and all that, says our
+caviler, but his relaxation was in farm accounts, and his business war
+and politics. He could plan a campaign, preserve a dignified manner,
+and conduct an administration, but he could write nothing more
+entertaining than a state paper or a military report. He gave himself
+up to great affairs, he was hardly human, and he shunned the graces,
+the wit, and all the salt of life, and passed them by on the other
+side.
+
+That Washington was serious and earnest cannot be doubted, for no man
+could have done what he did and been otherwise. He had little time
+for the lighter sides of life, and he never exerted himself to say
+brilliant and striking things. He was not a maker of phrases and
+proclamations, and the quality of the charlatan, so often found in men
+of the highest genius, was utterly lacking in him. He never talked or
+acted with an eye to dramatic effect, and this is one reason for the
+notion that he was dull and dry; for the world dearly loves a little
+charlatanism, and is never happier than in being brilliantly duped.
+But was he therefore really dull and juiceless, unlovable and
+unloving? Responsibility came upon him when a boy, and he was hardly
+of age when he was carrying in his hands the defense of his colony and
+the heavy burden of other human lives. Experience like this makes a
+man who is good for anything sober; but sobriety is not dullness, and
+if we look a little below the surface we find the ready refutation of
+such an idea. In his letters and even in the silent diaries we detect
+the keenest observation. He looked at the country, as he traveled,
+with the eye of the soldier and the farmer, and mastered its features
+and read its meaning with rapid and certain glance. It was not to him
+a mere panorama of fields and woods, of rivers and mountains. He
+saw the beauties of nature and the opportunities of the farmer, the
+trader, or the manufacturer wherever his gaze rested. He gathered
+in the same way the statistics of the people and of their various
+industries. In the West Indies, on the Virginian frontier, in his
+journeys when he was President, he read the story of all he saw as he
+would have read a book, and brought it home with him for use.
+
+[Illustration: NATHANAEL GREENE]
+
+In the same way he read and understood men, and had that power of
+choosing among them which is essential in its highest form to the
+great soldier or statesman. His selection never erred unless in a rare
+instance like that of Monroe, forced on him by political exigencies,
+or when the man of his choice would not serve. Congress chose Gates
+for the southern campaign, but Washington selected Greene, in whom he
+saw great military ability before any one else realized it. He took
+Hamilton, young and unknown, from the captaincy of an artillery
+company, and placed him on his personal staff. He bore with Hamilton's
+outbreak of temper, kept him ever in his confidence, and finally gave
+him the opportunity to prove himself the most brilliant of American
+statesmen. In the crowd of foreign volunteers, the men whom he
+especially selected and trusted were Lafayette and Steuben, each in
+his way of real value to the service. Even more remarkable than the
+ability to recognize great talent was his capacity to weigh and value
+with a nice exactness the worth of men who did not rise to the level
+of greatness. There is a recently published letter, too long for
+quotation here, in which he gives his opinions of all the leading
+officers of the Revolution,[1] and each one shows the most remarkable
+insight, as well as a sharp definiteness of outline that indicates
+complete mastery. These compact judgments were so sound that even the
+lapse of a century and all the study of historians and biographers
+find nothing in their keen analysis to alter and little to add. He did
+not expect to discover genius everywhere, or to find a marshal's
+baton in every knapsack, but he used men according to their value and
+possibilities, which is quite as essential as the preliminary work
+of selection. His military staff illustrated this faculty admirably.
+Every man, after a few trials and changes, fitted his place and did
+his particular task better than any one else could have done it.
+Colonel Meade, loyal and gallant, a good soldier and planter, said
+that Hamilton did the headwork of Washington's staff and he the
+riding. When the war was drawing to a close, Washington said one day
+to Hamilton, "You must go to the Bar, which you can reach in six
+months." Then turning to Meade, "Friend Dick, you must go to your
+plantation; you will make a good farmer, and an honest foreman of the
+grand jury."[2] The prediction was exactly fulfilled, with all that it
+implied, in both cases. But let it not be supposed that there was any
+touch of contempt in the advice to Meade. On the contrary, there was
+a little warmer affection, if anything, for he honored success in any
+honest pursuit, especially in farming, which he himself loved. But he
+distinguished the two men perfectly, and he knew what each was and
+what each meant. It seems little to say, but if we stop to think of
+it, this power to read men aright and see the truth in them and about
+them is a power more precious than any other bestowed by the kindest
+of fairy godmothers. The lame devil of Le Sage looked into the secrets
+of life through the roofs of houses, and much did he find of the
+secret story of humanity. But the great man looking with truth and
+kindliness into men's natures, and reading their characters and
+abilities in their words and acts, has a higher and better power than
+that attributed to the wandering sprite, for such a man holds in his
+hand the surest key to success. Washington, quiet and always on the
+watch, after the fashion of silent greatness, studied untiringly the
+ever recurring human problems, and his just conclusions were powerful
+factors in the great result. He was slow, when he had plenty of time,
+in adopting a policy or plan, or in settling a public question, but
+he read men very quickly. He was never under any delusion as to Lee,
+Gates, Conway, or any of the rest who engaged against him because they
+were restless from the first under the suspicion that he knew them
+thoroughly. Arnold deceived him because his treason was utterly
+inconceivable to Washington, and because his remarkable gallantry
+excused his many faults. But with this exception it may be safely
+said that Washington was never misled as to men, either as general or
+President. His instruments were not invariably the best and sometimes
+failed him, but they were always the best he could get, and he knew
+their defects and ran the inevitable risks with his eyes open. Such
+sure and rapid judgments of men and their capabilities were possible
+only to a man of keen perception and accurate observation, neither of
+which is characteristic of a slow or common-place mind.
+
+[Footnote 1: _Magazine of American History_, vol. iii., 1879, p. 81.]
+
+[Footnote 2: _Memoir of Rt. Rev. William Meade_, by Philip Slaughter,
+D.D., p. 7.]
+
+These qualities were, of course, gifts of nature, improved and
+developed by the training of a life of action on a great scale. He had
+received, indeed, little teaching except that of experience, and the
+world of war and politics had been to him both school and college. His
+education had been limited in the extreme, scarcely going beyond the
+most rudimentary branches except in mathematics, and this is very
+apparent in his early letters. He seems always to have written a
+handsome hand and to have been good at figures, but his spelling at
+the outset was far from perfect, and his style, although vigorous, was
+abrupt and rough. He felt this himself, took great pains to correct
+his faults in this respect, and succeeded, as he did in most things.
+Mr. Sparks has produced a false impression in this matter by smoothing
+and amending in very extensive fashion all the earlier letters, so as
+to give an appearance of uniformity throughout the correspondence; a
+process which not only destroyed much of the vigor and force of the
+early writings, but made them somewhat unnatural. The surveyor and
+frontier soldier wrote very differently from the general of the army
+and the President of the United States, and the improvements of Mr.
+Sparks only served to hide the real man.[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: These facts in regard to Washington's early letters,
+and to his correspondence generally, were first brought to public
+attention by the Reed letters, and by the controversy between Mr.
+Sparks and Lord Mahon. They have, of course, been long familiar to
+students of the original manuscripts. The full extent, however, of the
+changes made by Mr. Sparks, and of the mischief he wrought, and of the
+injustice thus done both to his hero and to posterity, has but lately
+been made known generally by the new edition of Washington's papers
+which have been published, under the supervision of Mr. W.C. Ford.
+Washington himself, when he undertook to arrange his military and
+state papers after his retirement from the presidency, began to
+correct the style of some of his earlier letters. This was natural
+enough, and he had a right to do what he pleased with his own, even
+if he thereby injured the material of the future historian and
+biographer. But he did not proceed far in his work, and the fact
+that he corrected a few of his own letters gave Mr. Sparks no right
+whatever to enter upon a wholesale revision.]
+
+If Washington had been of coarse fibre and heavy mind, this lack of
+education would have troubled him but little. His great success in
+that case would have served only to convince him of the uselessness of
+education except for inferior persons, who could not get along in the
+world without artificial aids. As it was, he never ceased to regret
+his deficiency in this respect, and when Humphreys urged him to
+prepare a history or memoirs of the war, he replied: "In a former
+letter I informed you, my dear Humphreys, that if I had talent for
+it, I have not leisure to turn my thoughts to commentaries. A
+consciousness of a defective education and a certainty of a want of
+time unfit me for such an undertaking." He was misled by his own
+modesty as to his capacity, but his strong feeling as to his lack of
+schooling haunted and troubled him always, although it did not make
+him either indifferent or bitter. He only admired more that which he
+himself had missed. He regarded education, and especially the higher
+forms, with an almost pathetic reverence, and its advancement was
+never absent from his thoughts. When he was made chancellor of the
+college of William and Mary, he was more deeply pleased than by any
+honor ever conferred upon him, and he accepted the position with a
+diffidence and a seriousness which were touching in such a man. In the
+same spirit he gave money to the Alexandria Academy, and every scheme
+to promote public education in Virginia had his eager support. His
+interest was not confined by state lines, for there was nothing so
+near his heart as the foundation of a national university. He urged
+its establishment upon Congress over and over again, and, as has been
+seen, left money in his will for its endowment.
+
+All his sympathies and tastes were those of a man of refined mind, and
+of a lover of scholarship and sound learning. Naturally a very modest
+man, and utterly devoid of any pretense, he underrated, as a matter of
+fact, his own accomplishments. He distrusted himself so much that he
+always turned to Hamilton, both during the Revolution and afterwards,
+as well as in the preparation of the farewell address, to aid him in
+clothing his thoughts in a proper dress, which he felt himself unable
+to give them. His tendency was to be too diffuse and too involved,
+but as a rule his style was sufficiently clear, and he could express
+himself with nervous force when the occasion demanded, and with a
+genuine and stately eloquence when he was deeply moved, as in the
+farewell to Congress at the close of the war. It is not a little
+remarkable that in his letters after the first years there is nothing
+to betray any lack of early training. They are the letters, not of a
+scholar or a literary man, but of an educated gentleman; and although
+he seldom indulged in similes or allusions, when he did so they were
+apt and correct. This was due to his perfect sanity of mind, and to
+his aversion to all display or to any attempt to shine in borrowed
+plumage. He never undertook to speak or write on any subject, or to
+make any reference, which he did not understand. He was a lover of
+books, collected a library, and read always as much as his crowded
+life would permit. When he was at Newburgh, at the close of the war,
+he wrote to Colonel Smith in New York to send him the following
+books:--
+
+ "Charles the XIIth of Sweden.
+ Lewis the XVth, 2 vols.
+ History of the Life and Reign of the Czar Peter the Great.
+ Campaigns of Marshal Turenne.
+ Locke on the Human Understanding.
+ Robertson's History of America, 2 vols.
+ Robertson's History of Charles V.
+ Voltaire's Letters.
+ Life of Gustavus Adolphus.
+ Sully's Memoirs.
+ Goldsmith's Natural History.
+ Mildman on Trees.
+ Vertot's Revolution of Rome, 3 vols.
+ Vertot's Revolution of Portugal, 3 vols.
+ {The Vertot's if they are in estimation.}
+
+ If there is a good Bookseller's shop in the City, I would thank
+ you for sending me a catalogue of the Books and their prices that
+ I may choose such as I want."
+
+His tastes ran to history and to works treating of war or agriculture,
+as is indicated both by this list and some earlier ones. It is not
+probable that he gave so much attention to lighter literature,
+although he wrote verses in his youth, and by an occasional allusion
+in his letters he seems to have been familiar with some of the great
+works of the imagination, like "Don Quixote."[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: At his death the appraisers of the estate found 863
+volumes in his library, besides a great number of pamphlets,
+magazines, and maps. This was a large collection of books for those
+days, and showed that the possessor, although purely a man of affairs,
+loved reading and had literary tastes.]
+
+He never freed himself from the self-distrust caused by his profound
+sense of his own deficiencies in education, on the one hand, and
+his deep reverence for learning, on the other. He had fought the
+Revolution, which opened the way for a new nation, and was at the
+height of his fame when he wrote to the French officers, who begged
+him to visit France, that he was "too old to learn French or to talk
+with ladies;" and it was this feeling in a large measure which kept
+him from ever being a maker of phrases or a sayer of brilliant things.
+In other words, the fact that he was modest and sensitive has been the
+chief cause of his being thought dull and cold. This idea, moreover,
+is wholly that of posterity, for there is not the slightest indication
+on the part of any contemporary that Washington could not talk well
+and did not appear to great advantage in society. It is posterity,
+looking with natural weariness at endless volumes of official letters
+with all the angles smoothed off by the editorial plane, that has
+come to suspect him of being dull in mind and heavy in wit. His
+contemporaries knew him to be dignified and often found him stern, but
+they never for a moment considered him stupid, or thought him a man at
+whom the shafts of wit could be shot with impunity. They were fully
+conscious that he was as able to hold his own in conversation as he
+was in the cabinet or in the field; and we can easily see the justice
+of contemporary opinion if we take the trouble to break through the
+official bark and get at the real man who wrote the letters. In many
+cases we find that he could employ irony and sarcasm with real force,
+and his powers of description, even if stilted at times, were vigorous
+and effective. All these qualities come out strongly in his letters,
+if carefully read, and his private correspondence in particular shows
+a keenness and point which the formalities of public intercourse
+veiled generally from view. We are fortunate in having the account of
+a disinterested and acute observer of the manner in which Washington
+impressed a casual acquaintance in conversation. The actor Bernard,
+whom we have already quoted, and whom we left with Washington at the
+gates of Mount Vernon, gives us the following vivid picture of what
+ensued:--
+
+"In conversation his face had not much variety of expression. A look
+of thoughtfulness was given by the compression of the mouth and the
+indentations of the brow (suggesting an habitual conflict with, and
+mastery over, passion), which did not seem so much to disdain a
+sympathy with trivialities as to be incapable of denoting them. Nor
+had his voice, so far as I could discover in our quiet talk,
+much change or richness of intonation, but he always spoke with
+earnestness, and his eyes (glorious conductors of the light within)
+burned with a steady fire which no one could mistake for mere
+affability; they were one grand expression of the well-known line: 'I
+am a man, and interested in all that concerns humanity.' In one hour
+and a half's conversation he touched on every topic that I brought
+before him with an even current of good sense, if he embellished it
+with little wit or verbal elegance. He spoke like a man who had felt
+as much as he had reflected, and reflected more than he had spoken;
+like one who had looked upon society rather in the mass than in
+detail, and who regarded the happiness of America but as the first
+link in a series of universal victories; for his full faith in the
+power of those results of civil liberty which he saw all around him
+led him to foresee that it would, erelong, prevail in other countries,
+and that the social millennium of Europe would usher in the political.
+When I mentioned to him the difference I perceived between the
+inhabitants of New England and of the Southern States, he remarked: 'I
+esteem those people greatly; they are the stamina of the Union and its
+greatest benefactors. They are continually spreading themselves too,
+to settle and enlighten less favored quarters. Dr. Franklin is a New
+Englander.' When I remarked that his observations were flattering to
+my country, he replied, with great good-humor, 'Yes, yes, Mr. Bernard,
+but I consider your country the cradle of free principles, not their
+armchair. Liberty in England is a sort of idol; people are bred up in
+the belief and love of it, but see little of its doings. They walk
+about freely, but then it is between high walls; and the error of its
+government was in supposing that after a portion of their subjects had
+crossed the sea to live upon a common, they would permit their friends
+at home to build up those walls about them.' A black coming in at this
+moment with a jug of spring water, I could not repress a smile, which
+the general at once interpreted. 'This may seem a contradiction,' he
+continued, 'but I think you must perceive that it is neither a crime
+nor an absurdity. When we profess, as our fundamental principle, that
+liberty is the inalienable right of every man, we do not include
+madmen or idiots; liberty in their hands would become a scourge. Till
+the mind of the slave has been educated to perceive what are the
+obligations of a state of freedom, and not confound a man's with a
+brute's, the gift would insure its abuse. We might as well be asked
+to pull down our old warehouses before trade has increased to demand
+enlarged new ones. Both houses and slaves were bequeathed to us by
+Europeans, and time alone can change them; an event, sir, which, you
+may believe me, no man desires more heartily than I do. Not only do I
+pray for it, on the score of human dignity, but I can already foresee
+that nothing but the rooting out of slavery can perpetuate the
+existence of our Union, by consolidating it in a common bond of
+principle.'
+
+"I now referred to the pleasant hours I had passed in Philadelphia,
+and my agreeable surprise at finding there so many men of talent, at
+which his face lit up vividly. 'I am glad to hear you, sir, who are an
+Englishman, say so, because you must now perceive how ungenerous are
+the assertions people are always making on your side of the water.
+One gentleman, of high literary standing,--I allude to the Abbe
+Raynal,--has demanded whether America has yet produced one great
+poet, statesman, or philosopher. The question shows anything but
+observation, because it is easy to perceive the causes which have
+combined to render the genius of this country scientific rather than
+imaginative. And, in this respect, America has surely furnished her
+quota. Franklin, Rittenhouse, and Rush are no mean names, to which,
+without shame, I may append those of Jefferson and Adams, as
+politicians; while I am told that the works of President Edwards of
+Rhode Island are a text-book in polemics in many European colleges.'
+
+"Of the replies which I made to his inquiries respecting England, he
+listened to none with so much interest as to those which described the
+character of my royal patron, the Prince of Wales. 'He holds out every
+promise,' remarked the general, 'of a brilliant career. He has been
+well educated by _events_, and I doubt not that, in his time, England
+will receive the benefit of her child's emancipation. She is at
+present bent double, and has to walk with crutches; but her offspring
+may teach her the secret of regaining strength, erectness, and
+independence.' In reference to my own pursuits he repeated the
+sentiments of Franklin. He feared the country was too poor to be a
+patron of the drama, and that only arts of a practical nature
+would for some time be esteemed. The stage he considered to be an
+indispensable resource for settled society, and a chief refiner; not
+merely interesting as a comment on the history of social happiness
+by its exhibition of manners, but an agent of good as a school for
+poetry, in holding up to honor the noblest principles. 'I am too old
+and too far removed,' he added, 'to seek for or require this pleasure
+myself, but the cause is not to droop on my account. There's my friend
+Mr. Jefferson has time and taste; he goes always to the play, and I'll
+introduce you to him,' a promise which he kept, and which proved to me
+the source of the greatest benefit and pleasure."
+
+This is by far the best account of Washington in the ordinary converse
+of daily life that has come down to us. The narrator belonged to the
+race who live by amusing their fellow-beings, and are in consequence
+quick to notice peculiarities and highly susceptible to being bored.
+Bernard, after the first interest of seeing a very eminent man had
+worn off, would never have lingered for an hour and a half of chat and
+then gone away reluctantly if his host had been either dull of speech
+or cold and forbidding of manner. It is evident that Washington talked
+well, easily, and simply, ranging widely over varied topics with a
+sure touch, and that he drew from the ample resources of a well-stored
+and reflective mind. The scraps of conversation which Bernard
+preserves are interesting and above the average of ordinary talk,
+without manifesting any attempt to be either brilliant or striking,
+and it is also apparent that Washington had the art of putting his
+guest entirely at his ease by his own pleasant and friendly manner. He
+had picked up the English actor on the road, liked his readiness to
+be helpful (always an attraction to him in any one), found him
+well-mannered and intelligent, and brought him home to rest and chat
+in the pleasant summer afternoon. To Bernard he was simply the plain
+Virginia gentleman, with a liberal and cultivated interest in men and
+things, and not a trace of oppressive and conscious greatness about
+him. It is to be suspected that he was by no means equally genial to
+the herd of sight-seers who pursued him in his retirement, but in this
+meeting he appeared as he must always have appeared to his family and
+friends.
+
+We get the same idea from the scattered allusions that we have to
+Washington in private life. Although silent and reserved as to
+himself, he was by no means averse to society, and in his own house
+all his guests, both great and small, felt at their ease with him,
+although with no temptation to be familiar. We know from more than
+one account that the dinners at the presidential house, as well as at
+Mount Vernon, were always agreeable. It was his wont to sit at table
+after the cloth was removed sipping a glass of wine and eating nuts,
+of which he was very fond, while he listened to the conversation and
+caused it to flow easily, not so much by what he said as by the kindly
+smile and ready sympathy which made all feel at home. We can gather
+an idea also of the charm which he had in the informal intercourse of
+daily life from some of his letters on trifling matters. Here is a
+little note written to Mrs. Stockton in acknowledgment of a pastoral
+poem which she had sent him:--
+
+ "MOUNT VERNON, February 18, 1784.
+
+ "Dear Madam: The intemperate weather and very great care which the
+ post riders take of themselves prevented your letter of the 4th of
+ last month from reaching my hands till the 10th of this. I was then in
+ the very act of setting off on a visit to my aged mother, from whence
+ I am just returned. These reasons I beg leave to offer as an apology
+ for my silence until now.
+
+ "It would be a pity indeed, my dear madam, if the muses should be
+ restrained in you; it is only to be regretted that the hero of your
+ poetical talents is not more deserving their lays. I cannot, however,
+ from motives of pure delicacy (because I happen to be the principal
+ character in your Pastoral) withhold my encomiums on the performance;
+ for I think the easy, simple, and beautiful strain with which the
+ dialogue is supported does great justice to your genius; and will not
+ only secure Lucinda and Amista from wits and critics, but draw from
+ them, however unwillingly, their highest plaudits; if they can
+ relish the praises that are given, as they must admire the manner of
+ bestowing them.
+
+ "Mrs. Washington, equally sensible with myself of the honor you have
+ done her, joins me in most affectionate compliments to yourself, and
+ the young ladies and gentlemen of your family.
+
+ "With sentiments of esteem, regard and respect,
+ I have the honor to be
+ ---- ----"
+
+This is not a matter of "great pith or moment," but it shows how
+pleasantly he could acknowledge a civility. The turn of the sentences
+smacks of the formality of the time. They sound a little labored,
+perhaps, to modern ears, but they were graceful according to the
+standard of his day, and they have a gentle courtesy which can never
+be out of fashion.
+
+He had the power also of paying a compliment in an impressive and
+really splendid manner whenever he felt it to be deserved. When
+Charles Thomson, who for fifteen years had been the honored secretary
+of the Continental Congress, wrote to announce his retirement,
+Washington replied: "The present age does so much justice to the
+unsullied reputation with which you have always conducted yourself in
+the execution of the duties of your office, and posterity will find
+your name so honorably connected with the verification of such a
+multitude of astonishing facts, that my single suffrage would add
+little to the illustration of your merits. Yet I cannot withhold any
+just testimonial in favor of so old, so faithful, and so able a
+public officer, which might tend to soothe his mind in the shades of
+retirement. Accept, then, this serious declaration, that your services
+have been important, as your patriotism was distinguished; and enjoy
+that best of all rewards, the consciousness of having done your duty
+well."
+
+Dull men do not write in this fashion. It is one thing to pay a
+handsome compliment, although even that is not by itself easy, but to
+give it in addition the note of sincerity which alone makes it of real
+value demands both art and good feeling. Let us take one more example
+of this sort before we drop the subject. When the French officers were
+leaving America Washington wrote to De Chastellux to bid him farewell.
+"Our good friend, the Marquis of Lafayette," he said, "prepared me,
+long before I had the honor to see you, for those impressions of
+esteem which opportunities and your own benevolent mind have since
+improved into a deep and lasting friendship; a friendship which
+neither time nor distance can eradicate. I can truly say that never in
+my life have I parted with a man to whom my soul clave more sincerely
+than it did to you. My warmest wishes will attend you in your voyage
+across the Atlantic to the rewards of a generous prince, the arms of
+affectionate friends; and be assured that it will be one of my highest
+gratifications to keep up a regular intercourse with you by letter."
+
+These letters exhibit not only the grace and point born of
+intelligence, but also the best of manners; by which I mean private
+manners, not those of the public man, of which there will be something
+to say hereafter. The attraction of Washington's society as a private
+gentleman lay in his good sense, breadth of knowledge, and good
+manners. Now the essence of good manners of the highest and most
+genuine kind is good feeling, which is thoughtful of others, and which
+is impossible to a cold, hard, or insensible nature. Such manners as
+we see in Washington's private letters and private life would have
+been strange offspring from the cold heart attributed to him by Mr.
+McMaster. In justice to Mr. McMaster, however, be it said, the charge
+is not a new one. It has been hinted at and spoken of elsewhere, and
+many persons have suspected that such was the case from the well-meant
+efforts of what may be called the cherry-tree school to elevate
+Washington's character by depicting him as a soulless, bloodless prig.
+The blundering efforts of the latter need not be noticed, but the
+reflections of serious critics cannot be passed by. The theory of the
+cold heart and the unfeeling nature seems to proceed in this wise.
+Washington was silent and reserved, he did not wear his heart upon his
+sleeve for daws to peck at, therefore he was cold; just as if mere
+noise and chatter had any relation to warm affections. He would take
+no salary from Congress, says Mr. McMaster, in fine antithesis, but
+he exacted his due from the family of the poor mason. This has an
+unpleasant sound, and suggests the man who is generous in public, and
+hard and grasping in private. Mr. McMaster in this sentence, however,
+whether intentionally or not, is not quite accurate in his facts, and
+conveys by his mode of statement an entirely false impression. The
+story to which he refers is given by Parkinson, who wrote a book about
+his experiences in America in 1798-1800. Parkinson had the story from
+one General Stone, and it was to this effect:[1] A room was plastered
+at Mount Vernon on one occasion, and was paid for during the owner's
+absence. When Washington returned he examined the work and had it
+measured, as was his habit. It then appeared that an error had been
+made, and that fifteen shillings too much had been paid. Meantime the
+plasterer had died. His widow married again, and her second husband
+advertised in the newspapers that he was prepared to pay the debts of
+his predecessor and collect all moneys due him. Thereupon Washington
+put in his claim, which was paid as a matter of course. He did not
+extort the debt from the family of the poor mason, but collected it
+from the second husband of the widow, in response to a voluntary
+advertisement. It was very careful and even close dealing, but it was
+neither harsh nor unjust, and the writer who has preserved the story
+would be not a little surprised at the interpretation that has
+been put upon it, for he cited it, as he expressly says, merely
+to illustrate the extraordinary regularity and method to which he
+attributed much of Washington's success.
+
+[Footnote 1: Parkinson's _Tour in America_, 1798-1800, 437 and ff.]
+
+Parkinson, in this same connection, tells several other stories,
+vague in origin, and sounding like mere gossip, but still worthy of
+consideration. According to one of them, Washington maintained a
+public ferry, which was customary among the planters, and the public
+paid regular tolls for its use. On one occasion General Stone, the
+authority for the previous anecdote, crossed the ferry and offered
+a moidore in payment. The ferryman objected to receiving it, on the
+ground that it was short weight, but Stone insisted, and it was
+finally accepted. On being given to Washington it was weighed, and
+being found three half-pence short, the ferryman was ordered to
+collect the balance due. On another occasion a tenant could not make
+the exact change in paying his rent, and Washington would not accept
+the money until the tenant went to Alexandria and brought back
+the precise sum. There is, however, still another anecdote, which
+completes this series, and which shows a different application of the
+same rule. Washington, in traveling, was in the habit of paying at
+inns the same for his servants as for himself. An innkeeper once
+charged him three shillings and ninepence for himself, and three
+shillings for his servant. Thereupon Washington sent for his host,
+said that his servant ate as much as he, and insisted on paying the
+additional ninepence.
+
+This extreme exactness in money matters, down even to the most
+trifling sums, was no doubt a foible, but it is well to observe that
+it was not a foible which sought only a selfish advantage, for the
+rule which he applied to others he applied also to himself. He meant
+to have his due, no matter how trivial, and he meant also that
+others should have theirs. In trifles, as in greater things, he was
+scrupulously just, and although he was always generous and ready to
+give, he insisted rigidly on what was justly his. A gift was one
+thing, a business transaction was another. The man himself who told
+these very stories was a good example of the kindliness which went
+hand in hand with this exactness in business affairs. Parkinson was
+an Englishman, of great narrowness of mind, who came out here to be a
+farmer, failed, and went home to write a book in denunciation of the
+country. America never had a more hostile critic. According to
+this profound observer, there was no good land in America, and no
+possibility of successful agriculture. The horses were bad, the cattle
+were bad, and sheep-raising was impossible. There was no game, the
+fish and oysters were poor and watery, and no one could ever hope in
+this wretchedly barren land for either wealth or comfort. It was a
+country fit only for the reception of convicts, and the cast-off
+mistress of an Englishman made a good wife for an American. A person
+who held such views as these was not likely to be biased in favor of
+anything American, and his evidence as to Washington may be safely
+trusted as not likely to be unduly favorable. He tells us that on his
+arrival at Mount Vernon, with letters of introduction, he was kindly
+received; that this hospitality was never relaxed; and that the
+general lent him money. He was at least grateful, and these are his
+last words as to Washington:--
+
+"To me he appeared a mild, friendly man, in company rather reserved,
+in private speaking with candor. His behavior to me was such that I
+shall ever revere his name.
+
+"General Washington lived a great man, and died the same.
+
+"I am of opinion that the general never knowingly did anything wrong,
+but did to all men as he would they should do to him."
+
+Evidently he appeared to Mr. Parkinson kindly and generous, as well
+as exactly just. It is well to have the truth about Washington, and
+nothing but the truth. Yet in escaping from the falsehoods of the
+eulogist and the myth-maker, let us beware of those which spring from
+the reaction against the current and accepted views. I have quoted
+the Parkinson stories at length, because they enforce this point
+admirably. No _a priori_ theory is safe, and to assume that Washington
+must have committed grave errors and been guilty of mean actions
+because they are common to humanity, and have not been admitted in his
+case, is just as misleading as to assume, as is usually done, that he
+was absolutely perfect and without fault.
+
+Let it be admitted that Washington, ever ready to pay his own dues,
+was strict, and sometimes severe, in demanding them of others; but
+let it be also remembered, this is the worst that can be said. He was
+always ready to overlook faults of omission or commission; he would
+pardon easily mismanagement or extravagance on his estate or in
+his household; but he had no mercy for anything that savored of
+ingratitude, treachery, or dishonesty, and he carried this same
+feeling into public as well as private affairs. No officer who had
+bravely done his best had anything to fear in defeat from Washington's
+anger. He was never unjust, and he was always kind to misfortune or
+mistake, but to the coward or the traitor he was entirely unforgiving.
+This it was which made Arnold's treason so bitter to him. Not only had
+he been deceived, but the country as well as himself had been most
+basely betrayed; and for this reason he was relentless to Andre, whom
+it is said he never saw, living or dead. The young Englishman had
+taken part in a wretched piece of treachery, and for the sake of the
+country, and as a warning to traitors, Washington would not spare him.
+He would never have ordered a political prisoner to be taken out and
+shot in a ditch, after the fashion of Napoleon; nor would he have
+dealt with any people as the Duke of Cumberland dealt with the
+clansmen after Culloden. Such performances would have seemed to him
+wanton as well as cruel, and he was too wise and too humane a man
+to be either. Indian atrocities, for instance, with which he was
+familiar, never led him to retaliate in kind. But he was perfectly
+prepared to exact the extremest penalty by just and recognized
+methods; and had it not been for the urgent entreaties of his friends,
+he would have sent Asgill to the scaffold, repugnant as it was to his
+feelings, because he felt that the murder of Huddy was a crime for
+which the English army was responsible, and which demanded a just and
+striking vengeance. He was, it may be freely confessed, of anything
+but a tame nature. There was a good deal of Berserker in his make-up,
+and he was fierce in his anger when he believed that a great wrong had
+been done. But because he was stern and unrelenting when he felt that
+justice and his duty required him to be so, no more proves that he had
+a cold heart than does the fact that he was silent, dignified, and
+reserved. Cold-blooded men are not fierce in seeking to redress the
+wrongs of others, nor are the fluent of speech the only kind and
+generous members of the human family.
+
+Washington's whole life, indeed, contradicts the charge that he was
+cold of heart and sluggish of feeling. The man who wrote as he did in
+his extreme youth, when Indians were harrying the frontier where he
+commanded, was not lacking in humanity or sympathy; and such as he
+then was he remained to the end of his life. A soldier by instinct and
+experience, he never grew indifferent to the miseries of war. Human
+suffering always appealed to him and moved him deeply, and when it was
+wantonly inflicted stirred him to anger and to the desire for the wild
+justice of revenge.
+
+The goodness and kindness of man's heart, however, are much more truly
+shown in the little details of life than in the great matters which
+affect classes or communities. Washington was considerate and helpful
+to all men, and if he was ever cold and distant in his manner, it was
+to the great, and not to the poor or humble. As has been indicated by
+his recognition of the actor Bernard, he had in high degree the royal
+gift of remembering names and faces. When he was at Senator Dalton's
+house in Newburyport, on his New England tour of 1789, he met an
+old servant whom he had not seen since the French war, thirty years
+before. He knew the man at once, spoke to him, and welcomed him. So it
+was with the old soldiers of the Revolution, who were always sure of a
+welcome, and, if he had ever seen them, of a recognition. No man ever
+turned from his presence wounded by a cold forgetfulness. When he was
+at Ipswich, on this same journey, Mr. Cleaveland, the minister of the
+town, was presented to him. As he approached, hat in hand, Washington
+said, "Put on your hat, parson, and I will shake hands with you." "I
+cannot wear my hat in your presence, general," was the reply, "when I
+think of what you have done for this country." "You did as much as I."
+"No, no," protested the parson. "Yes," said Washington, "you did what
+you could, and I've done no more." What a gracious, kindly courtesy is
+this, and not without the salt of wit! Does it not show the perfection
+of good manners which deals with all men for what they are, and is
+full of a warm sympathy born of a good heart? He was criticised
+for coldness and accused of monarchical leanings, because, at Mrs.
+Washington's receptions and his own public levees, he stood, dressed
+in black velvet, with one hand on the hilt of his sword and the other
+behind his back, and shook hands with no one, although he talked with
+all. He did this because he thought it became the President of the
+United States upon state occasions, and his sense of the dignity of
+his office was always paramount. But away from forms and ceremonies,
+with the old servant or the old soldier, or the country parson, his
+hand was never behind his back, and his manners were those of a great
+but simple gentleman, and came straight from a kind heart, full of
+sympathy and good feeling.
+
+He was, too, the most hospitable of men in the best sense, and his
+house was always open to all who came. When he was away during the war
+or the presidency, his instructions to his agents were to keep up the
+hospitality of Mount Vernon, just as if he had been there himself; and
+he was especially careful in directing that, if there were general
+distress, poor persons of the neighborhood should have help from his
+kitchen or his granaries.
+
+His own more immediate hospitality was of the same kind. He always
+entertained in the most liberal manner, both as general and President,
+and in a style which he thought befitted the station he occupied. But
+apart from all this, his table, whether at home or abroad, was never
+without its guest. "Dine with us," he wrote to Lear on July 31, 1797,
+"or we shall do what we have not done for twenty years, dine alone."
+The real hospitality which opens the door and spreads the board for
+the friend or stranger, admitting them to the family without form or
+ceremony, was his also. "My manner of living is plain," he wrote to
+a friend after the Revolution; "I do not mean to be put out of it. A
+glass of wine and a bit of mutton are always ready; and such as will
+be content to partake of them are always welcome. Those who expect
+more will be disappointed, but no change will be effected by
+it." Genuine hospitality as unstinted as it was sincere was not
+characteristic of a cold man, or of one who sought to avoid his
+fellows. It is one of the lighter graces of life, perhaps, but when it
+comes freely and simply, and not as a vehicle for the display or the
+aggrandizement of its dispenser, it is not without a meaning to the
+student of character.
+
+Washington was not much given to professions of friendship, nor was he
+one of the great men who keep a circle of intimates and sometimes of
+flatterers about them. He was extremely independent of the world and
+perfectly self-sufficing, but it is a mistake to suppose that because
+he unbosomed himself to scarcely any one, and had the loneliness of
+greatness and of high responsibilities, he was therefore without
+friends. He had as many friends as usually fall to the lot of any man;
+and although he laid bare his inmost heart to none, some were very
+close and all were very dear to him. In war and politics, as has
+already been said, the two men who came nearest to him were Hamilton
+and Knox, and his diary shows that when he was President he consulted
+with them nearly every day wholly apart from the regular cabinet
+meetings. They were the two advisers who were friends as well as
+secretaries, and who followed and sustained him as a matter of
+affection as much as politics. At home his neighbor, George Mason,
+although they came to differ, was a strong friend whom he liked and
+respected, and whose opinion, whether favorable or adverse, he always
+sought. His feeling to Patrick Henry was much deeper than mere
+political or official acquaintance, and the lovable qualities of the
+brilliant orator, clear even now across the gulf of a century, were
+evidently strongly felt by Washington. They differed about the
+Constitution, but Washington was eager at a later day to have Henry by
+his side in the cabinet, and in the last years they stood shoulder to
+shoulder in defense of the Union with a personal sympathy deeper than
+any born of a mere similarity of opinion. Henry Lee, the son of his
+old sweetheart, he loved with a tender and peculiar affection. He
+watched over him and helped him, rejoiced in the dashing gallantry
+which made him famous as Light-horse Harry, and, when he had won civil
+as well as military distinction, trusted him and counseled with him.
+Dr. Craik, the companion of his youth and his life-long physician, was
+always a dear and close friend, and the regard between the two is very
+pleasant to look at, as we see it glancing out here and there in the
+midst of state papers and official cases. For the officers of the army
+he had a peculiarly warm feeling, and he had among them many close
+friends, like Carrington of Virginia, and Charles Cotesworth Pinckney
+of South Carolina. His immediate staff he regarded with especial
+affection, and it is worthy of notice that they all not only admired
+their great chief, but followed him with a personal devotion which is
+not a little curious if Washington was cold of heart and distant of
+manner in the intimate association of a military family.
+
+This feeling for his soldiers and his officers extended also to those
+civilians who had stood by him and the army, and who had labored
+for victory in all those trying years. Such a one was old Governor
+Trumbull, "Brother Jonathan," who never failed to respond when a call
+was made for men and money, and upon whose friendship and advice
+Washington always leaned. Such, too, were Robert and Gouverneur
+Morris. The sacrifices and energy of the one and the zeal and
+brilliant abilities of the other endeared both to him, and his
+friendship for them never wavered when misfortune overtook the elder,
+and when the younger was driven by malice, both foreign and domestic,
+from the place he had filled so well. Another, again, of this kind was
+Franklin. In the dark days of the old French war, Washington had seen
+displayed for the first time the force and tact of Franklin, which
+alone obtained the necessary wagons and enabled Braddock's army
+to move. The early impression thus obtained was never lost, and
+Franklin's patriotism, his sympathy for the general and the army in
+the Revolution, as well as the stanch support he gave them, aroused in
+Washington a sense of obligation and friendship of the sincerest kind.
+In proportion as he loathed ingratitude was he grateful himself. He
+loved Franklin for his friendship and support, he admired him for
+his successful diplomacy, and he reverenced him for his scientific
+attainments. The only American whose fame could for a moment come
+in competition with his own, he regarded the old philosopher with
+affectionate veneration, and when, after his own fashion, and not at
+all after the fashion of the time, he arrived in Philadelphia on the
+exact day set for the Constitutional Convention, his first act was to
+call upon Dr. Franklin and pay his respects to him. The courtesy and
+kindliness of this little act on the part of a man who had come to the
+town in the midst of shouting crowds, with joy bells ringing above his
+head, speak well for the simple, honest heart that dictated it.
+
+After all, it may be said that a passing civility of this sort
+involved but little trouble, and was more a matter of good-breeding
+than anything else. Let us look, then, at another and widely different
+case. Of all the men whom the fortunes of war brought across
+Washington's path there was none who became dearer to him than
+Lafayette, for the generous, high-spirited young Frenchman, full of
+fresh enthusiasm and brave as a lion, appealed at once to Washington's
+heart. He quickly admitted him to his confidence, and the excellent
+service of Lafayette in the field, together with his invaluable
+help in securing the French alliance, deepened and strengthened the
+sympathy and affection which were entirely reciprocal. After Lafayette
+departed, a constant correspondence was maintained; and when the
+Bastille fell, it was to Washington that Lafayette sent its key, which
+still hangs on the wall of Mt. Vernon. As Lafayette rose rapidly to
+the dangerous heights of revolutionary leadership, he had at every
+step Washington's advice and sympathy. Then the tide turned; he fell
+headlong from power, and brought up in an Austrian prison. From that
+moment Washington spared no pains to help his unhappy friend, although
+his own position was one of extreme difficulty. Lafayette was not only
+the proscribed exile of one country, but also the political prisoner
+of another, and the President could not compromise the United States
+at that critical moment by showing too much interest in the fate of
+his unhappy friend. He nevertheless went to the very edge of prudence
+in trying to save him, and the ministers of the United States were
+instructed to use every private effort to secure Lafayette's release,
+or at least the mitigation of his confinement. All these attempts
+failed, but Washington was more successful in other directions. He
+sent money to Madame de Lafayette, who was absolutely beggared at the
+moment, and represented to her that it was in settlement of an account
+which he owed the marquis. When Lafayette's son and his own namesake
+came to this country for an asylum, he had him cared for in Boston and
+New York by his personal friends; George Cabot in the one case, and
+Hamilton in the other. As soon as public affairs made it proper for
+him to do it, he took the lad into his own household, treated him like
+a son, and kept him near him until events permitted the boy to return
+to Europe and rejoin his father. The sufferings and dangers of
+Lafayette and his family were indeed a source of great unhappiness
+to Washington, and we have the authority of Bradford, his
+attorney-general, that when the President attempted to talk about
+Lafayette he was so much affected that he shed tears,--a very rare
+exhibition of emotion in a man so intensely reserved.
+
+Absence had as little effect upon his memory of old friends as
+misfortune. The latter stimulated recollection, and the former could
+not dim it. He found time, in the very heat and fire of war and
+revolution, to write to Bryan Fairfax lamenting the death of "the good
+old lord" whose house had been open to him, and whose hand had ever
+helped him when he was a young and unknown man just beginning his
+career. When he returned to Mount Vernon after the presidency, full of
+years and honors, one of his first acts was to write to Mrs. Fairfax
+in England to assure her of his lasting remembrance, and to breathe
+a sigh over the changes time had brought, and over the by-gone years
+when they had been young together.
+
+The loyalty of nature which made his remembrance of old friends so
+real and lasting found expression also in the thoughtfulness which he
+showed toward casual acquaintances, and this was especially the case
+when he had received attention or service at any one's hands, or when
+he felt that he was able to give pleasure by a slight effort on his
+own part. A little incident which occurred during the first year of
+his presidency illustrates this trait in his character very well.
+Uxbridge was one among the many places where he stopped on his New
+England tour, and when he got to Hartford he wrote to Mr. Taft, who
+had been his host in the former town, and who evidently cherished for
+him a very keen admiration, the following note:--
+
+ "November 8, 1789.
+
+ "Sir: Being informed that you have given my name to one of your
+ sons, and called another after Mrs. Washington's family, and being
+ moreover very much pleased with the modest and innocent looks of
+ your two daughters, Patty and Polly, I do for these reasons send
+ each of these girls a piece of chintz; and to Patty, who bears the
+ name of Mrs. Washington, and who waited more upon us than Polly
+ did, I send five guineas, with which she may buy herself any
+ little ornament she may want, or she may dispose of them in any
+ other manner more agreeable to herself. As I do not give these
+ things with a view to having it talked of, or even to its being
+ known, the less there is said about the matter the better you will
+ please me; but, that I may be sure the chintz and money have got
+ safe to hand, let Patty, who I dare say is equal to it, write me
+ a line informing me thereof, directed to 'The President of the
+ United States at New York.' I wish you and your family well, and
+ am," etc.
+
+Let us turn now from friendship to nearer and closer relations.
+Washington was not only too reserved, but he had too much true
+sentiment, to leave his correspondence with Mrs. Washington behind
+him; for he knew that his vast collection of papers would become the
+material of history, and he had no mind that strangers should look
+into the sacred recesses of his private life. Only one letter to
+Mrs. Washington apparently has survived. It is simple and full of
+affection, as one would expect, and tells, as well as many volumes
+could, of the happy relations between husband and wife. Washington had
+many love affairs in his youth, but he proved in the end a constant
+lover. His wife was a high-bred, intelligent woman, simple and
+dignified in her manners, efficient in all ways to be the helpmate of
+her husband in the high places to which he was called. No shadow ever
+rested on their married life, and when the end came Mrs. Washington
+only said, "All is over now. I shall soon follow him." She could not
+conceive of life without the presence of the unchanging love and noble
+character which had been by her side so long.
+
+Children were denied to Washington, but although this was a
+disappointment it did not chill him nor narrow his sympathies, as is
+so often the case. He took to his heart his wife's children as if
+they were his own. He watched over them and cared for them, and their
+deaths caused him the deepest sorrow. He afterwards adopted his wife's
+two grandchildren, and watched over them, too, in the same way. In the
+midst of all the cares of the presidency, Washington found time always
+to write to George Custis, a boy at school or at college; while Nellie
+Custis was as dear to him as his own daughter, and her marriage a
+source of the most affectionate interest. Indeed, it is evident from
+various little anecdotes that he was much less strict with these
+children than was Mrs. Washington, and much more disposed to condone
+faults. Certain it is that they loved him tenderly, and in a way that
+only long years of loving-kindness could have made possible.
+
+He showed the same feeling to all his own kindred. His mother was ever
+the object of the most loyal affection, and even at the head of the
+armies he would turn aside to visit her with the same respect and
+devotion as when he was a mere boy. He was ever mindful of his
+brothers and sisters, and their fortunes. None of them were ever
+forgotten, and he was especially kind to the children of those who
+had been least fortunate and most needed his help. He educated and
+counseled his favorite nephew Bushrod, and did the same for the sons
+of George Steptoe Washington. Nothing is pleasanter than to read in
+the midst of official papers the long letters in which he gave these
+boys great store of wise and kindly advice, guided their education,
+strove to form their characters, and traced for them the honorable
+careers which he wished them to pursue. Very few men who had risen to
+the heights reached by Washington would have found time, in the midst
+of engrossing cares, to write such letters as he wrote to friends and
+kinsmen. A kind heart prompted them, but they were much more than
+merely kind, for when Washington undertook to do anything he did it
+thoroughly. Whether it was a treaty with England, the education of a
+boy, or the service of a friend, he gave it his best thought and his
+utmost care. Where those he loved were concerned, he was never too
+busy to think of them, and he spared no pains to help them; censuring
+faults where they existed, and giving praise in generous manner where
+praise was due.
+
+To any one who carefully studies his life, it is evident that
+Washington was as warm-hearted and affectionate as he was great in
+character and ability, and that he was so without noise or pretense.
+This really only amounts to saying that he was a well-balanced man,
+and yet even this cannot be said without admitting still another
+quality. The sanest of all senses is the sense of humor, and the
+nature in which it is wholly lacking cannot be thoroughly rounded and
+complete. Humor is not the most lofty of qualities, but it is one of
+the most essential, and it is generally assumed that Washington
+was very deficient in humor. This idea has arisen from a hasty
+consideration of the subject, and from a superficial conception of
+humor itself. To utter jests, or to say or write witty, brilliant, or
+amusing things, no doubt implies the possession of humor, but they are
+not the whole of it, for a man may have a fine sense of humor, and yet
+never make a joke nor utter a sarcasm. The distinction between humor
+and the want of it lies much deeper than word of mouth. The man
+without a sense of humor is sure to make a certain number of solemn
+blunders. They may be in matters of importance or in the merest
+trifles, but they are blunders none the less, and come from
+insensibility to the incongruous, the ludicrous, or the impossible. It
+may be said that common sense suffices to avoid these pitfalls, but
+this is really begging the question, inasmuch as common sense of a
+high order amounting almost to genius cannot exist without humor, for
+humor is the root and foundation of common sense. Let us apply this
+test to Washington and we shall find that there never was a man who
+made fewer mistakes than he, down even to matters of the smallest
+detail. Search his career from beginning to end, and there is not a
+solemn blunder to be found in it. He was attacked and assailed both as
+general and President, but he was never laughed at. In other words,
+he had a sense of humor which made it impossible for him to blunder
+solemnly, or to do or say anything which ridicule could touch.
+
+It is not, however, necessary to leave his possession of a sense of
+humor to inference from his career and his freedom from blunders. That
+he had humor strong, sane, and abundant is susceptible of much more
+direct proof; and the idea that he was lacking in this respect arose
+undoubtedly from the gravity of demeanor which was characteristic of
+the man. He had assumed the heavy responsibilities of an important
+military command in the French war at an age when most men are just
+leaving college and beginning to study a profession. This of itself
+sobered him, and added to his natural quiet and reserve, so that in
+estimating him in after-life this early and severe discipline at a
+most impressionable age ought never to be overlooked, for it had a
+very marked effect upon his character.
+
+He was not perhaps exactly joyous or gay of nature, but he had a
+contented and happy disposition, and, like all robust, well-balanced
+men, he possessed strong animal spirits and a keen sense of enjoyment.
+He loved a wild, open-air life, and was devoted to rough out-door
+sports. He liked to wrestle and run, to shoot, ride or dance, and
+to engage in all trials of skill and strength, for which his great
+muscular development suited him admirably. With such tastes, it
+followed almost as a matter of course that he loved laughter and fun.
+Good, hearty, country fun, a ludicrous mishap, a practical joke, all
+merriment of a simple, honest kind, were highly congenial to him,
+especially in his youth and early manhood. Here is the way, for
+example, in which he described in his diary a ball he attended in
+1760: "In a convenient room, detached for the purpose, abounded great
+plenty of bread and butter, some biscuits, with tea and coffee which
+the drinkers of could not distinguish from hot water sweetened. Be
+it remembered that pocket handkerchiefs served the purposes of
+tablecloths, and that no apologies were made for them. I shall
+therefore distinguish this ball by the style and title of the
+bread-and-butter ball." The wit is not brilliant, but there was a good
+hearty laugh in the young man who jots down this little memorandum in
+his diary.
+
+The years after the French war were happy years, free from care and
+full of simple pleasures. Then came the Revolution, bringing with it a
+burden such as has seldom been laid upon any man, and the seriousness
+bred by earlier experiences, came back with tenfold force. The popular
+saying was that Washington never smiled during the war, and, roughly
+speaking, this was quite true. In all those years of danger and trial,
+inasmuch as he was a man big of heart and brain, he had the gravity
+and the sadness born of responsibility, and the suffering sure to come
+to an unselfish mind. It was at this time that he began to be most
+closely observed of men, and hence came the idea that he never
+laughed, and therefore was a being devoid of humor, the most
+sympathetic of gifts. But as a matter of fact, the old sense of fun
+never left him. It would come to his aid at the most serious moments,
+just as an endless flow of stories brought relief to Lincoln and
+carried him round many jagged corners. With Washington it was hearty,
+laughing mirth at some ludicrous incident. Putnam riding into
+Cambridge with an old woman clinging behind him; Greene searching for
+his wig while it was on his head; a young braggart flung over the head
+of an unbroken colt; or a good, rollicking story from Colonel Seammel
+or Major Fairlie,--all these would delight Washington, and send him
+off into peals of inextinguishable laughter. It was ever the old,
+hearty love of fun born of animal spirits, which never left him, and
+which would always break out on sufficient provocation. Mr. Parton
+would have us believe that this was all, and that the common-place
+hero whom he describes never rose above the level of the humor
+conveyed by grinning through a horse-collar. Even admitting the truth
+of this, a real love of honest fun and of a hearty laugh is a kindly
+quality that all men like.
+
+But was this all? Is it quite true that Washington had only a love of
+boisterous fun, and nothing else? It is worth looking a little deeper
+than the current stories of the camp to find out, and yet one of these
+very camp-stories raises at once a strong suspicion that Mr. Parton's
+conclusion in this regard, like so many conclusions about Washington,
+is unfounded. When General Lee took the oath of allegiance to the
+United States, he remarked, in making abjuration of his former
+allegiance, that he was perfectly ready to abjure the king, but could
+not bring himself to abjure the Prince of Wales, at which bit of irony
+Washington was greatly amused. The wit of the remark is a little cold
+to-day, but at the moment, accompanying as it did a solemn act of
+abjuration, it was keen enough. Washington himself, moreover, was
+perfectly capable of good-natured banter. Colonel Humphreys challenged
+him one day to jump over a hedge. Washington, always ready to accept
+a challenge where riding was concerned, told the colonel to go on.
+Humphreys put his horse at the hedge, cleared it, and landed in
+a quagmire on the other side up to his horse's girths; whereupon
+Washington rode up, stopped, and looking blandly at his struggling
+friend, remarked, "Ah, colonel, you are too deep for me." "Take care,"
+he wrote to young Custis, when he sent him money for his college gown,
+"not to buy without advice; otherwise you may be more distinguished by
+your folly than your dress."
+
+We find in his letters here and there a good-natured raillery, and
+jesting, which show a sense of humor that goes beyond the limits of
+mere fun and horse-play. Here is a letter he wrote toward the close of
+the war, asking some ladies to dine with him in his quarters at West
+Point:--
+
+ "WEST POINT, August 16, 1779.
+
+ "Dear Doctor: I have asked Mrs. Cochran and Mrs. Livingston to
+ dine with me to-morrow; but ought I not to apprise you of their
+ fare? As I hate deception, even where imagination is concerned, I
+ will.
+
+ "It is needless to premise that my table is large enough to hold
+ the ladies: of this they had ocular demonstration yesterday. To
+ say how it is usually covered is rather more essential, and this
+ shall be the purport of my letter.
+
+ "Since my arrival at this happy spot, we have had a ham, sometimes
+ a shoulder of bacon, to grace the head of the table. A piece
+ of roast beef adorns the foot, and a small dish of green
+ beans--almost imperceptible--decorates the centre. When the cook
+ has a mind to cut a figure,--and this I presume he will attempt
+ to-morrow,--we have two beefsteak pies, or dishes of crabs, in
+ addition, one on each side of the centre dish, dividing the space,
+ and reducing the distance between dish and dish to about six feet,
+ which without them would be nearly twelve feet apart. Of late he
+ has had the surprising luck to discover that apples will make
+ pies; and it is a question if, amidst the violence of his efforts,
+ we do not get one of apples instead of having both of beef.
+
+ "If the ladies can put up with such entertainment, and submit to
+ partake of it on plates once tin, but now iron, not become so by
+ the labor of hard scouring, I shall be happy to see them."
+
+We may be sure that the ladies found their dinner a pleasant one, and
+that the writer of the note was neither a stiff nor unsocial host. A
+much more charming letter is one to Nellie Custis, on the occasion of
+her first ball. It is too long for quotation, but it is a model of
+affectionate wisdom tinged with a gentle humor, and designed to guide
+a young girl just beginning the world of society.
+
+Here, however, is another extract from a letter to Madame de
+Lafayette, of rather more serious purport, but in the same strain, and
+full of a simple and, as we should call it, an old-fashioned grace. He
+was replying to an invitation to visit France, which he felt obliged
+to decline. After giving his reasons, he said: "This, my dear
+Marchioness (indulge the freedom), is not the case with you. You have
+youth (and, if you should incline to leave your children, you can
+leave them with all the advantages of education), and must have a
+curiosity to see the country, young, rude, and uncultivated as it is,
+for the liberties of which your husband has fought, bled, and acquired
+much glory, where everybody admires, everybody loves him. Come, then,
+let me entreat you, and call my cottage your home; for your own doors
+do not open to you with more readiness than mine would. You will see
+the plain manner in which we live, and meet with rustic civility; and
+you shall taste the simplicity of rural life. It will diversify the
+scene, and may give you a higher relish for the gayeties of the court
+when you return to Versailles."
+
+There is also apparent in many of his letters a vein of worldly
+wisdom, shrewd but kindly, too gentle to be called cynical, and yet
+touched with the humor which reads and appreciates the foibles of
+humanity. Of an officer who grumbled at disappointments during the war
+he wrote: "General McIntosh is only experiencing upon a small scale
+what I have had an ample share of upon a large one; and must, as I
+have been obliged to do in a variety of instances, yield to necessity;
+that is, to use a vulgar phrase, 'shape his coat according to his
+cloth,' or in other words, if he cannot do as he wishes, he must do
+what he can." The philosophy is homely and common enough, but the
+manner in which the reproof was administered shows kindly tact, one
+of the most difficult of arts. Here is another passage, touching on
+something outside the range of war and politics. He was writing to
+Lund Washington in regard to Mrs. Washington's daughter-in-law, Mrs.
+Custis, who was contemplating a second marriage. "For my own part," he
+said, "I never did, nor do I believe I ever shall, give advice to a
+woman who is setting out on a matrimonial voyage: first, because I
+never could advise one to marry without her own consent; and secondly,
+because I know it is to no purpose to advise her to refrain when she
+has obtained it. A woman very rarely asks an opinion or requires
+advice on such an occasion till her resolution is formed; and then it
+is with the hope and expectation of obtaining a sanction, not that she
+means to be governed by your disapprobation, that she applies. In a
+word, the plain English of the application may be summed up in these
+words: 'I wish you to think as I do; but if unhappily you differ from
+me in opinion, my heart, I must confess, is fixed, and I have gone too
+far _now_ to retract.'"
+
+In the same spirit, but this time with a lurking smile at himself,
+did he write to the secretary of Congress for his commission: "If my
+commission is not necessary for the files of Congress, I should be
+glad to have it deposited among my own papers. It may serve _my
+grandchildren_, some fifty or a hundred years hence, for a theme to
+ruminate upon, if _they_ should be contemplatively disposed."
+
+He knew human nature well, and had a smile for its little weaknesses
+when they came to his mind. It was this same human sympathy which made
+him also love amusements of all sorts; but he was as little their
+slave as their enemy. No man ever carried great burdens with a higher
+or more serious spirit, but his cares never made him forbidding, nor
+rendered him impatient of the pleasure of others. He liked to amuse
+himself, and knew the value of a change of thought and scene, and he
+was always ready, when duty permitted, for a chat. He liked to take a
+comfortable seat and have his talk out, and he had the talent so rare
+in great men of being a good and appreciative listener. We hear of him
+playing cards at Tappan during the war, and he was always fond of a
+game in the evening, realizing the force of Talleyrand's remark to the
+despiser of cards: "Quelle triste vieillesse vous vous preparez." In
+1779 it is recorded that at a party he danced for three hours with
+Mrs. Greene without sitting down or resting, which speaks well for
+the health and spirits both of the lady and the gentleman. Even after
+Yorktown, he was ready to walk a minuet at a ball, and to the end
+he liked to see young people dance, as he had danced himself in his
+youth. As has been seen from his treatment of Bernard, he liked the
+theatre and the actors, and when he was in Philadelphia he was a
+constant attendant at the play, as he had been ever since he went to
+see "George Barnwell" in the Barbadoes. His love of horses stayed with
+him to the last. He not only rode and drove and trained horses,[1] but
+he enjoyed the sport of the race-course. He was probably aware, like
+the Shah of Persia who declined to go to the Derby, that one horse
+could run faster than another, but nevertheless he liked to see them
+run, and we hear of him, after he had reached the presidency, acting
+as judge at a race, and seeing his own colt Magnolia beaten, which he
+no doubt considered the next best thing to winning.
+
+[Footnote 1: The Marquis de Chastelleux speaks of the perfect training
+of Washington's saddle horses, and says the general broke them
+himself. He adds "He (the general) is an excellent and bold horseman,
+leaping the highest fences and going extremely quick, without standing
+upon his stirrups, bearing on the bridle or letting his horse run
+wild; circumstances which our young men look upon as so essential a part
+of English horsemanship, that they would rather break a leg or an arm
+than renounce them."]
+
+He had, indeed, in all ways a thoroughly well-balanced mind and
+temper. In great affairs he knew how to spare himself the details to
+which others could attend as well as he, and yet he was in no wise
+a despiser of small things. Before the Revolution, there was a warm
+discussion in the Truro parish as to the proper site for the Pohick
+Church. Washington and George Mason led respectively the opposing
+forces, and each confidently asserted that the site he preferred was
+the most convenient for the largest number of parishioners. Finally,
+after much debate and no conclusion, Washington appeared at a vestry
+meeting with a collection of statistics. He had measured the distance
+from each proposed site to the house of each parishioner, and found,
+as he declared, that his site was nearer to more people than the
+other. It is needless to add that he carried his point, and that the
+spot he desired for the church was the one chosen.
+
+The fact was that, if he confided a task of any sort to another, he
+let it go on without meddling; but if he undertook anything himself,
+he did it with the utmost thoroughness, and there is much success
+in this capacity to take pains even in small things. He managed his
+plantations entirely himself when he was at home, and did it well. He
+knew the qualities of each field, and the rotation of its crops. No
+improvement in agriculture and no ingenious invention escaped his
+attention, although he was not to be carried away by mere novelty,
+which had such a fascination for his ex-secretary at Monticello. Every
+resource of his estate was turned to good use, and his flour and
+tobacco commanded absolute confidence with his brand upon them. He
+followed in the same painstaking way all his business affairs, and his
+accounts, all in his own hand, are wonderfully minute and accurate. He
+was very exact in all business as well as very shrewd at a bargain,
+and the tradition is that his neighbors considered the general a
+formidable man in a horse-trade, that most difficult of transactions.
+Parkinson mentions that everything purchased or brought to the house
+was weighed, measured, or counted, generally in the presence of the
+master himself. Some of his letters to Lear, his private secretary,
+show that he looked after his china and servants, the packing and
+removal of his furniture with great minuteness. To some persons this
+appears evidence of a petty mind in a great man, but to those who
+reflect a little more deeply it will occur that this accuracy and
+care in trifles were the same qualities which kept the American army
+together, and enabled their owner to arrive on time and in full
+preparation at Yorktown and Trenton. The worst that can be said is
+that from his love of perfection and completeness he may in this
+respect have wasted time and strength, but his untiring industry and
+his capacity for work were so great that he accomplished so far as we
+can see all this drudgery without ever neglecting in the least more
+important duties. It was a satisfaction to him to do it; for he was
+methodical and exact to the last degree, and he was never happy unless
+he held everything in which he was concerned easily within his grasp.
+
+He had the same attention to details in external things, and he wished
+everything about him to be of the best, if not "express'd in fancy."
+He had the handsomest carriages and the finest horses always in his
+stables. It was necessary that the furniture of his house should be as
+good as could be procured, and he was most particular in regard to it.
+When he was preparing as President to move to Philadelphia, he made
+the most searching inquiries as to horses, stables, servants, schools
+for young Custis, and everything affecting the household. He sent at
+the same time most minute directions to his agents as to the furniture
+of his house, touching upon everything, down to the color of the
+curtains and the form of his wine-coolers. He had a like feeling in
+regard to dress. His fancy for handsome and appropriate dress in his
+youth has already been alluded to, but he never ceased to take an
+interest in it; and in a letter to McHenry, written in the last year
+of his life, he discusses with great care the details of the uniform
+to be prescribed for himself as commander-in-chief of the new army. It
+would be a mistake, of course, to infer that he was a dandy, or that
+he gave to dress and furniture the importance set upon them by shallow
+minds. He simply valued them rightly, and enjoyed the good things of
+this world. He had the best possible taste and the keenest sense of
+what was appropriate, and it was this good taste and sense of fitness
+which saved him from blundering in trifles, as much as his ability and
+his sense of humor preserved him from error in the conduct of great
+affairs.
+
+The value of all this to the country he served cannot be too often
+reiterated, for ridicule was a real danger to the Revolutionary cause
+when it started. The raw levies, headed by volunteer officers from the
+shop, the plough, the work-bench, or the trading vessel, despite their
+patriotism and the nobility of their cause, could easily have been
+made subjects of derision, a perilous enemy to all new undertakings.
+Men prefer to be shot at, if they are taken seriously, rather than to
+be laughed at and made objects of contempt. The same principle holds
+true of a revolution seeking the sympathy of a hostile world. When
+Washington drew his sword beneath the Cambridge elm and put himself at
+the head of the American army, effective ridicule became impossible,
+for the dignity of the cause was seen in that of its leader. The
+British generals soon found that they not only had a dangerous enemy
+to encounter, but that they were dealing with a man whose pride in his
+country and whose own sense of self-respect reduced any assumption of
+personal superiority on their part to speedy contempt. In the same way
+he brought dignity to the new government of the Constitution when
+he was placed at its head. The confederation had excited the just
+contempt of the world, and Washington as President, by the force of
+his own character and reputation, gave the United States at once the
+respect not only of the American people, but of those of Europe as
+well. Men felt instinctively that no government over which he presided
+could ever fall into feebleness or disrepute.
+
+In addition to the effect on the popular mind of his character and
+services was that of his personal presence. If contemporary testimony
+can be believed, few men have ever lived who had the power to impress
+those who looked upon them so profoundly as Washington. He was richly
+endowed by nature in all physical attributes. Well over six feet
+high,[1] large, powerfully built, and of uncommon muscular strength,
+he had the force that always comes from great physical power. He had
+a fine head, a strong face, with blue eyes set wide apart in deep
+orbits, and beneath, a square jaw and firm-set mouth which told of a
+relentless will. Houdon the sculptor, no bad judge, said he had no
+conception of the majesty and grandeur of Washington's form and
+features until he studied him as a subject for a statue. Pages might
+be filled with extracts from the descriptions of Washington given by
+French officers, by all sorts of strangers, and by his own countrymen,
+but they all repeat the same story. Every one who met him told of the
+commanding presence, and noble person, the ineffable dignity, and
+the calm, simple, and stately manners. No man ever left Washington's
+presence without a feeling of reverence and respect amounting almost
+to awe.
+
+[Footnote 1: Lear in his memoranda published recently in full in
+McClure's Magazine for February, 1898, states that Washington measured
+after death six feet three and one half inches in height, a foot
+and nine inches across the shoulders, two feet across the elbows;
+evidently a spare man with muscular arms, which we know to have been
+also of unusual length.]
+
+I will quote only a single one of the numerous descriptions of
+Washington, and I select it because, although it is the least
+favorable of the many I have seen, and is written in homely phrase, it
+displays the most evident and entire sincerity. The extract is from
+a letter written by David Ackerson of Alexandria, Va., in 1811, in
+answer to an inquiry by his son. Mr. Ackerson commanded a company in
+the Revolutionary war.
+
+"Washington was not," he wrote, "what ladies would call a pretty man,
+but in military costume a heroic figure, such as would impress the
+memory ever afterward."
+
+The writer had a good view of Washington three days before the
+crossing of the Delaware.
+
+"Washington," he says, "had a large thick nose, and it was very red
+that day, giving me the impression that he was not so moderate in the
+use of liquors as he was supposed to be. I found afterward that this
+was a peculiarity. His nose was apt to turn scarlet in a cold wind.
+He was standing near a small camp-fire, evidently lost in thought
+and making no effort to keep warm. He seemed six feet and a half in
+height, was as erect as an Indian, and did not for a moment relax from
+a military attitude. Washington's exact height was six feet two inches
+in his boots. He was then a little lame from striking his knee against
+a tree. His eye was so gray that it looked almost white, and he had
+a troubled look on his colorless face. He had a piece of woolen tied
+around his throat and was quite hoarse. Perhaps the throat trouble
+from which he finally died had its origin about then. Washington's
+boots were enormous. They were number 13. His ordinary walking-shoes
+were number 11. His hands were large in proportion, and he could not
+buy a glove to fit him and had to have his gloves made to order.
+His mouth was his strong feature, the lips being always tightly
+compressed. That day they were compressed so tightly as to be painful
+to look at. At that time he weighed two hundred pounds, and there was
+no surplus flesh about him. He was tremendously muscled, and the fame
+of his great strength was everywhere. His large tent when wrapped up
+with the poles was so heavy that it required two men to place it in
+the camp-wagon. Washington would lift it with one hand and throw it in
+the wagon as easily as if it were a pair of saddle-bags. He could hold
+a musket with one hand and shoot with precision as easily as other men
+did with a horse-pistol. His lungs were his weak point, and his voice
+was never strong. He was at that time in the prime of life. His hair
+was a chestnut brown, his cheeks were prominent, and his head was not
+large in contrast to every other part of his body, which seemed large
+and bony at all points. His finger-joints and wrists were so large as
+to be genuine curiosities. As to his habits at that period I found
+out much that might be interesting. He was an enormous eater, but was
+content with bread and meat, if he had plenty of it. But hunger seemed
+to put him in a rage. It was his custom to take a drink of rum or
+whiskey on awakening in the morning. Of course all this was changed
+when he grew old. I saw him at Alexandria a year before he died. His
+hair was very gray, and his form was slightly bent. His chest was very
+thin. He had false teeth, which did not fit and pushed his under lip
+outward."[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: This letter, recently printed, is in the collection of
+Dr. Toner, at Washington. It contains some obvious errors, as
+in regard to the color of the eyes, but it is nevertheless very
+interesting and valuable.]
+
+This description is certainly not a flattering one, and all other
+accounts as well as the best portraits prove that Washington was a
+much handsomer man than this letter would indicate. Yet the writer,
+despite his freedom from all illusions and his readiness to state
+frankly all defects, was profoundly impressed by Washington's
+appearance as he watched him meditating by the camp-fire at the crisis
+of the country's fate, and herein lies the principal interest of his
+description.
+
+This personal impressiveness, however, affected every one upon all
+occasions.
+
+Mr. Rush, for instance, saw Washington go on one occasion to open
+Congress. He drove to the hall in a handsome carriage of his own,
+with his servants dressed in white liveries. When he had alighted
+he stopped on the step, and pausing faced round to wait for his
+secretary. The vast crowd looked at him in dead silence, and then,
+when he turned away, broke into wild cheering. At his second
+inauguration he was dressed in deep mourning for the death of his
+nephew. He took the oath of office in the Senate Chamber, and Major
+Forman, who was present, wrote in his diary: "Every eye was on him.
+When he said, 'I, George Washington,' my blood seemed to run cold and
+every one seemed to start." At the inauguration of Adams, another
+eye-witness wrote that Washington, dressed in black velvet, with a
+military hat and black cockade, was the central figure in the scene,
+and when he left the chamber the crowds followed him, cheering and
+shouting to the door of his own house.
+
+There must have been something very impressive about a man who, with
+no pretensions to the art of the orator and with no touch of the
+charlatan, could so move and affect vast bodies of men by his presence
+alone. But the people, with the keen eye of affection, looked beyond
+the mere outward nobility of form. They saw the soldier who had given
+them victory, the great statesman who had led them out of confusion
+and faction to order and good government. Party newspapers might rave,
+but the instinct of the people was never at fault. They loved, trusted
+and well-nigh worshiped Washington living, and they have honored and
+reverenced him with an unchanging fidelity since his death, nearly a
+century ago.
+
+But little more remains to be said. Washington had his faults, for
+he was human; but they are not easy to point out, so perfect was his
+mastery of himself. He was intensely reserved and very silent, and
+these are the qualities which gave him the reputation in history
+of being distant and unsympathetic. In truth, he had not only warm
+affections and a generous heart, but there was a strong vein of
+sentiment in his composition. At the same time he was in no wise
+romantic, and the ruling element in his make-up was prose, good solid
+prose, and not poetry. He did not have the poetical and imaginative
+quality so strongly developed in Lincoln. Yet he was not devoid of
+imagination, although it was here that he was lacking, if anywhere. He
+saw facts, knew them, mastered and used them, and never gave much play
+to fancy; but as his business in life was with men and facts, this
+deficiency, if it was one, was of little moment. He was also a man of
+the strongest passions in every way, but he dominated them; they never
+ruled him. Vigorous animal passions were inevitable, of course, in a
+man of such a physical make-up as his. How far he gave way to them in
+his youth no one knows, but the scandals which many persons now desire
+to have printed, ostensibly for the sake of truth, are, so far as
+I have been able to learn, with one or two dubious exceptions, of
+entirely modern parentage. I have run many of them to earth; nearly
+all are destitute of contemporary authority, and they may be relegated
+to the dust-heaps.[1] If he gave way to these propensities in his
+youth, the only conclusion that I have been able to come to is that he
+mastered them when he reached man's estate.
+
+[Footnote 1: The charge in the pamphlet purporting to give an account
+of the trial of the New York conspirators in 1776 is of such doubtful
+origin and character that it hardly merits consideration, and the only
+other allusion is in the well-known intercepted letter of Harrison,
+which is of doubtful authenticity in certain passages, open to
+suspicion from having been intercepted and published by the enemy and
+quite likely to have been at best merely a coarse jest of a character
+very common at that period and entirely in keeping with the notorious
+habits of life and speech peculiar to the writer. (See Life of John
+Adams, iii. 35.)]
+
+He had, too, a fierce temper, and although he gradually subdued it, he
+would sometimes lose control of himself and burst out into a tempest
+of rage. When he did so he would use strong and even violent language,
+as he did at Kip's Landing and at Monmouth. Well-intentioned persons
+in their desire to make him a faultless being have argued at great
+length that Washington never swore, and but for their argument the
+matter would never have attracted much attention. He was anything but
+a profane man, but the evidence is beyond question that if deeply
+angered he would use a hearty English oath; and not seldom the action
+accompanied the word, as when he rode among the fleeing soldiers at
+Kip's Landing, striking them with his sword, and almost beside himself
+at their cowardice. Judge Marshall used to tell also of an occasion
+when Washington sent out an officer to cross a river and bring back
+some information about the enemy, on which the action of the morrow
+would depend. The officer was gone some time, came back, and found
+the general impatiently pacing his tent. On being asked what he had
+learned, he replied that the night was dark and stormy, the river full
+of ice, and that he had not been able to cross. Washington glared at
+him a moment, seized a large leaden inkstand from the table, hurled it
+at the offender's head, and said with a fierce oath, "Be off, and send
+me a _man_!" The officer went, crossed the river, and brought back the
+information.
+
+But although he would now and then give way to these tremendous bursts
+of anger, Washington was never unjust. As he said to one officer, "I
+never judge the propriety of actions by after events;" and in that
+sound philosophy is found the secret not only of much of his own
+success, but of the devotion of his officers and men. He might be
+angry with them, but he was never unfair. In truth, he was too
+generous to be unjust or even over-severe to any one, and there is not
+a line in all his writings which even suggests that he ever envied any
+man. So long as the work in hand was done, he cared not who had the
+glory, and he was perfectly magnanimous and perfectly at ease about
+his own reputation. He never showed the slightest anxiety to write his
+own memoirs, and he was not in the least alarmed when it was proposed
+to publish the memoirs of other people, like General Charles Lee,
+which would probably reflect upon him.
+
+He had the same confidence in the judgment of posterity that he had in
+the future beyond the grave. He regarded death with entire calmness
+and even indifference not only when it came to him, but when in
+previous years it had threatened him. He loved life and tasted of it
+deeply, but the courage which never forsook him made him ready to face
+the inevitable at any moment with an unruffled spirit. In this he was
+helped by his religious faith, which was as simple as it was profound.
+He had been brought up in the Protestant Episcopal Church, and to that
+church he always adhered; for its splendid liturgy and stately forms
+appealed to him and satisfied him. He loved it too as the church of
+his home and his childhood. Yet he was as far as possible from being
+sectarian, and there is not a word of his which shows anything but
+the most entire liberality and toleration. He made no parade of his
+religion, for in this as in other things he was perfectly simple and
+sincere. He was tortured by no doubts or questionings, but believed
+always in an overruling Providence and in a merciful God, to whom he
+knelt and prayed in the day of darkness or in the hour of triumph with
+a supreme and childlike confidence.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+As I bring these volumes to a close I am conscious that they speak, so
+far as they speak at all, in a tone of almost unbroken praise of the
+great man they attempt to portray. If this be so, it is because I
+could come to no other conclusions. For many years I have studied
+minutely the career of Washington, and with every step the greatness
+of the man has grown upon me, for analysis has failed to discover
+the act of his life which, under the conditions of the time, I could
+unhesitatingly pronounce to have been an error. Such has been my
+experience, and although my deductions may be wrong, they at least
+have been carefully and slowly made. I see in Washington a great
+soldier who fought a trying war to a successful end impossible without
+him; a great statesman who did more than all other men to lay the
+foundations of a republic which has endured in prosperity for more
+than a century. I find in him a marvelous judgment which was never at
+fault, a penetrating vision which beheld the future of America when it
+was dim to other eyes, a great intellectual force, a will of iron,
+an unyielding grasp of facts, and an unequaled strength of patriotic
+purpose. I see in him too a pure and high-minded gentleman of
+dauntless courage and stainless honor, simple and stately of manner,
+kind and generous of heart. Such he was in truth. The historian and
+the biographer may fail to do him justice, but the instinct of mankind
+will not fail. The real hero needs not books to give him worshipers.
+George Washington will always hold the love and reverence of men
+because they see embodied in him the noblest possibilities of
+humanity.
+
+
+
+
+INDEX for Volumes I & II
+
+
+ ACKERSON, DAVID,
+ describes Washington's personal appearance, ii. 386-388.
+
+ Adams, Abigail,
+ on Washington's appearance in 1775, i. 137.
+
+ Adams, John,
+ moves appointment of Washington as commander-in-chief, i. 134;
+ on political necessity for his appointment, 135;
+ and objections to it, 135;
+ statement as to Washington's difficulties, 163;
+ over-sanguine as to American prospects, 171;
+ finds fault with Washington, 214, 215;
+ one of few national statesmen, 252;
+ on Washington's opinion of titles, ii. 52;
+ advocates ceremony, 54;
+ returns to United States, 137;
+ attacked by Jefferson as a monarchist, 226;
+ praised by Democrats as superior to Washington, 251;
+ his administration upheld by Washington, 259;
+ advised by Washington, 260;
+ his inauguration, 276;
+ sends special mission to France, 284;
+ urges Washington to take command of provisional army, 285;
+ wishes to make Knox senior to Hamilton, 286;
+ censured by Washington, gives way, 287;
+ lack of sympathy with Washington, 287;
+ his nomination of Murray disapproved by Washington, 292, 293;
+ letter of Washington to, on immigration, 326.
+
+ Adams, J.Q.,
+ on weights and measures, ii. 81.
+
+ Adams, Samuel,
+ not sympathized with by Washington in working for independence, i. 131;
+ his inability to sympathize with Washington, 204;
+ an enemy of Constitution, ii. 71;
+ a genuine American, 309.
+
+ Alcudia, Duke de,
+ interviews with Pinckney, ii. 166.
+
+ Alexander, Philip,
+ hunts with Washington, i. 115.
+
+ Alien and Sedition Laws,
+ approved by Washington and Federalists, ii. 290, 297.
+
+ Ames, Fisher,
+ speech on behalf of administration in Jay treaty affair, ii. 210.
+
+ Andre, Major,
+ meets Arnold, i. 282;
+ announces capture to Arnold, 284;
+ confesses, 284;
+ condemned and executed, 287;
+ justice of the sentence, 287, 288;
+ Washington's opinion of, 288, ii. 357.
+
+ Armstrong, John, Major,
+ writes Newburg address, i. 335.
+
+ Army of the Revolution,
+ at Boston, adopted by Congress, i. 134;
+ its organization and character, 136-143;
+ sectional jealousies in, at New York, 162;
+ goes to pieces after defeat, 167, 175, 176;
+ condition in winter of 1777, 186;
+ difficulties between officers, 189;
+ with foreign officers, 190-192;
+ improvement as shown by condition after Brandywine and Germantown,
+ 200, 201;
+ hard winter at Valley Forge, 228;
+ maintained alive only by Washington, 227, 228, 232;
+ improved morale at Monmouth, 239;
+ mutinies for lack of pay, 258;
+ suffers during 1779, 270;
+ bad condition in 1780, 279;
+ again mutinies for pay, 291, 292, 295;
+ conduct of troops, 292, 293;
+ jealousy of people towards, 332;
+ badly treated by States and by Congress, 333;
+ grows mutinous, 334;
+ adopts Newburg addresses, 335, 336;
+ ready for a military dictatorship, 338, 340;
+ farewell of Washington to, 345.
+
+ Arnold, Benedict,
+ sent by Washington to attack Quebec, i. 144;
+ sent against Burgoyne, 210;
+ plans treason, 281;
+ shows loyalist letter to Washington, 282;
+ meets Andre, 282;
+ receives news of Andre's capture, 284;
+ escapes, 284, 285;
+ previous benefits from Washington, 286;
+ Washington's opinion of, 288;
+ ravages Virginia, 303;
+ sent back to New York, 303;
+ one of the few men who deceived Washington, ii. 336.
+
+ Arnold, Mrs.,
+ entertains Washington at time of her husband's treachery, i. 284, 285.
+
+ Articles of Confederation,
+ their inadequacy early seen by Washington, i. 297, 298; ii. 17.
+
+ Asgill, Capt.,
+ selected for retaliation for murder of Huddy, i. 328;
+ efforts for his release, 329;
+ release ordered by Congress, 330.
+
+
+ BACHE, B.F.,
+ publishes Jay treaty in "Aurora," ii. 185;
+ joins in attack on Washington, 238, 244;
+ rejoices over his retirement, 256.
+
+ Baker,----,
+ works out a pedigree for Washington, i. 31.
+
+ Ball, Joseph,
+ advises against sending Washington to sea, i. 49, 50.
+
+ Barbadoes,
+ Washington's description of, i. 64.
+
+ Beckley, John,
+ accuses Washington of embezzling, ii. 245.
+
+ Bernard, John,
+ his conversation with Washington referred to, i. 58, 107;
+ describes encounter with Washington, ii. 281-283;
+ his description of Washington's conversation, 343-348.
+
+ Blackwell, Rev. Dr.,
+ calls on Washington with Dr. Logan, ii. 264.
+
+ Blair, John,
+ appointed to Supreme Court, ii. 73.
+
+ Bland, Mary,
+ "Lowland Beauty," admired by Washington, i. 95, 96.
+
+ Blount, Governor,
+ pacifies Cherokees, ii. 94.
+
+ Boston,
+ visit of Washington to, i. 97, 99;
+ political troubles in, 120;
+ British measures against condemned by Virginia, 122, 123;
+ appeals to colonies, 124;
+ protests against Jay treaty, ii. 186;
+ answered by Washington, 190.
+
+ Botetourt, Lord, Governor of Virginia,
+ quarrels with Assembly, i. 121;
+ manages to calm dissension, 122;
+ on friendly terms with Washington, 122.
+
+ Braddock, General Edward,
+ arrives in Virginia, i. 82;
+ invites Washington to serve on his staff, 82;
+ respects him, 83;
+ his character and unfitness for his position, 83;
+ despises provincials, 83;
+ accepts Washington's advice as to dividing force, 84;
+ rebukes Washington for warning against ambush, 85;
+ insists on fighting by rule, 85;
+ defeated and mortally wounded, 85;
+ death and burial, 87.
+
+ Bradford, William,
+ succeeds Randolph, ii. 246.
+
+ Brandywine,
+ battle of, i. 196-198.
+
+ Bunker Hill,
+ question of Washington regarding battle of, i. 136.
+
+ Burgoyne, General John,
+ junction of Howe with, feared by Washington, i. 194, 195, 205, 206;
+ significance of his defeat, 202;
+ danger of his invasion foreseen by Washington, 203-206;
+ captures Ticonderoga, 207;
+ outnumbered and defeated, 210;
+ surrenders, 211.
+
+ Burke, Edmund,
+ understands significance of Washington's leadership, i. 202;
+ unsettled by French Revolution, ii. 294.
+
+
+ CABOT, GEORGE,
+ entertains Lafayette's son, ii. 366.
+
+ Cadwalader, General,
+ fails to cross Delaware to help Washington, i. 180;
+ duel with Conway, 226.
+
+ Calvert, Eleanor,
+ misgivings of Washington over her marriage to John Custis, i. 111.
+
+ Camden, battle of, i. 281.
+
+ Canada,
+ captured by Wolfe, i. 94;
+ expedition of Montgomery against, 143, 144;
+ project of Conway cabal against, 222; 253;
+ project of Lafayette to attack, 254;
+ plan considered dangerous by Washington, 254, 255;
+ not undertaken by France, 256.
+
+ Carleton, Sir Guy,
+ informs Washington of address of Commons for peace, i. 324;
+ suspected by Washington, 325;
+ remonstrates against retaliation by Washington for murder of
+ Huddy, 328;
+ disavows Lippencott, 328;
+ fears plunder of New York city, 345;
+ urges Indians to attack the United States, ii. 102, 175.
+
+ Carlisle, Earl of,
+ peace commissioner, i. 233.
+
+ Carlyle, Thomas,
+ sneers at Washington, i. 4, 14;
+ calls him "a bloodless Cromwell," i. 69, ii. 332;
+ fails to understand his reticence, i. 70;
+ despises him for not seizing power, 341.
+
+ Carmichael, William,
+ minister at Madrid, ii. 165;
+ on commission regarding the Mississippi, 166.
+
+ Carrington, Paul,
+ letter of Washington to, ii. 208;
+ Washington's friendship for, 363.
+
+ Cary, Mary,
+ early love affair of Washington with, i. 96.
+
+ Chamberlayne, Major,
+ entertains Washington at Williams' Ferry, i. 101.
+
+ Charleston,
+ siege and capture of, i. 273, 274, 276.
+
+ Chastellux, Marquis de,
+ Washington's friendship for and letter to, ii. 351;
+ on Washington's training of horses, 380.
+
+ Cherokees,
+ beaten by Sevier, ii. 89;
+ pacified by Blount, 94,101.
+
+ Chester, Colonel,
+ researches on Washington pedigree, i. 31.
+
+ Chickasaws,
+ desert from St. Clair, ii. 96.
+
+ China,
+ honors Washington, i. 6.
+
+ Choctaws,
+ peaceable in 1788, ii. 89.
+
+ Cincinnati, Society of the,
+ Washington's connection with, ii. 4.
+
+ Clarke, Governor,
+ thinks Washington is invading popular rights, i. 215.
+
+ Cleaveland, Rev.----,
+ complimented by Washington, ii. 359.
+
+ Clinton, George,
+ appealed to by Washington to attack Burgoyne, i. 210;
+ journey with Washington to Ticonderoga, 343;
+ enters New York city, 345;
+ letter of Washington to, ii. 1;
+ meets Washington on journey to inauguration, 45;
+ opponent of the Constitution, 71;
+ orders seizure of French privateers, 153.
+
+ Clinton, Sir Henry,
+ fails to help Burgoyne, i. 210;
+ replaces Howe at Philadelphia, his character, 232;
+ tries to cut off Lafayette, 233;
+ leaves Philadelphia, 234;
+ defeats Lee at Monmouth, 236;
+ retreats to New York, 238;
+ withdraws from Newport, 248;
+ makes a raid, 265;
+ fortifies Stony Point, 268;
+ his aimless warfare, 269, 270;
+ after capturing Charleston returns to New York, 276;
+ tries to save Andre, 287;
+ alarmed at attacks on New York, 306;
+ jealous of Cornwallis, refuses to send reinforcements, 308;
+ deceived by Washington, 311;
+ sends Graves to relieve Cornwallis, 312.
+
+ Congress, Continental,
+ Washington's journey to, i. 128;
+ its character and ability, 129;
+ its state papers, 129;
+ adjourns, 132;
+ in second session, resolves to petition the king, 133;
+ adopts Massachusetts army and makes Washington commander, 134;
+ reasons for his choice, 135;
+ adheres to short-term enlistments, 149;
+ influenced to declare independence by Washington, 160;
+ hampers Washington in campaign of New York, 167;
+ letters of Washington to, 170, 179, 212, 225, 229, 266, 278, 295,
+ 321, 323, 333;
+ takes steps to make army permanent, 171;
+ its over-confidence, 171;
+ insists on holding Forts Washington and Lee, 174;
+ dissatisfied with Washington's inactivity, 187;
+ criticises his proclamation requiring oath of allegiance, 189;
+ makes unwise appointments of officers, 189;
+ especially of foreigners, 190-192; 248, 249;
+ applauds Washington's efforts at Germantown, 200;
+ deposes Schuyler and St. Clair, 208;
+ appoints Gates, 210;
+ irritation against Washington, 212-215;
+ falls under guidance of Conway cabal, 221, 222;
+ discovers incompetence of cabal, 223;
+ meddles with prisoners and officers, 231;
+ rejects English peace offers, 233;
+ makes alliance with France, 241;
+ suppresses protests of officers against D'Estaing, 244;
+ decline in its character, 257;
+ becomes feeble, 258;
+ improvement urged by Washington, 259, 266;
+ appoints Gates to command in South, 268;
+ loses interest in war, 278;
+ asks Washington to name general for the South, 295;
+ considers reduction of army, 313;
+ elated by Yorktown, 323;
+ its unfair treatment of army, 333, 335;
+ driven from Philadelphia by Pennsylvania troops, 340;
+ passes half-pay act, 342;
+ receives commission of Washington, 347-349;
+ disbands army, ii. 6;
+ indifferent to Western expansion, 15;
+ continues to decline, 22;
+ merit of its Indian policy, 88.
+
+ Congress, Federal,
+ establishes departments, ii. 64;
+ opened by Washington, 78, 79;
+ ceremonial abolished by Jefferson, 79;
+ recommendations made to by Washington, 81-83;
+ acts upon them, 81-83;
+ creates commission to treat with Creeks, 90;
+ increases army, 94, 99;
+ fails to solve financial problems, 106;
+ debates Hamilton's report on credit, 107, 108;
+ establishes national bank, 109;
+ establishes protective revenue duties, 113;
+ imposes an excise tax, 123;
+ prepares for retaliation on Great Britain, 176;
+ Senate ratifies Jay treaty conditionally, 184;
+ House demands papers, 207;
+ debates over its right to concur in treaty, 208-210;
+ refuses to adjourn on Washington's birthday, 247;
+ prepares for war with France, 285;
+ passes Alien and Sedition Laws, 296.
+
+ Constitution, Federal,
+ necessity of, foreseen by Washington, ii. 17-18, 23, 24;
+ the Annapolis Convention, 23-29;
+ the Federal Convention, 30-36;
+ Washington's attitude in, 31,34;
+ his influence, 36;
+ campaign for ratification, 38-41.
+
+ Contrecoeur, Captain,
+ leader of French and Indians in Virginia, i. 75.
+
+ "Conway cabal,"
+ elements of in Congress, i. 214, 215;
+ in the army, 215;
+ organized by Conway, 217;
+ discovered by Washington, 220;
+ gets control of Board of War, 221;
+ tries to make Washington resign, 222, 224;
+ fails to invade Canada or provide supplies, 222, 223;
+ harassed by Washington's letters, 223,226;
+ breaks down, 226.
+
+ Conway, Moncure D.,
+ his life of Randolph, ii. 65, note, 196;
+ his defense of Randolph in Fauchet letter affair, 196;
+ on Washington's motives, 200;
+ on his unfair treatment of Randolph, 201, 202.
+
+ Conway, Thomas,
+ demand for higher rank refused by Washington, i. 216;
+ plots against him, 217;
+ his letter discovered by Washington, 221;
+ made inspector-general, 221, 222;
+ complains to Congress of his reception at camp, 225;
+ resigns, has duel with Cadwalader, 226;
+ apologizes to Washington and leaves country, 226.
+
+ Cooke, Governor,
+ remonstrated with by Washington for raising state troops, i. 186.
+
+ Cornwallis, Lord,
+ pursues Washington in New Jersey, i. 175;
+ repulsed at Assunpink, 181;
+ outgeneraled by Washington, 182;
+ surprises Sullivan at Brandywine, 197;
+ defeats Lee at Monmouth, 236;
+ pursues Greene in vain, 302;
+ wins battle of Guilford Court House, 302;
+ retreats into Virginia, 302;
+ joins British troops in Virginia, 303;
+ his dangerous position, 304;
+ urged by Clinton to return troops to New York, 306;
+ plunders Virginia, 307;
+ defeats Lafayette and Wayne, 307;
+ wishes to retreat South, 307;
+ ordered by ministry to stay on the Chesapeake, 307;
+ abandoned by Clinton, 308;
+ establishes himself at Yorktown, 308;
+ withdraws into town, 315;
+ besieged, 316, 317;
+ surrenders, 317;
+ outgeneraled by Washington, 319, 320.
+
+ Cowpens,
+ battle of, i. 301.
+
+ Craik, Dr.,
+ attends Washington in last illness, ii. 300-302;
+ Washington's friendship with, 363.
+
+ Creeks,
+ their relations with Spaniards, ii. 89, 90;
+ quarrel with Georgia, 90;
+ agree to treaty with United States, 91;
+ stirred up by Spain, 101.
+
+ Curwen, Samuel,
+ on Washington's appearance, i. 137.
+
+ Cushing, Caleb,
+ appointed to Supreme Court, ii. 72.
+
+ Custis, Daniel Parke,
+ first husband of Martha Washington, i. 101.
+
+ Custis, G.W.P.,
+ tells mythical story of Washington and the colt, i. 45;
+ Washington's care for, ii. 369.
+
+ Custis, John,
+ Washington's tenderness toward, i. 111;
+ care for his education and marriage, 111;
+ hunts with Washington, 141;
+ death of, 322.
+
+ Custis, Nellie,
+ marriage with Washington's nephew, ii. 281, 369;
+ letter of Washington to, 377.
+
+
+ DAGWORTHY, CAPTAIN,
+ claims to outrank Washington in Virginia army, i. 91, 97.
+
+ Dallas, Alexander,
+ protests to Genet against sailing of Little Sarah, ii. 155.
+
+ Dalton, Senator,
+ entertains Washington at Newburyport, ii. 359.
+
+ Deane, Silas,
+ promises commissions to foreign military adventurers, i. 190.
+
+ De Barras,
+ jealous of De Grasse, decides not to aid him, i. 310;
+ persuaded to do so by Washington and Rochambeau, 311;
+ reaches Chesapeake, 312.
+
+ De Grasse, Comte,
+ announces intention of coming to Washington, i. 305;
+ warned by Washington not to come to New York, 305;
+ sails to Chesapeake, 306;
+ asked to meet Washington there, 308;
+ reaches Chesapeake, 312;
+ repulses British fleet, 312;
+ wishes to return to West Indies, 315;
+ persuaded to remain by Washington, 315;
+ refuses to join Washington in attack on Charleston, 322;
+ returns to West Indies, 322.
+
+ De Guichen,----,
+ commander of French fleet in West Indies, i. 280;
+ appealed to for aid by Washington, 281;
+ returns home, 282.
+
+ Delancey, Oliver,
+ escapes American attack, i. 306.
+
+ Democratic party,
+ its formation as a French party, ii. 225;
+ furnished with catch-words by Jefferson, 226;
+ with a newspaper organ, 227;
+ not ready to oppose Washington for president in 1792, 235;
+ organized against treasury measure, 236;
+ stimulated by French Revolution, 238;
+ supports Genet, 237;
+ begins to attack Washington, 238;
+ his opinion of it, 239, 240, 258, 261, 267, 268;
+ forms clubs on French model, 241;
+ Washington's opinion of, 242, 243;
+ continues to abuse him, 244, 245, 250, 252;
+ exults at his retirement, 256;
+ prints slanders, 257.
+
+ Demont, William,
+ betrays plans of Fort Washington to Howe, i. 175.
+
+ D'Estaing, Admiral,
+ reaches America, i. 242;
+ welcomed by Washington, 243;
+ fails to cut off Howe and goes to Newport, 243;
+ after battle with Howe goes to Boston, 244;
+ letter of Washington to, 246;
+ sails to West Indies, 246;
+ second letter of Washington to, 247;
+ attacks Savannah, 248;
+ withdraws, 248.
+
+ De Rochambeau, Comte,
+ arrives at Newport, i. 277;
+ ordered to await second division of army, 278;
+ refuses to attack New York, 280;
+ wishes a conference with Washington, 282;
+ meets him at Hartford, 282;
+ disapproves attacking Florida, 301;
+ joins Washington before New York, 306;
+ persuades De Barras to join De Grasse, 311;
+ accompanies Washington to Yorktown, 314.
+
+ Dickinson, John,
+ commands scouts at Monmouth, i. 326.
+
+ Digby, Admiral,
+ bitter comments of Washington on, i. 325.
+
+ Dinwiddie, Governor,
+ remonstrates against French encroachments, i. 66;
+ sends Washington on mission to French, 66;
+ quarrels with the Virginia Assembly, 71;
+ letter of Washington to, 73;
+ wishes Washington to attack French, 79;
+ tries to quiet discussions between regular and provincial troops, 80;
+ military schemes condemned by Washington, 91;
+ prevents his getting a royal commission, 93.
+
+ Diplomatic History:
+ refusal by Washington of special privileges to French minister,
+ ii. 59-61;
+ slow growth of idea of non-intervention, 132, 133;
+ difficulties owing to French Revolution, 134;
+ to English retention of frontier posts, 135;
+ attitude of Spain, 135;
+ relations with Barbary States, 136;
+ mission of Gouverneur Morris to sound English feeling, 137;
+ assertion by Washington of non-intervention policy toward Europe,
+ 145, 146;
+ issue of neutrality proclamation, 147, 148;
+ its importance, 148;
+ mission of Genet, 148-162;
+ guarded attitude of Washington toward emigres, 151;
+ excesses of Genet, 151;
+ neutrality enforced, 153, 154;
+ the Little Sarah episode, 154-157;
+ recall of Genet demanded, 158;
+ futile missions of Carmichael and Short to Spain, 165, 166;
+ successful treaty of Thomas Pinckney, 166-168;
+ question as to binding nature of French treaty of commerce, 169-171;
+ irritating relations with England, 173-176;
+ Jay's mission, 177-184;
+ the questions at issue, 180, 181;
+ terms of the treaty agreed upon, 182;
+ good and bad points, 183;
+ ratified by Senate, 184;
+ signing delayed by renewal of provision order, 185;
+ war with England prevented by signing, 205;
+ difficulties with France over Morris and Monroe, 211-214;
+ doings of Monroe, 212, 213;
+ United States compromised by him, 213, 214;
+ Monroe replaced by Pinckney, 214;
+ review of Washington's foreign policy, 216-219;
+ mission of Pinckney, Marshall, and Gerry to France, 284;
+ the X.Y.Z. affair, 285.
+
+ Donop, Count,
+ drives Griffin out of New Jersey, i. 180;
+ killed at Fort Mercer, 217.
+
+ Dorchester, Lord.
+ See Carleton.
+
+ Duane, James,
+ letters of Washington to, i. 294, 329.
+
+ Dumas, Comte,
+ describes enthusiasm of people for Washington, i. 288.
+
+ Dunbar, Colonel,
+ connection with Braddock's expedition, i. 84, 87.
+
+ Dunmore, Lord,
+ arrives in Virginia as governor, i. 122;
+ on friendly terms with Washington, 122, 123;
+ dissolves assembly, 123.
+
+ Duplaine, French consul,
+ exequatur of revoked, ii. 159.
+
+
+ EDEN, WILLIAM,
+ peace commissioner, i. 233.
+
+ Edwards, Jonathan,
+ a typical New England American, ii. 309.
+
+ Emerson, Rev. Dr.,
+ describes Washington's reforms in army before Boston, i. 140.
+
+ Emigres,
+ Washington's treatment of, ii. 151, 253.
+
+ England,
+ honors Washington, i. 20;
+ arrogant behavior toward colonists, 80, 81, 82, 148;
+ its policy towards Boston condemned by Virginia, 119, 121, 123, 126;
+ by Washington, 124, 125,126;
+ sends incompetent officers to America, 155, 201, 202, 233;
+ stupidity of its operations, 203, 205, 206, 265;
+ sincerity of its desire for peace doubted by Washington, 324, 325;
+ arrogant conduct of toward the United States after peace, ii. 24, 25;
+ stirs up the Six Nations and Northwestern Indians, 92, 94, 101;
+ folly of her policy, 102;
+ sends Hammond as minister, 169;
+ its opportunity to win United States as ally against France, 171, 172;
+ adopts contrary policy of opposition, 172, 173;
+ adopts "provision order," 174;
+ incites Indians against United States, 175;
+ indignation of America against, 176;
+ receives Jay well, but refuses to yield points at issue, 180;
+ insists on monopoly of West India trade, 180;
+ and on impressment, 181;
+ later history of, 181;
+ renews provision order, 185;
+ danger of war with, 193;
+ avoided by Jay treaty, 205;
+ Washington said to sympathize with England, 252;
+ his real hostility toward, 254;
+ Washington's opinion of liberty in, 344.
+
+ Ewing, General James,
+ fails to help Washington at Trenton, i. 180.
+
+
+ FAIRFAX, BRYAN,
+ hunts with Washington, i. 115;
+ remonstrates with Washington against violence of patriots, 124;
+ Washington's replies to, 124, 126, 127;
+ letter of Washington to in Revolution, ii. 366.
+
+ Fairfax, George,
+ married to Miss Cary, i. 55;
+ accompanies Washington on surveying expedition, 58;
+ letter of Washington to, 133.
+
+ Fairfax, Mrs.----,
+ letter of Washington to, ii. 367.
+
+ Fairfax, Thomas, Lord,
+ his career in England, i. 55;
+ comes to his Virginia estates, 55;
+ his character, 55;
+ his friendship for Washington, 56;
+ sends him to survey estates, 56;
+ plans a manor across the Blue Ridge, 59;
+ secures for Washington position as public surveyor, 60;
+ probably influential in securing his appointment as envoy to
+ French, 66;
+ hunts with Washington, 115;
+ his death remembered by Washington, ii. 366.
+
+ Fairlie, Major,
+ amuses Washington, ii. 374.
+
+ Farewell Address, ii. 248, 249.
+
+ Fauchet, M.,----,
+ letter of, incriminating Randolph, ii. 195,196, 202.
+
+ Fauntleroy, Betsy,
+ love affair of Washington with, i. 97.
+
+ Fauquier, Francis, Governor,
+ at Washington's wedding, i. 101.
+
+ Federal courts,
+ suggested by Washington, i. 150.
+
+ "Federalist,"
+ circulated by Washington, ii. 40.
+
+ Federalist party,
+ begun by Hamilton's controversy with Jefferson, ii. 230;
+ supports Washington for reelection, 235;
+ organized in support of financial measures, 236;
+ Washington looked upon by Democrats as its head, 244, 247;
+ only its members trusted by Washington, 246, 247, 259, 260, 261;
+ becomes a British party, 255;
+ Washington considers himself a member of, 269-274;
+ the only American party until 1800, 273;
+ strengthened by X, Y, Z affair, 285;
+ dissensions in, over army appointments, 286-290;
+ its horror at French Revolution, 294, 295;
+ attempts of Washington to heal divisions in, 298.
+
+ Fenno's newspaper,
+ used by Hamilton against the "National Gazette," ii. 230.
+
+ Finances of the Revolution,
+ effect of paper money on war, i. 258, 262;
+ difficulties in paying troops, 258;
+ labors of Robert Morris, 259, 264, 312;
+ connection of Washington with, 263;
+ continued collapse, 280, 290, 312.
+
+ Financial History,
+ bad condition in 1789, ii. 105;
+ decay of credit, paper, and revenue, 106;
+ futile propositions, 106;
+ Hamilton's report on credit, 107;
+ debate over assumption of state debt, 107;
+ bargain between Hamilton and Jefferson, 108;
+ establishment of bank, 109;
+ other measures adopted, 112;
+ protection in the first Congress, 112-115;
+ the excise tax imposed, 123;
+ opposition to, 123-127;
+ "Whiskey Rebellion," 127-128.
+
+ Fishbourn, Benjamin,
+ nomination rejected by Senate, ii. 63.
+
+ Fontanes, M. de,
+ delivers funeral oration on Washington, i. 1.
+
+ Forbes, General,
+ renews attack on French in Ohio, i. 93.
+
+ Forman, Major,
+ describes impressiveness of Washington, ii. 389.
+
+ Fox, Charles James,
+ understands significance of Washington's leadership, i. 202.
+
+ France,
+ pays honors to Washington, i. I, 6;
+ war with England, see French and Indian war;
+ takes possession of Ohio, 65;
+ considers Jumonville assassinated by Washington, 74;
+ importance of alliance with foreseen by Washington, 191;
+ impressed by battle of Germantown, 200;
+ makes treaty of alliance with United States, 241;
+ sends D'Estaing, 243;
+ declines to attack Canada, 256;
+ sends army and fleet, 274, 277;
+ relations of French to Washington, 318, 319;
+ absolute necessity of their naval aid, 318, 319;
+ Revolution in, applauded by America, ii. 138, 139, 142;
+ real character understood by Washington and others, 139-142, 295;
+ debate over in America, 142;
+ question of relations with United States, 143, 144;
+ warned by Washington, 144, 145;
+ neutrality toward declared, 147;
+ tries to drive United States into alliance, 149;
+ terms of the treaty with, 169;
+ latter held to be no longer binding, 169-171;
+ abrogates it, 171;
+ demands recall of Morris, 211;
+ mission of Monroe to, 211-214;
+ makes vague promises, 212, 213;
+ Washington's fairness toward, 253;
+ tries to bully or corrupt American ministers, 284;
+ the X, Y, Z affair, 285;
+ war with not expected by Washington, 291;
+ danger of concession to, 292, 293;
+ progress of Revolution in, 294.
+
+ Franklin, Benjamin,
+ gets wagons for Braddock's expedition, i. 84;
+ remark on Howe in Philadelphia, 219;
+ national, like Washington, 252, ii. 8;
+ despairs of success of Constitutional Convention, 35;
+ his unquestioned Americanism, 309;
+ respect of Washington for, 344, 346, 364.
+
+ Frederick II., the Great,
+ his opinion of Trenton campaign, i. 183;
+ of Monmouth campaign, 239.
+
+ French and Indian war, i. 64-94;
+ inevitable conflict, 65;
+ efforts to negotiate, 66, 67;
+ hostilities begun, 72;
+ the Jumonville affair, 74;
+ defeat of Washington, 76;
+ Braddock's campaign, 82-88;
+ ravages in Virginia, 90;
+ carried to a favorable conclusion by Pitt, 93, 94.
+
+ Freneau, Philip,
+ brought to Philadelphia and given clerkship by Jefferson, ii. 227;
+ attacks Adams, Hamilton, and Washington in "National Gazette," 227;
+ makes conflicting statements as to Jefferson's share in the paper,
+ 227, 228;
+ the first to attack Washington, 238.
+
+ Fry, Colonel,
+ commands a Virginia regiment against French and Indians, i. 71;
+ dies, leaving Washington in command, 75.
+
+
+ GAGE, GENERAL THOMAS,
+ conduct at Boston condemned by Washington, i. 126;
+ his treatment of prisoners protested against by Washington, 145;
+ sends an arrogant reply, 147;
+ second letter of Washington to, 147, 156.
+
+ Gallatin, Albert,
+ connection with Whiskey Rebellion, ii. 129.
+
+ Gates, Horatio,
+ visits Mt. Vernon, his character, i. 132;
+ refuses to cooperate with Washington at Trenton, 180;
+ his appointment as commander against Burgoyne urged, 208;
+ chosen by Congress, 209;
+ his part in defeating Burgoyne, 210;
+ neglects to inform Washington, 211;
+ loses his head and wishes to supplant Washington, 215;
+ forced to send troops South, 216, 217;
+ his attitude discovered by Washington, 221;
+ makes feeble efforts at opposition, 221, 223;
+ correspondence with Washington, 221, 223, 226;
+ becomes head of board of war, 221;
+ quarrels with Wilkinson, 223;
+ sent to his command, 226;
+ fears attack of British on Boston, 265;
+ sent by Congress to command in South, 268;
+ defeated at Camden, 281, 294;
+ loses support of Congress, 294.
+
+ Genet, Edmond Charles,
+ arrives as French minister, ii. 148;
+ his character, 149;
+ violates neutrality, 151;
+ his journey to Philadelphia, 151;
+ reception by Washington, 152;
+ complains of it, 153;
+ makes demands upon State Department, 153;
+ protests at seizure of privateers, 153;
+ insists on sailing of Little Sarah, 155;
+ succeeds in getting vessel away, 157;
+ his recall demanded, 158;
+ reproaches Jefferson, 158;
+ remains in America, 158;
+ threatens to appeal from Washington to Massachusetts, 159;
+ demands denial from Washington of Jay's statements, 159;
+ loses popular support, 160;
+ tries to raise a force to invade Southwest, 161;
+ prevented by state and federal authorities, 162;
+ his arrival the signal for divisions of parties, 237;
+ hurts Democratic party by his excesses, 241;
+ suggests clubs, 241.
+
+ George IV.,
+ Washington's opinion of, ii. 346.
+
+ Georgia,
+ quarrels with Creeks, asks aid of United States, ii. 90;
+ becomes dissatisfied with treaty, 91;
+ disregards treaties of the United States, 103.
+
+ Gerard, M.,
+ notifies Washington of return of D'Estaing, i. 246.
+
+ Germantown,
+ battle of, i. 199.
+
+ Gerry, Elbridge,
+ on special mission to France, ii. 284;
+ disliked by Washington, 292.
+
+ Giles, W.B.,
+ attacks Washington in Congress, ii. 251, 252.
+
+ Gist, Christopher,
+ accompanies Washington on his mission to French, i. 66;
+ wishes to shoot French Indians, 68.
+
+ Gordon,----,
+ letter of Washington to, i. 227.
+
+ Graves, Admiral,
+ sent to relieve Cornwallis, i. 312; defeated by De Grasse, 312.
+
+ Grayson, William,
+ hunts with Washington, i. 115; letter to, ii. 22.
+
+ Green Springs,
+ battle of, i. 307.
+
+ Greene, General Nathanael,
+ commands at Long Island, ill with fever, i. 164;
+ wishes forts on Hudson held, 174;
+ late in attacking at Germantown, 199;
+ conducts retreat, 200;
+ succeeds Mifflin as quartermaster-general, 232;
+ selected by Washington to command in South, 268;
+ commands army at New York in absence of Washington, 282;
+ appointed to command Southern army, 295;
+ retreats from Cornwallis, 302;
+ fights battle of Guilford Court House, 302;
+ clears Southern States of enemy, 302;
+ strong position, 304;
+ reinforced by Washington, 322;
+ letter to, 325;
+ his military capacity early recognized by Washington, ii. 334;
+ amuses Washington, 374.
+
+ Greene, Mrs.----,
+ dances three hours with Washington, ii. 380.
+
+ Grenville, Lord,
+ denies that ministry has incited Indians against United States,
+ ii. 175;
+ receives Jay, 180;
+ declines to grant United States trade with West Indies, 181.
+
+ Griffin, David,
+ commissioner to treat with Creeks, ii. 90.
+
+ Griffin,----,
+ fails to help Washington at Trenton, i. 180.
+
+ Grymes, Lucy,
+ the "Lowland Beauty," love affair of Washington with, i. 95;
+ marries Henry Lee, 96.
+
+
+ HALDIMAND, SIR FREDERICK,
+ leads Indians against colonists, i. 325.
+
+ Hale, Nathan, compared with Andre, i. 288.
+
+ Half-King,
+ kept to English alliance by Washington, i. 68;
+ his criticism of Washington's first campaign, 76.
+
+ Hamilton, Alexander,
+ forces Gates to send back troops to Washington, i. 216, 217;
+ remark on councils of war before Monmouth, 234;
+ informs Washington of Arnold's treason, 284;
+ sent to intercept Arnold, 285;
+ writes letters on government and finance, 298;
+ leads attack at Yorktown, i. 316;
+ requests release of Asgill, 329;
+ aids Washington in Congress, 333;
+ only man beside Washington and Franklin to realize American future,
+ ii. 7;
+ letters of Washington to on necessity of a strong government, 17, 18;
+ writes letters to Duane and Morris, 19;
+ speech in Federal Convention and departure, 35;
+ counseled by Washington, 39;
+ consulted by Washington as to etiquette, 54;
+ made secretary of treasury, 66;
+ his character, 67;
+ his report on the mint, 81;
+ on the public credit, 107;
+ upheld by Washington, 107, 108;
+ his arrangement with Jefferson, 108;
+ argument on the bank, 110;
+ his success largely due to Washington, 112;
+ his report on manufactures, 112, 114, 116;
+ advocates an excise, 122;
+ fails to realize its unpopularity, 123;
+ accompanies expedition to suppress Whiskey Rebellion, 128;
+ comprehends French Revolution, 139;
+ frames questions to cabinet on neutrality, 147;
+ urges decisive measures against Genet, 154;
+ argues against United States being bound by French treaty, 169;
+ selected for English mission, but withdraws, 177;
+ not likely to have done better than Jay, 183;
+ mobbed in defending Jay treaty, 187;
+ writes Camillus letters in favor of Jay treaty, 206;
+ intrigued against by Monroe, 212;
+ causes for his breach with Jefferson, 224;
+ his aristocratic tendencies, 225;
+ attacked by Jefferson and his friends, 228, 229;
+ disposes of the charges, 229;
+ retorts in newspapers with effect, 230;
+ ceases at Washington's request, 230, 234;
+ resigns from the cabinet, 234;
+ desires Washington's reelection, 235;
+ selected by Washing, ton as senior general, 286;
+ appeals to Washington against Adams's reversal of rank, 286;
+ fails to soothe Knox's anger, 288;
+ report on army organization, 290;
+ letter of Washington to, condemning Adams's French mission, 293;
+ fears anarchy from Democratic success, 295;
+ approves Alien and Sedition Acts, 296;
+ his scheme of a military academy approved by Washington, 299;
+ Washington's affection for, 317, 362;
+ his ability early recognized by Washington, 334, 335;
+ aids Washington in literary points, 340;
+ takes care of Lafayette's son, 366.
+
+ Hammond, George,
+ protests against violations of neutrality, ii. 151;
+ his arrival as British minister, 169;
+ his offensive tone, 173;
+ does not disavow Lord Dorchester's speech to Indians, 176;
+ gives Fauchet letters to Wolcott, 195;
+ intrigues with American public men, 200.
+
+ Hampden, John,
+ compared with Washington, ii. 312, 313.
+
+ Hancock, John,
+ disappointed at Washington's receiving command of army, i. 135;
+ his character, ii. 74;
+ refuses to call first on Washington as President, 75;
+ apologizes and calls, 75, 76.
+
+ Hardin, Colonel,
+ twice surprised and defeated by Indians, ii. 93.
+
+ Harmar, Colonel,
+ invades Indian country, ii. 92;
+ attacks the Miamis, 93;
+ sends out unsuccessful expeditions and retreats, 93;
+ court-martialed and resigns, 93.
+
+ Harrison, Benjamin,
+ letters of Washington to, i. 259, 261; ii. 10.
+
+ Hartley, Mrs.----,
+ admired by Washington, i. 95.
+
+ Heard, Sir Isaac,
+ Garter King at Arms, makes out a pedigree for Washington, i. 30, 31.
+
+ Heath, General,
+ checks Howe at Frog's Point, i. 173;
+ left in command at New York, 311.
+
+ Henry, Patrick,
+ his resolutions supported by Washington, i. 119;
+ accompanies him to Philadelphia, 128;
+ his tribute to Washington's influence, 130;
+ ready for war, 132;
+ letters of Conway cabal to against Washington, 222;
+ letter of Washington to, 225;
+ appealed to by Washington on behalf of Constitution, ii. 38;
+ an opponent of the Constitution, 71;
+ urged by Washington to oppose Virginia resolutions, 266-268, 293;
+ a genuine American, 309;
+ offered secretaryship of state, 324;
+ friendship of Washington for, 362.
+
+ Hertburn, Sir William de,
+ ancestor of Washington family, i. 31, 33.
+
+ Hessians,
+ in Revolution, i. 194.
+
+ Hickey, Thomas,
+ hanged for plotting to murder Washington, i. 160.
+
+ Hobby,----, a sexton,
+ Washington's earliest teacher, i. 48.
+
+ Hopkinson, Francis,
+ letter of Washington to, ii. 3.
+
+ Houdon, J.A., sculptor,
+ on Washington's appearance, ii. 386.
+
+ Howe, Lord,
+ arrives at New York with power to negotiate and pardon, i. 161;
+ refuses to give Washington his title, 161;
+ tries to negotiate with Congress, 167;
+ escapes D'Estaing at Delaware, 244;
+ attacks D'Estaing off Newport, 244.
+
+ Howe, Sir William,
+ has controversy with Washington over treatment of prisoners, i. 148;
+ checked at Frog's Point, 173;
+ attacks cautiously at Chatterton Hill, 173;
+ retreats and attacks forts on Hudson, 174;
+ takes Fort Washington, 175;
+ goes into winter quarters in New York, 177, 186;
+ suspected of purpose to meet Burgoyne, 194, 195;
+ baffled in advance across New Jersey by Washington, 194;
+ goes by sea, 195;
+ arrives at Head of Elk, 196;
+ defeats Washington at Brandywine, 197;
+ camps at Germantown, 199;
+ withdraws after Germantown into Philadelphia, 201;
+ folly of his failure to meet Burgoyne, 205, 206;
+ offers battle in vain to Washington, 218;
+ replaced by Clinton, 232;
+ tries to cut off Lafayette, 233.
+
+ Huddy, Captain,
+ captured by English, hanged by Tories, i. 327.
+
+ Humphreys, Colonel,
+ letters of Washington to, ii. 13, 339;
+ at opening of Congress, 78;
+ commissioner to treat with Creeks, 90;
+ anecdote of, 375.
+
+ Huntington, Lady,
+ asks Washington's aid in Christianizing Indians, ii. 4.
+
+
+ IMPRESSMENT,
+ right of, maintained by England, ii. 181.
+
+ Independence,
+ not wished, but foreseen, by Washington, i. 131, 156;
+ declared by Congress, possibly through Washington's influence, 160.
+
+ Indians,
+ wars with in Virginia, i. 37, 38;
+ in French and Indian war, 67,68;
+ desert English, 76;
+ in Braddock's defeat, 85, 86, 88;
+ restless before Revolution, 122;
+ in War of Revolution, 266, 270;
+ punished by Sullivan, 269;
+ policy toward, early suggested by Washington, 344;
+ recommendations relative to in Washington's address to Congress,
+ ii. 82;
+ the "Indian problem" under Washington's administration, 83-105;
+ erroneous popular ideas of, 84, 85;
+ real character and military ability, 85-87;
+ understood by Washington, 87, 88;
+ a real danger in 1788, 88;
+ situation in the Northwest, 89;
+ difficulties with Cherokees and Creeks, 89, 90;
+ influence of Spanish intrigue, 90;
+ successful treaty with Creeks, 90, 91;
+ wisdom of this policy, 92;
+ warfare in the Northwest, 92;
+ defeats of Harmar and Hardin, 93;
+ causes for the failure, 93, 94;
+ intrigues of England, 92, 94, 175, 178;
+ expedition and defeat of St. Clair, 95-97;
+ results, 99;
+ expedition of Wayne, 100, 102;
+ his victory, 103;
+ success of Washington's policy toward, 104, 105.
+
+ Iredell, James,
+ appointed to Supreme Court, ii. 73.
+
+
+ JACKSON, MAJOR,
+ accompanies Washington to opening of Congress, ii. 78.
+
+ Jameson, Colonel,
+ forwards Andrews letter to Arnold, i. 284;
+ receives orders from Washington, 285.
+
+ Jay, John,
+ on opposition in Congress, to Washington, i. 222;
+ consulted by Washington as to etiquette, ii. 54;
+ appointed chief justice, 72;
+ publishes card against Genet, 159;
+ appointed on special mission to England, 177;
+ his character, 177;
+ instructions from Washington, 179;
+ his reception in England, 180;
+ difficulties in negotiating, 181;
+ concludes treaty, 182;
+ burnt in effigy while absent, 186;
+ execrated after news of treaty, 187;
+ hampered by Monroe in France, 213.
+
+ Jay treaty, ii. 180-184;
+ opposition to and debate over signing, 184-201;
+ reasons of Washington for signing, 205.
+
+ Jefferson, Thomas,
+ his flight from Cornwallis, i. 307;
+ discusses with Washington needs of government, ii. 9;
+ adopts French democratic phraseology, 27;
+ contrast with Washington, 27, 28, 69;
+ criticises Washington's manners, 56;
+ made secretary of state, 68;
+ his previous relations with Washington, 68;
+ his character, 69;
+ supposed to be a friend of the Constitution, 72;
+ his objections to President's opening Congress, 79;
+ on weights and measures, 81;
+ letter of Washington to on assumption of state debts, 107;
+ makes bargain with Hamilton, 108;
+ opposes a bank, 110;
+ asked to prepare neutrality instructions, 146;
+ upholds Genet, 153;
+ argues against him publicly, supports him privately, 154;
+ notified of French privateer Little Sarah, 155;
+ allows it to sail, 155;
+ retires to country and is censured by Washington, 156;
+ assures Washington that vessel will wait his decision, 156;
+ his un-American attitude, 157;
+ wishes to make terms of note demanding Genet's recall mild, 158;
+ argues that United States is bound by French treaty, 170, 171;
+ begs Madison to answer Hamilton's "Camillus" letters, 206;
+ his attitude upon first entering cabinet, 223;
+ causes for his breach with Hamilton, 224;
+ jealousy, incompatibility of temper, 224;
+ his democratic opinions, 225;
+ skill in creating party catch-words, 225;
+ prints "Rights of Man" with note against Adams, 226;
+ attacks him further in letter to Washington, 226;
+ brings Freneau to Philadelphia and gives him an office, 227;
+ denies any connection with Freneau's newspaper, 227;
+ his real responsibility, 228;
+ his purpose to undermine Hamilton, 228;
+ causes his friends to attack him, 229;
+ writes a letter to Washington attacking Hamilton's treasury measures,
+ 229;
+ fails to produce any effect, 230;
+ winces under Hamilton's counter attacks, 230;
+ reiterates charges and asserts devotion to Constitution, 231;
+ continues attacks and resigns, 234;
+ wishes reelection of Washington, 235;
+ his charge of British sympathies resented by Washington, 252;
+ plain letter of Washington to, 259;
+ Washington's opinion of, 259;
+ suggests Logan's mission to France, 262, 265;
+ takes oath as vice-president, 276;
+ regarded as a Jacobin by Federalists, 294;
+ jealous of Washington, 306;
+ accuses him of senility, 307;
+ a genuine American, 309.
+
+ Johnson, William,
+ Tory leader in New York, i. 143.
+
+ Johnstone, Governor,
+ peace commissioner, i. 233.
+
+ Jumonville, De, French leader,
+ declared to have been assassinated by Washington, i. 74,79;
+ really a scout and spy, 75.
+
+
+ KENTUCKY RESOLUTIONS,
+ condemned by Washington, ii. 266-268.
+
+ King, Clarence,
+ his opinion that Washington was not American, ii. 308.
+
+ King, Rufus,
+ publishes card exposing Genet, ii. 159.
+
+ King's Bridge,
+ fight at, i. 170.
+
+ Kip's Landing,
+ fight at, i. 168.
+
+ Kirkland, Rev. Samuel,
+ negotiates with Six Nations, ii. 101.
+
+ Knox, Henry,
+ brings artillery to Boston from Ticonderoga, i. 152;
+ accompanies Washington to meet De Rochambeau, 283;
+ at West Point, 285;
+ sent by Washington to confer with governors of States, 295;
+ urged by Washington to establish Western posts, ii. 7;
+ letters of Washington to, 30, 39;
+ made secretary of war, 65;
+ his character, 65;
+ a Federalist, 71;
+ deals with Creeks, 91;
+ urges decisive measure against Genet, 154, 155;
+ letters of Washington to, 260;
+ selected by Washington as third major-general, 286;
+ given first place by Adams, 286;
+ angry at Hamilton's higher rank, 288;
+ refuses the office, 289;
+ his offer to serve on Washington's staff refused, 289;
+ Washington's affection for, 317, 362.
+
+
+ LAFAYETTE, Madame de,
+ aided by Washington, ii. 366;
+ letter of Washington to, 377.
+
+ Lafayette, Marquis de,
+ Washington's regard for, i. 192;
+ his opinion of Continental troops, 196;
+ sent on fruitless journey to the lakes by cabal, 222, 253;
+ encouraged by Washington, 225;
+ narrowly escapes being cut off by Clinton, 233;
+ appointed to attack British rear, 235;
+ superseded by Lee, 235;
+ urges Washington to come, 235;
+ letter of Washington to, regarding quarrel between D'Estaing and
+ Sullivan, 245;
+ regard of Washington for, 249;
+ desires to conquer Canada, 254;
+ his plan not supported in France, 256;
+ works to get a French army sent, 264;
+ brings news of French army and fleet, 274;
+ tries to get De Rochambeau to attack New York, 280;
+ accompanies Washington to meet De Rochambeau, 283;
+ told by Washington of Arnold's treachery, 285;
+ on court to try Andre, 287;
+ opinion of Continental soldiers, 293;
+ harasses Cornwallis, 307;
+ defeated at Green Springs, 307;
+ watches Cornwallis at Yorktown, 308;
+ reinforced by De Grasse, 312;
+ persuades him to remain, 315;
+ sends Washington French wolf-hounds, ii. 2;
+ letters of Washington to, 23, 26, 118, 144, 165, 222, 261;
+ his son not received by Washington, 253;
+ later taken care of, 277, 281, 366;
+ his worth, early seen by Washington, 334;
+ Washington's affection for, 365;
+ sends key of Bastile to Mt. Vernon, 365;
+ helped by Washington, 365,366.
+
+ Laurens, Henry,
+ letter of Conway cabal to, making attack on Washington, i. 222;
+ letters of Washington to, 254, 288;
+ sent to Paris to get loans, 299.
+
+ Lauzun, Duc de,
+ repulses Tarleton at Yorktown, i. 317.
+
+
+ Lear, Tobias,
+ Washington's secretary, ii. 263;
+ his account of Washington's last illness, 299-303, 385;
+ letters to, 361, 382.
+
+ Lee, Arthur,
+ example of Virginia gentleman educated abroad, i. 23.
+
+ Lee, Charles,
+ visits Mt. Vernon, his character, i. 132;
+ accompanies Washington to Boston, 136;
+ aids Washington in organizing army, 140;
+ disobeys orders and is captured, 175;
+ objects to attacking Clinton, 234;
+ first refuses, then claims command of van, 235;
+ disobeys orders and retreats, 236;
+ rebuked by Washington, 236, 237;
+ court martial of and dismissal from army, 237;
+ his witty remark on taking oath of allegiance, ii. 375.
+
+ Lee, Henry, marries Lucy Grymes,
+ Washington's "Lowland Beauty," i. 96.
+
+ Lee, Henry,
+ son of Lucy Grymes, Washington's "Lowland Beauty," i. 96; ii. 362;
+ captures Paulus Hook, i. 269;
+ letters of Washington to, ii. 23, 26, 149, 235, 239, 242, 252;
+ considered for command against Indians, 100;
+ commands troops to suppress Whiskey Rebellion, 127;
+ Washington's affection for, 362.
+
+ Lee, Richard Henry,
+ unfriendly to Washington, i. 214;
+ letter of Washington to, ii. 160.
+
+ Lewis, Lawrence,
+ at opening of Congress, ii. 78;
+ takes social duties at Mt. Vernon, 280.
+
+ Liancourt, Duc de,
+ refused reception by Washington, ii. 253.
+
+ Lincoln, Abraham,
+ compared with Washington, i. 349; ii. 308-313.
+
+ Lincoln, Benjamin,
+ sent by Washington against Burgoyne, i. 210;
+ fails to understand Washington's policy and tries to hold Charleston,
+ 273, 274;
+ captured, 276;
+ commissioner to treat with Creeks, ii. 90.
+
+ Lippencott, Captain,
+ orders hanging of Huddy, i. 327;
+ acquitted by English court martial, 328.
+
+ Little Sarah,
+ the affair of, 155-157.
+
+ Livingston, Chancellor,
+ administers oath at Washington's inauguration, ii. 46.
+
+ Livingston, Edward,
+ moves call for papers relating to Jay treaty, ii. 207.
+
+ Logan, Dr. George,
+ goes on volunteer mission to France, ii. 262;
+ ridiculed by Federalists, publishes defense, 263;
+ calls upon Washington, 263;
+ mercilessly snubbed, 263-265.
+
+ Long Island,
+ battle of, i. 164,165.
+
+ London, Lord,
+ disappoints Washington by his inefficiency, i. 91.
+
+ Lovell, James,
+ follows the Adamses in opposing Washington, i. 214;
+ wishes to supplant him by Gates, 215;
+ writes hostile letters, 222.
+
+
+ MACKENZIE, CAPTAIN,
+ letter of Washington to, i. 130.
+
+ Madison, James,
+ begins to desire a stronger government, ii. 19, 29;
+ letters of Washington to, 30, 39, 53;
+ chosen for French mission, but does not go, 211.
+
+ Magaw, Colonel,
+ betrayed at Fort Washington, i. 175.
+
+ "Magnolia,"
+ Washington's pet colt, beaten in a race, i. 99, 113; ii. 381.
+
+ Marshall, John,
+ Chief Justice, on special commission to France, ii. 284;
+ tells anecdote of Washington's anger at cowardice, 392.
+
+ Maryland, the Washington family in, i.36.
+
+ Mason, George,
+ discusses political outlook with Washington, i. 119;
+ letter of Washington to, 263;
+ an opponent of the Constitution, ii. 71;
+ friendship of Washington for, 362;
+ debates with Washington the site of Pohick Church, 381.
+
+ Mason, S.T.,
+ communicates Jay treaty to Bache, ii. 185.
+
+ Massey, Rev. Lee,
+ rector of Pohick Church, i. 44.
+
+ Mathews, George,
+ letter of Washington to, i. 294.
+
+ Matthews, Edward,
+ makes raids in Virginia, i. 269.
+
+ Mawhood, General,
+ defeated at Princeton, i. 182.
+
+ McGillivray, Alexander,
+ chief of the Creeks, ii. 90;
+ his journey to New York and interview with Washington, 91.
+
+ McHenry, James,
+ at West Point, i. 284;
+ letters to, 325, ii. 22, 278, 287, 384;
+ becomes secretary of war, 246;
+ advised by Washington not to appoint Democrats, 260, 261.
+
+ McKean, Thomas, given letters to Dr. Logan, ii. 265.
+
+ McMaster, John B.,
+ calls Washington "an unknown man," i. 7, ii. 304;
+ calls him cold, 332, 352;
+ and avaricious in small ways, 352.
+
+ Meade, Colonel Richard,
+ Washington's opinion of, ii. 335.
+
+ Mercer, Hugh,
+ killed at Princeton, i. 182.
+
+ Merlin,----,
+ president of Directory, interview with Dr. Logan, ii. 265.
+
+ Mifflin, Thomas,
+ wishes to supplant Washington by Gates, i. 216;
+ member of board of war, 221;
+ put under Washington's orders, 226;
+ replies to Washington's surrender of commission, 349;
+ meets Washington on journey to inauguration, ii. 44;
+ notified of the Little Sarah, French privateer, 154;
+ orders its seizure, 155.
+
+ Militia,
+ abandon Continental army, i. 167;
+ cowardice of, 168;
+ despised by Washington, 169;
+ leave army again, 175;
+ assist in defeat of Burgoyne, 211.
+
+ Mischianza, i. 232.
+
+ Monmouth,
+ battle of, i. 235-239.
+
+ Monroe, James,
+ appointed minister to France, ii. 211;
+ his character, 212;
+ intrigues against Hamilton, 212;
+ effusively received in Paris, 212;
+ acts foolishly, 213;
+ tries to interfere with Jay, 213;
+ upheld, then condemned and recalled by Washington, 213, 214;
+ writes a vindication, 215;
+ Washington's opinion of him, 215, 216;
+ his selection one of Washington's few mistakes, 334.
+
+ Montgomery, General Richard,
+ sent by Washington to invade Canada, i. 143.
+
+ Morgan, Daniel,
+ sent against Burgoyne by Washington, i. 208;
+ at Saratoga, 210;
+ wins battle of Cowpens, joins Greene, 301.
+
+ Morris, Gouverneur,
+ letters of Washington to, i. 248, 263;
+ efforts towards financial reform, 264;
+ quotes speech of Washington at Federal convention in his eulogy,
+ ii. 31;
+ discussion as to his value as an authority, 32, note;
+ goes to England on unofficial mission, 137;
+ balked by English insolence, 137;
+ comprehends French Revolution, 139;
+ letters of Washington to, on the Revolution, 140,142,145;
+ recall demanded by France, 211;
+ letter of Washington to, 217,240, 254;
+ Washington's friendship for, 363.
+
+ Morris, Robert,
+ letter of Washington to, i. 187;
+ helps Washington to pay troops, 259;
+ efforts towards financial reform, 264;
+ difficulty in helping Washington in 1781, 309, 312;
+ considered for secretary of treasury, ii. 66;
+ his bank policy approved by Washington, 110;
+ Washington's friendship for, 363.
+
+ Moustier,
+ demands private access to Washington, ii. 59;
+ refused, 59, 60.
+
+ Murray, Vans, minister in Holland,
+ interview with Dr. Logan, ii. 264;
+ nominated for French mission by Adams, 292;
+ written to by Washington, 292.
+
+ Muse, Adjutant,
+ trains Washington in tactics and art of war, i. 65.
+
+
+ NAPOLEON,
+ orders public mourning for Washington's death, i. 1.
+
+ Nelson, General,
+ letter of Washington to, i. 257.
+
+ Newburgh,
+ addresses, ii. 335.
+
+ New England,
+ character of people, i. 138;
+ attitude toward Washington, 138, 139;
+ troops disliked by Washington, 152;
+ later praised by him, 152, 317, 344;
+ threatened by Burgoyne's invasion, 204;
+ its delegates in Congress demand appointment of Gates, 208;
+ and oppose Washington, 214;
+ welcomes Washington on tour as President, ii. 74;
+ more democratic than other colonies before Revolution, 315;
+ disliked by Washington for this reason, 316.
+
+ Newenham, Sir Edward,
+ letter of Washington to on American foreign policy, ii. 133.
+
+ New York,
+ Washington's first visit to, i. 99, 100;
+ defense of, in Revolution, 159-169;
+ abandoned by Washington, 169;
+ Howe establishes himself in, 177;
+ reoccupied by Clinton, 264;
+ Washington's journey to, ii. 44;
+ inauguration in, 46;
+ rioting in, against Jay treaty, 187.
+
+ Nicholas, John,
+ letter of Washington to, ii. 259.
+
+ Nicola, Col.,
+ urges Washington to establish a despotism, i. 337.
+
+ Noailles, Vicomte de, French emigre,
+ referred to State Department, ii. 151, 253.
+
+
+ O'FLINN, CAPTAIN,
+ Washington's friendship with, ii. 318.
+
+ Organization of the national government,
+ absence of materials to work with, ii. 51;
+ debate over title of President, 52;
+ over his communications with Senate, 53;
+ over presidential etiquette, 53-56;
+ appointment of officials to cabinet offices established by Congress,
+ 64-71;
+ appointment of supreme court judges, 72.
+
+ Orme,----,
+ letter of Washington to, i. 84.
+
+
+ PAINE, THOMAS,
+ his "Rights of Man" reprinted by Jefferson, ii. 226.
+
+ Parkinson, Richard,
+ says Washington was harsh to slaves, i. 105;
+ contradicts statement elsewhere, 106;
+ tells stories of Washington's pecuniary exactness, ii. 353, 354, 382;
+ his character, 355;
+ his high opinion of Washington, 356.
+
+ Parton, James,
+ considers Washington as good but commonplace, ii. 330, 374.
+
+ Peachey, Captain,
+ letter of Washington to, i. 92.
+
+ Pendleton, Edmund,
+ Virginia delegate to Continental Congress, i. 128.
+
+ Pennsylvania,
+ refuses to fight the French, i. 72,83;
+ fails to help Washington, 225;
+ remonstrates against his going into winter quarters, 229;
+ condemned by Washington, 229;
+ compromises with mutineers, 292.
+
+ Philipse, Mary,
+ brief love-affair of Washington with, i. 99, 100.
+
+ Phillips, General,
+ commands British troops in Virginia, i. 303;
+ death of, 303.
+
+ Pickering, Colonel, quiets Six Nations, ii. 94.
+
+ Pickering, Timothy,
+ letter of Washington to, on French Revolution, ii. 140;
+ on failure of Spanish negotiations, 166;
+ recalls Washington to Philadelphia to receive Fauchet letter, 195;
+ succeeds Randolph, 246;
+ letters of Washington to, on party government, 247;
+ appeals to Washington against Adams's reversal of Hamilton's rank,
+ 286;
+ letters of Washington to, 292, 324;
+ criticises Washington as a commonplace person, 307.
+
+ Pinckney, Charles C.,
+ letter of Washington to, ii. 90;
+ appointed to succeed Monroe as minister to France, 214;
+ refused reception, 284;
+ sent on special commission, 284;
+ named by Washington as general, 286;
+ accepts without complaint of Hamilton's higher rank, 290;
+ Washington's friendship with, 363.
+
+ Pinckney, Thomas,
+ sent on special mission to Spain, ii. 166;
+ unsuccessful at first, 166;
+ succeeds in making a good treaty, 167;
+ credit of his exploit, 168;
+ letter of Washington to, 325.
+
+ Pitt, William,
+ his conduct of French war, i. 93, 94.
+
+ Princeton,
+ battle of, i. 181-3.
+
+ Privateers,
+ sent out by Washington, i. 150.
+
+ "Protection"
+ favored in the first Congress, ii. 113-115;
+ arguments of Hamilton for, 114, 115;
+ of Washington, 116-122.
+
+ Provincialism,
+ of Americans, i. 193;
+ with regard to foreign officers, 193, 234, 250-252;
+ with regard to foreign politics, ii. 131, 132, 163, 237, 255.
+
+ Putnam, Israel,
+ escapes with difficulty from New York, i. 169;
+ fails to help Washington at Trenton, 180;
+ warned to defend the Hudson, 195;
+ tells Washington of Burgoyne's surrender, 211;
+ rebuked by Washington, 217;
+ amuses Washington, ii. 374.
+
+
+ RAHL, COLONEL,
+ defeated and killed at Trenton, i. 181.
+
+ Randolph, Edmund,
+ letter of Washington to, ii. 30, 39;
+ relations with Washington, 64;
+ appointed attorney-general, 64;
+ his character, 64, 65;
+ a friend of the Constitution, 71;
+ opposes a bank, 110;
+ letter of Washington to, on protective bounties, 118;
+ drafts neutrality proclamation, 147;
+ vacillates with regard to Genet, 154;
+ argues that United States is bound by French alliance, 170;
+ succeeds Jefferson as secretary of state, 184;
+ directed to prepare a remonstrance against English "provision order,"
+ 185;
+ opposed to Jay treaty, 188;
+ letter of Washington to, on conditional ratification, 189, 191, 192,
+ 194;
+ guilty, apparently, from Fauchet letter, of corrupt practices, 196;
+ his position not a cause for Washington's signing treaty, 196-200;
+ receives Fauchet letter, resigns, 201;
+ his personal honesty, 201;
+ his discreditable carelessness, 202;
+ fairly treated by Washington, 203, 204;
+ his complaints against Washington, 203;
+ letter of Washington to, concerning Monroe, 213;
+ at first a Federalist, 246.
+
+ Randolph, John,
+ on early disappearance of Virginia colonial society, i. 15.
+
+ Rawdon, Lord,
+ commands British forces in South, too distant to help Cornwallis,
+ i. 304.
+
+ Reed, Joseph,
+ letters of Washington to, i. 151, 260.
+
+ Revolution, War of,
+ foreseen by Washington, i. 120, 122;
+ Lexington and Concord, 133;
+ Bunker Hill, 136;
+ siege of Boston, 137-154;
+ organization of army, 139-142;
+ operations in New York, 143;
+ invasion of Canada, 143, 144;
+ question as to treatment of prisoners, 145-148;
+ causes of British defeat, 154, 155;
+ campaign near New York, 161-177;
+ causes for attempted defense of Brooklyn, 163, 164;
+ battle of Long Island, 164-165;
+ escape of Americans, 166;
+ affair at Kip's Bay, 168;
+ at King's Bridge, 170;
+ at Frog's Point, 173;
+ battle of White Plains, 173;
+ at Chatterton Hill, 174;
+ capture of Forts Washington and Lee, 174, 175;
+ pursuit of Washington into New Jersey, 175-177;
+ retirement of Howe to New York, 177;
+ battle of Trenton, 180, 181;
+ campaign of Princeton, 181-183;
+ its brilliancy, 183;
+ Philadelphia campaign, 194-202;
+ British march across New Jersey prevented by Washington, 194;
+ sea voyage to Delaware, 195;
+ battle of the Brandywine, 196-198;
+ causes for defeat, 198;
+ defeat of Wayne, 198;
+ Philadelphia taken by Howe, 199;
+ battle of Germantown, 199;
+ its significance, 200, 201;
+ Burgoyne's invasion, 203-211;
+ Washington's preparations for, 204-206;
+ Howe's error in neglecting to cooperate, 205;
+ capture of Ticonderoga, 207;
+ battles of Bennington, Oriskany, Fort Schuyler, 210;
+ battle of Saratoga, 211;
+ British repulse at Fort Mercer, 217;
+ destruction of the forts, 217;
+ fruitless skirmishing before Philadelphia, 218;
+ Valley Forge, 228-232;
+ evacuation of Philadelphia, 234;
+ battle of Monmouth, 235-239;
+ its effect, 239;
+ cruise and failure of D'Estaing at Newport, 243, 244;
+ failure of D'Estaing at Savannah, 247, 248;
+ storming of Stony Point, 268, 269;
+ Tory raids near New York, 269;
+ standstill in 1780, 272;
+ siege and capture of Charleston, 273, 274, 276;
+ operations of French and Americans near Newport, 277, 278;
+ battle of Camden, 281;
+ treason of Arnold, 281-289;
+ battle of Cowpens, 301;
+ retreat of Greene before Cornwallis, 302;
+ battle of Guilford Court House, 302;
+ successful operations of Greene, 302, 303;
+ Southern campaign planned by Washington, 304-311;
+ feints against Clinton, 306;
+ operations of Cornwallis and Lafayette in Virginia, 307;
+ naval supremacy secured by Washington, 310, 311;
+ battle of De Grasse and Graves off Chesapeake, 312;
+ transport of American army to Virginia, 311-313;
+ siege and capture of Yorktown, 315-318;
+ masterly character of campaign, 318-320;
+ petty operations before New York, 326;
+ treaty of peace, 342.
+
+ Rives,
+ on Washington's doubts of constitutionality of Bank, ii. 110.
+
+ Robinson, Beverly,
+ speaker of Virginia House of Burgesses, his compliment to Washington,
+ i. 102.
+
+ Robinson, Colonel,
+ loyalist, i. 282.
+
+ Rumsey, James,
+ the inventor, asks Washington's consideration of his steamboat, ii. 4.
+
+ Rush, Benjamin,
+ describes Washington's impressiveness, ii. 389.
+
+ Rutledge, John,
+ letter of Washington to, i. 281;
+ nomination rejected by Senate, ii. 63;
+ nominated to Supreme Court, 73.
+
+
+ ST. CLAIR, Arthur,
+ removed after loss of Ticonderoga, i. 208;
+ appointed to command against Indians, ii. 94;
+ receives instructions and begins expedition, 95;
+ defeated, 96;
+ his character, 99;
+ fair treatment by Washington, 99;
+ popular execration of, 105.
+
+ St. Pierre, M. de,
+ French governor in Ohio, i. 67.
+
+ St. Simon, Count,
+ reinforces Lafayette, i. 312.
+
+ Sandwich, Lord,
+ calls all Yankees cowards, i. 155.
+
+ Saratoga,
+ anecdote concerning, i. 202.
+
+ Savage, Edward,
+ characteristics of his portrait of Washington, i. 13.
+
+ Savannah,
+ siege of, i. 247.
+
+ Scammel, Colonel,
+ amuses Washington, ii. 374.
+
+ Schuyler, Philip,
+ accompanies Washington to Boston, i. 136;
+ appointed military head in New York, 136;
+ directed by Washington how to meet Burgoyne, 204;
+ fails to carry out directions, 207;
+ removed, 208;
+ value of his preparations, 209.
+
+ Scott, Charles, commands expedition against Indians, ii. 95.
+
+ Sea-power,
+ its necessity seen by Washington, i. 283, 303, 304, 306, 310, 318, 319.
+
+ Sectional feeling,
+ deplored by Washington, ii. 222.
+
+ Sharpe, Governor,
+ offers Washington a company, i. 80;
+ Washington's reply to, 81.
+
+ Shays's Rebellion,
+ comments of Washington and Jefferson upon, ii. 26, 27.
+
+ Sherman, Roger,
+ makes sarcastic remark about Wilkinson, i. 220.
+
+ Shirley, Governor William,
+ adjusts matter of Washington's rank, i. 91, 97.
+
+ Short, William, minister to Holland,
+ on commission regarding opening of Mississippi, ii. 166.
+
+ Six Nations,
+ make satisfactory treaties, ii. 88;
+ stirred up by English, 94;
+ but pacified, 94, 101.
+
+ Slavery,
+ in Virginia, i. 20;
+ its evil effects, 104;
+ Washington's attitude toward slaves, 105;
+ his condemnation of the system, 106, 107;
+ gradual emancipation favored, 107, 108.
+
+ Smith, Colonel,
+ letter of Washington to, ii. 340.
+
+ Spain,
+ instigates Indians to hostilities, ii. 89, 94, 101;
+ blocks Mississippi, 135;
+ makes treaty with Pinckney opening Mississippi, 167, 168;
+ angered at Jay treaty, 210.
+
+ Sparks, Jared,
+ his alterations of Washington's letters, ii. 337, 338.
+
+ Spotswood, Alexander,
+ asks Washington's opinion of Alien and Sedition Acts, ii. 297.
+
+ Stamp Act,
+ Washington's opinion of, i. 119, 120.
+
+ Stark, General,
+ leads attack at Trenton, i. 181.
+
+ States, in the Revolutionary war,
+ appeals of Washington to, i. 142, 186, 204, 259, 277, 295, 306, 323,
+ 324, 326, 344;
+ issue paper money, 258;
+ grow tired of the war, 290;
+ alarmed by mutinies, 294;
+ try to appease soldiers, 295, 296;
+ their selfishness condemned by Washington, 333; ii. 21, 23;
+ thwart Indian policy of Congress, 88.
+
+ Stephen, Adam,
+ late in attacking at Germantown, i. 199.
+
+ Steuben, Baron,
+ Washington's appreciation of, i. 192, 249;
+ drills the army at Valley Forge, 232;
+ annoys Washington by wishing higher command, 249;
+ sent on mission to demand surrender of Western posts, 343;
+ his worth recognized by Washington, ii. 334.
+
+ Stirling, Lord,
+ defeated and captured at Long Island, i. 165.
+
+ Stockton, Mrs.,
+ letter of Washington to, ii. 349.
+
+ Stone, General,
+ tells stories of Washington's closeness, ii. 353, 354.
+
+ Stuart, David,
+ letters of Washington to, ii. 107, 221, 222, 258.
+
+ Stuart, Gilbert,
+ his portrait of Washington contrasted with Savage's, i. 13.
+
+ Sullivan, John, General,
+ surprised at Long Island, i. 165;
+ attacks at Trenton, 180;
+ surprised and crushed at Brandywine, 197, 198;
+ unites with D'Estaing to attack Newport, 243;
+ angry at D'Estaing's desertion, 244;
+ soothed by Washington, 244;
+ sent against Indians, 266, 269.
+
+ Supreme Court,
+ appointed by Washington, ii. 72.
+
+
+ TAFT,----,
+ kindness of Washington toward, ii. 367.
+
+ Talleyrand,
+ eulogistic report to Napoleon on death of Washington, i. 1, note;
+ remark on Hamilton, ii. 139;
+ refused reception by Washington, 253.
+
+ Tarleton, Sir Banastre,
+ tries to escape at Yorktown, i. 317.
+
+ Thatcher, Dr.,
+ on Washington's appearance when taking command of army, i. 137.
+
+ Thomson, Charles,
+ complimented by Washington on retiring from secretary-ship of
+ Continental Congress, ii. 350.
+
+ Tories,
+ hated by Washington, i. 156;
+ his reasons, 157;
+ active in New York, 158;
+ suppressed by Washington, 159;
+ in Philadelphia, impressed by Continental army, 196;
+ make raids on frontier, 266;
+ strong in Southern States, 267;
+ raids under Tryon, 269.
+
+ Trent, Captain,
+ his incompetence in dealing with Indians and French, i. 72.
+
+ Trenton, campaign of, i. 180-183.
+
+ Trumbull, Governor,
+ letter of Washington to, refusing to stand for a third term,
+ ii. 269-271;
+ other letters, 298.
+
+ Trumbull, John,
+ on New England army before Boston, i. 139.
+
+ Trumbull, Jonathan,
+ his message on better government praised by Washington, ii. 21;
+ letters to, 42;
+ Washington's friendship for, 363.
+
+ Tryon, Governor,
+ Tory leader in New York, i. 143;
+ his intrigues stopped by Washington, 158, 159;
+ conspires to murder Washington, 160;
+ makes raids in Connecticut, 269.
+
+
+ VALLEY FORGE,
+ Continental Army at, i. 228-232.
+
+ Van Braam, Jacob,
+ friend of Lawrence Washington, trains George in fencing, i. 65;
+ accompanies him on mission to French, 66.
+
+ Vergennes,
+ requests release of Asgill, i. 329, 330;
+ letter of Washington to, 330;
+ proposes to submit disposition of a subsidy to Washington, 332.
+
+ Virginia, society in,
+ before the Revolution, i. 15-29;
+ its entire change since then, 15, 16;
+ population, distribution, and numbers, 17, 18;
+ absence of towns, 18;
+ and town life, 19;
+ trade and travel in, 19;
+ social classes, 20-24;
+ slaves and poor whites, 20;
+ clergy, 21;
+ planters and their estates, 22;
+ their life, 22;
+ education, 23;
+ habits of governing, 24;
+ luxury and extravagance, 25;
+ apparent wealth, 26;
+ agreeableness of life, 27;
+ aristocratic ideals, 28;
+ vigor of stock, 29;
+ unwilling to fight French, 71;
+ quarrels with Dinwiddie, 71;
+ thanks Washington after his French campaign, 79;
+ terrified at Braddock's defeat, 88;
+ gives Washington command, 89;
+ fails to support him, 89, 90, 93;
+ bad economic conditions in, 104,105;
+ local government in, 117;
+ condemns Stamp Act, 119;
+ adopts non-importation, 121;
+ condemns Boston Port Bill, 123;
+ asks opinion of counties, 124;
+ chooses delegates to a congress, 127;
+ prepares for war, 132;
+ British campaign in, 307, 315-318;
+ ratifies Constitution, ii. 40;
+ evil effect of free trade upon, 116, 117;
+ nullification resolutions, 266;
+ strength of its aristocracy, 315.
+
+
+ WADE, COLONEL,
+ in command at West Point after Arnold's flight, i. 285.
+
+ Walker, Benjamin,
+ letter of Washington to, ii. 257.
+
+ Warren, James,
+ letters of Washington to, i. 262, ii. 118.
+
+ Washington,
+ ancestry, i. 30-40;
+ early genealogical researches concerning, 30-32;
+ pedigree finally established, 32;
+ origin of family, 33;
+ various members during middle ages, 34;
+ on royalist side in English civil war, 34, 36;
+ character of family, 35;
+ emigration to Virginia, 35, 36;
+ career of Washingtons in Maryland, 37;
+ in Virginia history, 38;
+ their estates, 39.
+
+ Washington, Augustine, father of George Washington,
+ birth, i. 35;
+ death, 39;
+ character, 39;
+ his estate, 41;
+ ridiculous part played by in Weems's anecdotes, 44, 47.
+
+ Washington, Augustine, half brother of George Washington,
+ keeps him after his father's death, i. 48.
+
+ Washington, Bushrod,
+ refused appointment as attorney by Washington, ii. 62;
+ educated by him, 370.
+
+ Washington, George,
+ honors to his memory in France, i. 1;
+ in England, 2;
+ grief in America, 3, 4;
+ general admission of his greatness, 4;
+ its significance, 5, 6;
+ tributes from England, 6;
+ from other countries, 6, 7;
+ yet an "unknown" man, 7;
+ minuteness of knowledge concerning, 8;
+ has become subject of myths, 9;
+ development of the Weems myth about, 10, 11;
+ necessity of a new treatment of, 12;
+ significant difference of real and ideal portraits of, 13;
+ his silence regarding himself, 14;
+ underlying traits, 14.
+
+ _Early Life_.
+ Ancestry, 30-41;
+ birth, 39;
+ origin of Weems's anecdotes about, 41-44;
+ their absurdity and evil results, 45-48;
+ early schooling, 48;
+ plan to send him to sea, 49, 50;
+ studies to be a surveyor, 51;
+ his rules of behavior, 52;
+ his family connections with Fairfaxes, 54, 55;
+ his friendship with Lord Fairfax, 56;
+ surveys Fairfax's estate, 57, 58, 59;
+ made public surveyor, 60;
+ his life at the time, 60, 61;
+ influenced by Fairfax's cultivation, 62;
+ goes to West Indies with his brother, 62;
+ has the small-pox, 63;
+ observations on the voyage, 63, 64;
+ returns to Virginia, 64;
+ becomes guardian of his brother's daughter, 64.
+
+ _Service against the French and Indians_.
+ Receives military training, 65;
+ a military appointment, 66;
+ goes on expedition to treat with French, 66;
+ meets Indians, 67;
+ deals with French, 67;
+ dangers of journey, 68;
+ his impersonal account, 69, 70;
+ appointed to command force against French, 71, 72;
+ his anger at neglect of Virginia Assembly, 73;
+ attacks and defeats force of Jumonville, 74;
+ called murderer by the French, 74;
+ surrounded by French at Great Meadows, 76;
+ surrenders, 76;
+ recklessness of his expedition, 77, 78;
+ effect of experience upon, 79;
+ gains a European notoriety, 79;
+ thanked by Virginia, 79;
+ protests against Dinwiddie's organization of soldiers, 80;
+ refuses to serve when ranked by British officers, 81;
+ accepts position on Braddock's staff, 82;
+ his treatment there, 82;
+ advises Braddock, 84;
+ rebuked for warning against surprise, 85;
+ his bravery in the battle, 86;
+ conducts retreat, 86, 87;
+ effect of experience on him, 87;
+ declines to solicit command of Virginia troops, 88;
+ accepts it when offered, 88;
+ his difficulties with Assembly, 89;
+ and with troops, 90;
+ settles question of rank, 91;
+ writes freely in criticism of government, 91, 92;
+ retires for rest to Mt. Vernon, 93;
+ offers services to General Forbes, 93;
+ irritated at slowness of English, 93, 94;
+ his love affairs, 95, 96;
+ journey to Boston, 97-101;
+ at festivities in New York and Philadelphia, 99;
+ meets Martha Custis, 101;
+ his wedding, 101, 102;
+ elected to House of Burgesses, 102;
+ confused at being thanked by Assembly, 102;
+ his local position, 103;
+ tries to farm his estate, 104;
+ his management of slaves, 105, 106, 108, 109;
+ cares for interests of old soldiers, 109;
+ rebukes a coward, 110;
+ cares for education of stepson, 111;
+ his furnishing of house, 112;
+ hunting habits, 113-115;
+ punishes a poacher, 116;
+ participates in colonial and local government, 117;
+ enters into society, 117, 118.
+
+ _Congressional delegate from Virginia_.
+ His influence in Assembly, 119;
+ discusses Stamp Act with Mason, 119;
+ foresees result to be independence, 119;
+ rejoices at its repeal, but notes Declaratory Act, 120;
+ ready to use force to defend colonial rights, 120;
+ presents non-importation resolutions to Burgesses, 121;
+ abstains from English products, 121;
+ notes ominous movements among Indians, 122;
+ on good terms with royal governors, 122, 123;
+ observes fast on account of Boston Port Bill, 123;
+ has controversy with Bryan Fairfax over Parliamentary policy,
+ 124, 125, 126;
+ presides at Fairfax County meeting, 126;
+ declares himself ready for action, 126;
+ at convention of counties, offers to march to relief of Boston, 127;
+ elected to Continental Congress, 127;
+ his journey, 128;
+ silent in Congress, 129;
+ writes to a British officer that independence is not
+ desired, but war is certain, 130, 131;
+ returns to Virginia, 132;
+ aids in military preparations, 132;
+ his opinion after Concord, 133;
+ at second Continental Congress, wears uniform, 134;
+ made commander-in-chief, 134;
+ his modesty and courage in accepting position, 134, 135;
+ political motives for his choice, 135;
+ his popularity, 136;
+ his journey to Boston, 136, 137;
+ receives news of Bunker Hill, 136;
+ is received by Massachusetts Provincial Assembly, 137.
+
+ _Commander of the Army_.
+ Takes command at Cambridge, 137;
+ his impression upon people, 137, 138, 139;
+ begins reorganization of army, 139;
+ secures number of troops, 140;
+ enforces discipline, his difficulties, 140, 141;
+ forced to lead Congress, 142;
+ to arrange rank of officers, 142;
+ organizes privateers, 142;
+ discovers lack of powder, 143;
+ plans campaigns in Canada and elsewhere, 143, 144;
+ his plans of attack on Boston overruled by council of war, 144;
+ writes to Gage urging that captives be treated as prisoners of war,
+ 145;
+ skill of his letter, 146;
+ retorts to Gage's reply, 147;
+ continues dispute with Howe, 148;
+ annoyed by insufficiency of provisions, 149;
+ and by desertions, 149;
+ stops quarrel between Virginia and Marblehead soldiers, 149;
+ suggests admiralty committees, 150;
+ annoyed by army contractors, 150;
+ and criticism, 151;
+ letter to Joseph Reed, 151;
+ occupies Dorchester Heights, 152;
+ begins to like New England men better, 152;
+ rejoices at prospect of a fight, 153;
+ departure of British due to his leadership, 154;
+ sends troops immediately to New York, 155;
+ enters Boston, 156;
+ expects a hard war, 156;
+ urges upon Congress the necessity of preparing for a long struggle,
+ 156;
+ his growing hatred of Tories, 156, 157;
+ goes to New York, 157, 158;
+ difficulties of the situation, 158;
+ suppresses Tories, 159;
+ urges Congress to declare independence, 159, 160;
+ discovers and punishes a conspiracy to assassinate, 160;
+ insists on his title in correspondence with Howe, 161;
+ justice of his position, 162;
+ quiets sectional jealousies in army, 162;
+ his military inferiority to British, 163;
+ obliged by political considerations to attempt defense of New York,
+ 163, 164;
+ assumes command on Long Island, 164;
+ sees defeat of his troops, 165;
+ sees plan of British fleet to cut off retreat, 166;
+ secures retreat of army, 167;
+ explains his policy of avoiding a pitched battle, 167;
+ anger at flight of militia at Kip's Bay, 168;
+ again secures safe retreat, 169;
+ secures slight advantage in a skirmish, 170;
+ continues to urge Congress to action, 170, 171;
+ success of his letters in securing a permanent army, 171;
+ surprised by advance of British fleet, 172;
+ moves to White Plains, 173;
+ blocks British advance, 174;
+ advises abandonment of American forts, 174;
+ blames himself for their capture, 175;
+ leads diminishing army through New Jersey, 175;
+ makes vain appeals for aid, 176;
+ resolves to take the offensive, 177;
+ desperateness of his situation, 178;
+ pledges his estate and private fortune to raise men, 179;
+ orders disregarded by officers, 180;
+ crosses Delaware and captures Hessians, 180, 181;
+ has difficulty in retaining soldiers, 181;
+ repulses Cornwallis at Assunpink, 181;
+ outwits Cornwallis and wins battle at Princeton, 182;
+ excellence of his strategy, 183;
+ effect of this campaign in saving Revolution, 183, 184;
+ withdraws to Morristown, 185;
+ fluctuations in size of army, 186;
+ his determination to keep the field, 186, 187;
+ criticised by Congress for not fighting, 187;
+ hampered by Congressional interference, 188;
+ issues proclamation requiring oath of allegiance, 188;
+ attacked in Congress for so doing, 189;
+ annoyed by Congressional alterations of rank, 189;
+ and by foreign military adventurers, 191;
+ value of his services in suppressing them, 192;
+ his American feelings, 191, 193;
+ warns Congress in vain that Howe means to attack Philadelphia, 193;
+ baffles Howe's advance across New Jersey, 195;
+ learning of his sailing, marches to defend Philadelphia, 195;
+ offers battle at Brandywine, 196, 197;
+ out-generaled and beaten, 197;
+ rallies army and prepares to fight again, 198;
+ prevented by storm, 199;
+ attacks British at Germantown, 199;
+ defeated, 200;
+ exposes himself in battle, 200;
+ real success of his action, 201;
+ despised by English, 202;
+ foresees danger of Burgoyne's invasion, 203;
+ sends instructions to Schuyler, 204;
+ urges use of New England and New York militia, 304;
+ dreads northern advance of Howe, 205;
+ determines to hold him at all hazards, 206, 207;
+ not cast down by loss of Ticonderoga, 207;
+ urges New England to rise, 208;
+ sends all possible troops, 208;
+ refuses to appoint a commander for Northern army, 208;
+ his probable reasons, 209;
+ continues to send suggestions, 210;
+ slighted by Gates after Burgoyne's surrender, 211;
+ rise of opposition in Congress, 212;
+ arouses ill-feeling by his frankness, 212, 213;
+ distrusted by Samuel and John Adams, 214;
+ by others, 214, 215;
+ formation of a plan to supplant him by Gates, 215;
+ opposed by Gates, Mifflin, and Conway, 215, 216;
+ angers Conway by preventing his increase in rank, 216;
+ is refused troops by Gates, 217;
+ defends and loses Delaware forts, 217;
+ refuses to attack Howe, 218;
+ propriety of his action, 219;
+ becomes aware of cabal, 220;
+ alarms them by showing extent of his knowledge, 221;
+ attacked bitterly in Congress, 222;
+ insulted by Gates, 223;
+ refuses to resign, 224;
+ refuses to notice cabal publicly, 224;
+ complains privately of slight support from Pennsylvania, 225;
+ continues to push Gates for explanations, 226;
+ regains complete control after collapse of cabal, 226, 227;
+ withdraws to Valley Forge, 227;
+ desperation of his situation, 228;
+ criticised by Pennsylvania legislature for going into winter quarters,
+ 229;
+ his bitter reply, 229;
+ his unbending resolution, 230;
+ continues to urge improvements in army organization, 231;
+ manages to hold army together, 232;
+ sends Lafayette to watch Philadelphia, 233;
+ determines to fight, 234;
+ checked by Lee, 234;
+ pursues Clinton, 235;
+ orders Lee to attack British rearguard, 235;
+ discovers his force retreating, 236;
+ rebukes Lee and punishes him, 236, 237;
+ takes command and stops retreat, 237;
+ repulses British and assumes offensive, 238;
+ success due to his work at Valley Forge, 239;
+ celebrates French alliance, 241;
+ has to confront difficulty of managing allies, 241, 242;
+ welcomes D'Estaing, 243;
+ obliged to quiet recrimination after Newport failure, 244;
+ his letter to Sullivan, 244;
+ to Lafayette, 245;
+ to D'Estaing, 246;
+ tact and good effect of his letters, 246;
+ offers to cooperate in an attack on New York, 247;
+ furnishes admirable suggestions to D'Estaing, 247;
+ not dazzled by French, 248;
+ objects to giving rank to foreign officers, 248, 249;
+ opposes transfer of Steuben from inspectorship to the line, 249;
+ his thoroughly American position, 250;
+ absence of provinciality, 251, 252;
+ a national leader, 252;
+ opposes invasion of Canada, 253;
+ foresees danger of its recapture by France, 254, 255;
+ his clear understanding of French motives, 255, 256;
+ rejoices in condition of patriot cause, 257;
+ foresees ruin to army in financial troubles, 258;
+ has to appease mutinies among unpaid troops, 258;
+ appeals to Congress, 259;
+ urges election of better delegates to Congress, 259;
+ angry with speculators, 260, 261;
+ futility of his efforts, 261, 262;
+ his increasing alarm at social demoralization, 263;
+ effect of his exertions, 264;
+ conceals his doubts of the French, 264;
+ watches New York, 264;
+ keeps dreading an English campaign, 265;
+ labors with Congress to form a navy, 266;
+ plans expedition to chastise Indians, 266;
+ realizes that things are at a standstill in the North, 267;
+ sees danger to lie in the South, but determines to remain himself near
+ New York, 267;
+ not consulted by Congress in naming general for Southern army, 268;
+ plans attack on Stony Point, 268;
+ hatred of ravaging methods of British warfare, 270;
+ again has great difficulties in winter quarters, 270;
+ unable to act on offensive in the spring, 270, 272;
+ unable to help South, 272;
+ advises abandonment of Charleston, 273;
+ learns of arrival of French army, 274;
+ plans a number of enterprises with it, 275, 276;
+ refuses, even after loss of Charleston, to abandon Hudson, 276;
+ welcomes Rochambeau, 277;
+ writes to Congress against too optimistic feelings, 278, 279;
+ has extreme difficulty in holding army together, 280;
+ urges French to attack New York, 280;
+ sends Maryland troops South after Camden, 281;
+ arranges meeting with Rochambeau at Hartford, 282;
+ popular enthusiasm over him, 283;
+ goes to West Point, 284;
+ surprised at Arnold's absence, 284;
+ learns of his treachery, 284, 285;
+ his cool behavior, 285;
+ his real feelings, 286;
+ his conduct toward Andre, 287;
+ its justice, 287, 288;
+ his opinion of Arnold, 288, 289;
+ his responsibility in the general breakdown of the Congress and army,
+ 290;
+ obliged to quell food mutinies in army, 291, 292;
+ difficulty of situation, 292;
+ his influence the salvation of army, 293;
+ his greatness best shown in this way, 293;
+ rebukes Congress, 294;
+ appoints Greene to command Southern army, 295;
+ sends Knox to confer with state governors, 296;
+ secures temporary relief for army, 296;
+ sees the real defect is in weak government, 296;
+ urges adoption of Articles of Confederation, 297;
+ works for improvements in executive, 298,299;
+ still keeps a Southern movement in mind, 301;
+ unable to do anything through lack of naval power, 303;
+ rebukes Lund Washington for entertaining British at Mt. Vernon, 303;
+ still unable to fight, 304;
+ tries to frighten Clinton into remaining in New York, 305;
+ succeeds with aid of Rochambeau, 306;
+ explains his plan to French and to Congress, 306;
+ learns of De Grasse's approach, prepares to move South, 306;
+ writes to De Grasse to meet him in Chesapeake, 308;
+ fears a premature peace, 308;
+ pecuniary difficulties, 309;
+ absolute need of command of sea, 310;
+ persuades De Barras to join De Grasse, 311;
+ starts on march for Chesapeake, 311;
+ hampered by lack of supplies, 312;
+ and by threat of Congress to reduce army, 313;
+ passes through Mt. Vernon, 314;
+ succeeds in persuading De Grasse not to abandon him, 315;
+ besieges Cornwallis, 315;
+ sees capture of redoubts, 316;
+ receives surrender of Cornwallis, 317;
+ admirable strategy and management of campaign, 318;
+ his personal influence the cause of success, 318;
+ especially his use of the fleet, 319;
+ his management of Cornwallis through Lafayette, 319;
+ his boldness in transferring army away from New York, 320;
+ does not lose his head over victory, 321;
+ urges De Grasse to repeat success against Charleston, 322;
+ returns north, 322;
+ saddened by death of Custis, 322;
+ continues to urge Congress to action, 323;
+ writes letters to the States, 323;
+ does not expect English surrender, 324;
+ urges renewed vigor, 324;
+ points out that war actually continues, 325;
+ urges not to give up army until peace is actually secured, 325;
+ failure of his appeals, 326;
+ reduced to inactivity, 326;
+ angered at murder of Huddy, 327;
+ threatens Carleton with retaliation, 328;
+ releases Asgill at request of Vergennes and order of Congress,
+ 329, 330;
+ disclaims credit, 330;
+ justification of his behavior, 330;
+ his tenderness toward the soldiers, 331;
+ jealousy of Congress toward him, 332;
+ warns Congress of danger of further neglect of army, 333, 334;
+ takes control of mutinous movement, 335;
+ his address to the soldiers, 336;
+ its effect, 336;
+ movement among soldiers to make him dictator, 337;
+ replies to revolutionary proposals, 337;
+ reality of the danger, 339;
+ causes for his behaviour, 340, 341;
+ a friend of strong government, but devoid of personal ambition, 342;
+ chafes under delay to disband army, 343;
+ tries to secure Western posts, 343;
+ makes a journey through New York, 343;
+ gives Congress excellent but futile advice, 344;
+ issues circular letter to governors, 344;
+ and farewell address to army, 345;
+ enters New York after departure of British, 345;
+ his farewell to his officers, 345;
+ adjusts his accounts, 346;
+ appears before Congress, 347;
+ French account of his action, 347;
+ makes speech resigning commission, 348, 349.
+
+ _In Retirement_.
+ Returns to Mt. Vernon, ii. I;
+ tries to resume old life, 2;
+ gives up hunting, 2;
+ pursued by lion-hunters and artists, 3;
+ overwhelmed with correspondence, 3;
+ receives letters from Europe, 4;
+ from cranks, 4;
+ from officers, 4;
+ his share in Society of Cincinnati, 4;
+ manages his estate, 5;
+ visits Western lands, 5;
+ family cares, 5, 6;
+ continues to have interest in public affairs, 6;
+ advises Congress regarding peace establishment, 6;
+ urges acquisition of Western posts, 7;
+ his broad national views, 7;
+ alone in realizing future greatness of country, 7, 8;
+ appreciates importance of the West, 8;
+ urges development of inland navigation, 9;
+ asks Jefferson's aid, 9, 10;
+ lays canal scheme before Virginia legislature, 10;
+ his arguments, 10;
+ troubled by offer of stock, 11;
+ uses it to endow two schools, 12;
+ significance of his scheme, 12, 13;
+ his political purposes in binding West to East, 13;
+ willing to leave Mississippi closed for this purpose, 14, 15, 16;
+ feels need of firmer union during Revolution, 17;
+ his arguments, 18, 19;
+ his influence starts movement for reform, 20;
+ continues to urge it during retirement, 21;
+ foresees disasters of confederation, 21;
+ urges impost scheme, 22;
+ condemns action of States, 22, 23, 25;
+ favours commercial agreement between Maryland and Virginia, 23;
+ stung by contempt of foreign powers, 24;
+ his arguments for a national government, 24;
+ points out designs of England, 25;
+ works against paper money craze in States, 26;
+ his opinion of Shays's rebellion, 26;
+ his position contrasted with Jefferson's, 27;
+ influence of his letters, 28, 29;
+ shrinks from participating in Federal convention, 29;
+ elected unanimously, 30;
+ refuses to go to a feeble convention, 30, 31;
+ finally makes up his mind, 31.
+
+ _In the Federal Convention_.
+ Speech attributed to Washington by Morris on duties of delegates,
+ 31, 32;
+ chosen to preside, 33;
+ takes no part in debate, 34;
+ his influence in convention, 34, 35;
+ despairs of success, 35;
+ signs the Constitution, 36;
+ words attributed to him, 36;
+ silent as to his thoughts, 36, 37;
+ sees clearly danger of failure to ratify, 37;
+ tries at first to act indifferently, 38;
+ begins to work for ratification, 38;
+ writes letters to various people, 38, 39;
+ circulates copies of "Federalist," 40;
+ saves ratification in Virginia, 40;
+ urges election of Federalists to Congress, 41;
+ receives general request to accept presidency, 41;
+ his objections, 41, 42;
+ dreads failure and responsibility, 42;
+ elected, 42;
+ his journey to New York, 42-46;
+ speech at Alexandria, 43;
+ popular reception at all points, 44, 45;
+ his feelings, 46;
+ his inauguration, 46.
+
+ _President_.
+ His speech to Congress, 48;
+ urges no specific policy, 48, 49;
+ his solemn feelings, 49;
+ his sober view of necessities of situation, 50;
+ question of his title, 52;
+ arranges to communicate with Senate by writing, 52, 53;
+ discusses social etiquette, 53;
+ takes middle ground, 54;
+ wisdom of his action, 55;
+ criticisms by Democrats, 55, 56;
+ accused of monarchical leanings, 56, 57;
+ familiarizes himself with work already accomplished under
+ Confederation, 58;
+ his business habits, 58;
+ refuses special privileges to French minister, 59, 60;
+ skill of his reply, 60, 61;
+ solicited for office, 61;
+ his views on appointment, 62;
+ favors friends of Constitution and old soldiers, 62;
+ success of his appointments, 63;
+ selects a cabinet, 64;
+ his regard for Knox 65;
+ for Morris, 66;
+ his skill in choosing, 66;
+ his appreciation of Hamilton, 67;
+ his grounds for choosing Jefferson, 68;
+ his contrast with Jefferson, 69;
+ his choice a mistake in policy, 70;
+ his partisan characteristics, 70, 71;
+ excludes anti-Federalists, 71;
+ nominates justices of Supreme Court, 72;
+ their party character, 73;
+ illness, 73;
+ visits the Eastern States, 73;
+ his reasons, 74;
+ stirs popular enthusiasm, 74;
+ snubbed by Hancock in Massachusetts, 75;
+ accepts Hancock's apology, 75;
+ importance of his action, 76;
+ success of journey, 76;
+ opens Congress, 78, 79;
+ his speech and its recommendations, 81;
+ how far carried out, 81-83;
+ national character of the speech, 83;
+ his fitness to deal with Indians, 87;
+ his policy, 88;
+ appoints commission to treat with Creeks, 90;
+ ascribes its failure to Spanish intrigue, 90;
+ succeeds by a personal interview in making treaty, 91;
+ wisdom of his policy, 92;
+ orders an expedition against Western Indians, 93;
+ angered at its failure, 94;
+ and at conduct of frontiersmen, 94;
+ prepares St. Clair's expedition, 95;
+ warns against ambush, 95;
+ hopes for decisive results, 97;
+ learns of St. Clair's defeat, 97;
+ his self-control, 97;
+ his outburst of anger against St. Clair, 97, 98;
+ masters his feelings, 98;
+ treats St. Clair kindly, 99;
+ determines on a second campaign, 100;
+ selects Wayne and other officers, 100;
+ tries to secure peace with tribes, 101;
+ efforts prevented by English influence, 101, 102;
+ and in South by conduct of Georgia, 103;
+ general results of his Indian policy, 104;
+ popular misunderstandings and criticism, 104, 105;
+ favors assumption of state debts by the government, 107, 108;
+ satisfied with bargain between Hamilton and Jefferson, 108;
+ his respectful attitude toward Constitution, 109;
+ asks opinions of cabinet on constitutionality of bank, 110;
+ signs bill creating it, 110;
+ reasons for his decision, 111;
+ supports Hamilton's financial policy, 112;
+ supports Hamilton's views on protection, 115, 116;
+ appreciates evil economic condition of Virginia, 116, 117;
+ sees necessity for self-sufficient industries in war time, 117;
+ urges protection, 118, 119, 120;
+ his purpose to build up national feeling, 121;
+ approves national excise tax, 122, 123;
+ does not realize unpopularity of method, 123;
+ ready to modify but insists on obedience, 124, 125;
+ issues proclamation against rioters, 125;
+ since Pennsylvania frontier continues rebellious, issues second
+ proclamation threatening to use force, 127;
+ calls out the militia, 127;
+ his advice to leaders and troops, 128;
+ importance of Washington's firmness, 129;
+ his good judgment and patience, 130;
+ decides success of the central authority, 130;
+ early advocacy of separation of United States from European politics,
+ 133;
+ studies situation, 134, 135;
+ sees importance of binding West with Eastern States, 135;
+ sees necessity of good relations with England, 137;
+ authorizes Morris to sound England as to exchange of ministers and a
+ commercial treaty, 137;
+ not disturbed by British bad manners, 138;
+ succeeds in establishing diplomatic relations, 138;
+ early foresees danger of excess in French Revolution, 139, 140;
+ states a policy of strict neutrality, 140, 142, 143;
+ difficulties of his situation, 142;
+ objects to action of National Assembly on tobacco and oil, 144;
+ denies reported request by United States that England mediate with
+ Indians, 145;
+ announces neutrality in case of a European war, 146;
+ instructs cabinet to prepare a neutrality proclamation, 147;
+ importance of this step not understood at time, 148, 149;
+ foresees coming difficulties, 149, 150;
+ acts cautiously toward _emigres_, 151;
+ contrast with Genet, 152;
+ greets him coldly, 152;
+ orders steps taken to prevent violations of neutrality, 153, 154;
+ retires to Mt. Vernon for rest, 154;
+ on returning finds Jefferson has allowed Little Sarah to escape, 156;
+ writes a sharp note to Jefferson, 156;
+ anger at escape, 157;
+ takes matters out of Jefferson's hands, 157;
+ determines on asking recall of Genet, 158;
+ revokes exequatur of Duplaine, French consul, 159;
+ insulted by Genet, 159, 160;
+ refuses to deny Jay's card, 160;
+ upheld by popular feeling, 160;
+ his annoyance at the episode, 160;
+ obliged to teach American people self-respect, 162, 163;
+ deals with troubles incited by Genet in the West, 162, 163;
+ sympathizes with frontiersmen, 163;
+ comprehends value of Mississippi, 164, 165;
+ sends a commission to Madrid to negotiate about free navigation, 166;
+ later sends Thomas Pinckney, 166;
+ despairs of success, 166;
+ apparent conflict between French treaties and neutrality, 169, 170;
+ value of Washington's policy to England, 171;
+ in spite of England's attitude, intends to keep peace, 177;
+ wishes to send Hamilton as envoy, 177;
+ after his refusal appoints Jay, 177;
+ fears that England intends war, 178;
+ determines to be prepared, 178;
+ urges upon Jay the absolute necessity of England's giving up Western
+ posts, 179;
+ dissatisfied with Jay treaty but willing to sign it, 184;
+ in doubt as to meaning of conditional ratification, 184;
+ protests against English "provision order" and refuses signature, 185;
+ meets uproar against treaty alone, 188;
+ determines to sign, 189;
+ answers resolutions of Boston town meeting, 190;
+ refuses to abandon his judgment to popular outcry, 190;
+ distinguishes temporary from permanent feeling, 191;
+ fears effect of excitement upon French government, 192;
+ his view of dangers of situation, 193, 194;
+ recalled to Philadelphia by cabinet, 195;
+ receives intercepted correspondence of Fauchet, 195, 196;
+ his course of action already determined, 197, 198;
+ not influenced by the Fauchet letter, 198;
+ evidence of this, 199, 200;
+ reasons for ratifying before showing letter to Randolph, 199, 200;
+ signs treaty, 201;
+ evidence that he did not sacrifice Randolph, 201, 202;
+ fairness of his action, 203;
+ refuses to reply to Randolph's attack, 204;
+ reasons for signing treaty, 205;
+ justified in course of time, 206;
+ refuses on constitutional grounds the call of representatives for
+ documents, 208;
+ insists on independence of treaty-making by executive and Senate, 209;
+ overcomes hostile majority in House, 210;
+ wishes Madison to succeed Morris at Paris, 211;
+ appoints Monroe, 216;
+ his mistake in not appointing a political supporter, 212;
+ disgusted at Monroe's behavior, 213, 214;
+ recalls Monroe and appoints C.C. Pinckney, 214;
+ angered at French policy, 214;
+ his contempt for Monroe's self-justification, 215, 216;
+ review of foreign policy, 216-219;
+ his guiding principle national independence, 216;
+ and abstention from European politics, 217;
+ desires peace and time for growth, 217, 218;
+ wishes development of the West, 218, 219;
+ wisdom of his policy, 219;
+ considers parties dangerous, 220;
+ but chooses cabinet from Federalists, 220;
+ prepared to undergo criticism, 221;
+ willingness to bear it, 221;
+ desires to learn public feeling, by travels, 221, 222;
+ feels that body of people will support national government, 222;
+ sees and deplores sectional feelings in the South, 222, 223;
+ objects to utterances of newspapers, 223;
+ attacked by "National Gazette," 227;
+ receives attacks on Hamilton from Jefferson and his friends, 228, 229;
+ sends charges to Hamilton, 229;
+ made anxious by signs of party division, 229;
+ urges both Hamilton and Jefferson to cease quarrel, 230, 231;
+ dreads an open division in cabinet, 232;
+ desirous to rule without party, 233;
+ accomplishes feat of keeping both secretaries in cabinet, 233;
+ keeps confidence in Hamilton, 234;
+ urged by all parties to accept presidency again, 235;
+ willing to be reelected, 235;
+ pleased at unanimous vote, 235;
+ his early immunity from attacks, 237;
+ later attacked by Freneau and Bache, 238;
+ regards opposition as dangerous to country, 239;
+ asserts his intention to disregard them, 240;
+ his success in Genet affair, 241;
+ disgusted at "democratic" societies, 242;
+ thinks they fomented Whiskey Rebellion, 242;
+ denounces them to Congress, 243;
+ effect of his remarks, 244;
+ accused of tyranny after Jay treaty, 244;
+ of embezzlement, 245;
+ of aristocracy, 245;
+ realizes that he must compose cabinet of sympathizers, 246;
+ reconstructs it, 246;
+ states determination to govern by party, 247;
+ slighted by House, 247;
+ refuses a third term, 248;
+ publishes Farewell Address, 248;
+ his justification for so doing, 248;
+ his wise advice, 249;
+ address Attacked by Democrats, 250, 251;
+ assailed in Congress by Giles, 251;
+ resents charge of being a British sympathizer, 252;
+ his scrupulously fair conduct toward France, 253;
+ his resentment at English policy, 254;
+ his retirement celebrated by the opposition, 255;
+ remarks of the "Aurora," 256;
+ forged letters of British circulated, 257;
+ he repudiates them, 257;
+ his view of opposition, 259.
+
+ _In Retirement_.
+ Regards Adams's administration as continuation of his own, 259;
+ understands Jefferson's attitude, 259;
+ wishes generals of provisional army to be Federalist, 260;
+ doubts fidelity of opposition as soldiers, 260;
+ dreads their poisoning mind of army, 261;
+ his condemnation of Democrats, 261, 262;
+ snubs Dr. Logan for assuming an unofficial mission to France, 263-265;
+ alarmed at Virginia and Kentucky resolutions, 266;
+ urges Henry to oppose Virginia resolutions, 267;
+ condemns the French party as unpatriotic, 267;
+ refuses request to stand again for presidency, 269;
+ comments on partisanship of Democrats, 269;
+ believes that he would be no better candidate than any other
+ Federalist, 270, 271;
+ error of statement that Washington was not a party man, 271, 272;
+ slow to relinquish non-partisan position, 272;
+ not the man to shrink from declaring his position, 273;
+ becomes a member of Federalist party, 273, 274;
+ eager for end of term of office, 275;
+ his farewell dinner, 275;
+ at Adams's inauguration, 276;
+ popular enthusiasm at Philadelphia, 276;
+ at Baltimore, 277;
+ returns to Mt. Vernon, 279;
+ describes his farm life, 278, 279;
+ burdened by necessities of hospitality, 280;
+ account of his meeting with Bernard, 281-283;
+ continued interest in politics, 284;
+ accepts command of provisional army, 285;
+ selects Hamilton, Pinckney, and Knox as major-generals, 286;
+ surprised at Adams's objection to Hamilton, 286;
+ rebukes Adams for altering order of rank of generals, 286, 287;
+ not influenced by intrigue, 287;
+ annoyed by Adams's conduct, 288;
+ tries to soothe Knox's irritation, 289;
+ fails to pacify him, 289;
+ carries out organization of army, 290;
+ does not expect actual war, 291;
+ disapproves of Gerry's conduct, 292;
+ disapproves of Adams's nomination of Vans Murray, 292;
+ his dread of French Revolution, 295;
+ distrusts Adams's attempts at peace, 296;
+ approves Alien and Sedition laws, 296;
+ his defense of them, 297;
+ distressed by dissensions among Federalists, 298;
+ predicts their defeat, 298;
+ his sudden illness, 299-302;
+ death, 303.
+
+ _Character_,
+ misunderstood, 304;
+ extravagantly praised, 304;
+ disliked on account of being called faultless, 305;
+ bitterly attacked in lifetime, 306;
+ sneered at by Jefferson, 306;
+ by Pickering, 307;
+ called an Englishman, not an American, 307, 308;
+ difference of his type from that of Lincoln, 310;
+ none the less American, 311, 312;
+ compared with Hampden, 312;
+ his manners those of the times elsewhere in America, 314;
+ aristocratic, but of a non-English type, 314-316;
+ less affected by Southern limitations than his neighbors, 316;
+ early dislike of New England changed to respect, 316, 317;
+ friendly with people of humble origin, 317, 318;
+ never an enemy of democracy, 318;
+ but opposes French excesses, 318;
+ his self-directed and American training, 319, 320;
+ early conception of a nation, 321;
+ works toward national government during Revolution, 321;
+ his interest in Western expansion, 321, 322;
+ national character of his Indian policy, 322;
+ of his desire to secure free Mississippi navigation, 322;
+ of his opposition to war as a danger to Union, 323;
+ his anger at accusation of foreign subservience, 323;
+ continually asserts necessity for independent American policy,
+ 324, 325;
+ opposes foreign educational influences, 325, 326;
+ favors foundation of a national university, 326;
+ breadth and strength of his national feeling, 327;
+ absence of boastfulness about country, 328;
+ faith in it, 328;
+ charge that he was merely a figure-head, 329;
+ its injustice, 330;
+ charged with commonplaceness of intellect, 330;
+ incident of the deathbed explained, 330, 331;
+ falsity of the charge, 331;
+ inability of mere moral qualities to achieve what he did, 331;
+ charged with dullness and coldness, 332;
+ his seriousness, 333;
+ responsibility from early youth, 333;
+ his habits of keen observation, 333;
+ power of judging men, 334;
+ ability to use them for what they were worth, 335;
+ anecdote of advice to Hamilton and Meade, 335;
+ deceived only by Arnold, 336;
+ imperfect education, 337;
+ continual efforts to improve it, 337, 338;
+ modest regarding his literary ability, 339, 340;
+ interested in education, 339;
+ character of his writing, 340;
+ tastes in reading, 341;
+ modest but effective in conversation, 342;
+ his manner and interest described by Bernard, 343-347;
+ attractiveness of the picture, 347, 348;
+ his pleasure in society, 348;
+ power of paying compliments, letter to Mrs. Stockton, 349;
+ to Charles Thompson, 350;
+ to De Chastellux, 351;
+ his warmth of heart, 352;
+ extreme exactness in pecuniary matters, 352;
+ illustrative anecdotes, 353,354;
+ favorable opinion of teller of anecdotes, 356;
+ stern towards dishonesty or cowardice, 357;
+ treatment of Andre and Asgill, 357, 358;
+ sensitive to human suffering, 357, 358;
+ kind and courteous to poor, 359;
+ conversation with Cleaveland, 359;
+ sense of dignity in public office, 360;
+ hospitality at Mt. Vernon, 360, 361;
+ his intimate friendships, 361,362;
+ relations with Hamilton, Knox, Mason, Henry Lee, Craik, 362, 363;
+ the officers of the army, 363;
+ Trumbull, Robert and Gouverneur Morris, 363;
+ regard for and courtesy toward Franklin, 364;
+ love for Lafayette, 365;
+ care for his family, 366;
+ lasting regard for Fairfaxes, 366, 367;
+ kindness to Taft family, 367, 368;
+ destroys correspondence with his wife, 368;
+ their devoted relationship, 368;
+ care for his step-children and relatives, 369, 370;
+ charged with lack of humor, 371;
+ but never made himself ridiculous, 372;
+ not joyous in temperament, 372;
+ but had keen pleasure in sport, 373;
+ enjoyed a joke, even during Revolution, 374;
+ appreciates wit, 375;
+ writes a humorous letter, 376-378;
+ not devoid of worldly wisdom, 378, 379;
+ enjoys cards, dancing, the theatre, 380;
+ loves horses, 380;
+ thorough in small affairs as well as great, 381;
+ controversy over site of church, 381;
+ his careful domestic economy, 382;
+ love of method, 383;
+ of excellence in dress and furniture, 383, 384;
+ gives dignity to American cause, 385;
+ his personal appearance, 385;
+ statements of Houdon, 386;
+ of Ackerson, 386, 387;
+ his tremendous muscular strength, 388;
+ great personal impressiveness, 389, 390;
+ lacking in imagination, 391;
+ strong passions, 391;
+ fierce temper, 392;
+ anecdotes of outbreaks, 392;
+ his absence of self-love, 393;
+ confident in judgment of posterity, 393;
+ religious faith, 394;
+ summary and conclusion, 394, 395.
+
+ _Characteristics of_.
+ General view, ii. 304-395;
+ general admiration for, i. 1-7;
+ myths about, i. 9-12, ii. 307 ff.;
+ comparisons with Jefferson, ii. 69;
+ with Lincoln, ii. 310-312;
+ with Hampden, ii. 312, 313;
+ absence of self-seeking, i. 341;
+ affectionateness, i. 111, 285,331,345, ii. 332, 362-371;
+ agreeableness, ii. 344-347, 377;
+ Americanism, ii. 307-328;
+ aristocratic habits, ii. 314, 316;
+ business ability, i. 105, 109, ii. 5, 352, 382;
+ coldness on occasion, i. 223, 224, 263, ii. 318;
+ courage, i. 77, 78, 86, 127, 168, 292;
+ dignity, i. 81,161, ii. 52-57, 76;
+ hospitality, ii. 360;
+ impressiveness, i. 56, 83, 130, 138, 319, ii. 385;
+ indomitableness, i. 177, 181, 227;
+ judgments of men, i. 295, ii. 64, 86, 334, 335;
+ justice and sternness, i. 287, 330, ii. 203, 352-358, 389;
+ kindliness, ii. 349-356, 359;
+ lack of education, i. 62, ii. 337;
+ love of reading, i. 62, ii. 341, 342;
+ love of sport, i. 56, 98, 113-116, 118, ii. 380;
+ manners, ii. 282-283, 314;
+ military ability, i. 154, 166, 174, 183, 197, 204, 207, 239, 247,
+ 265, 267, 305-320, ii. 331;
+ modesty, i. 102, 134;
+ not a figure-head, ii. 329, 330;
+ not a prig, i. 10-12, 41-47;
+ not cold and inhuman, ii. 332, 342;
+ not dull or commonplace, ii. 330, 332;
+ not superhuman and distant, i. 9, 10, 12, ii. 304, 305;
+ open-mindedness, ii. 317;
+ passionateness, i. 58, 73, 90;
+ personal appearance, i. 57, 136, 137, ii. 282, 343, 385-389;
+ religious views, i. 321, ii. 393;
+ romantic traits, i. 95-97;
+ sense of humor, ii. 371-377;
+ silence regarding self, i. 14, 69, 70, 116, 129, 285; ii. 37, 336;
+ simplicity, i. 59, 69, 348; ii. 50, 340;
+ sobriety, i. 49, 52, 134; ii. 43, 45, 333, 373;
+ tact, i. 162, 243, 244-246;
+ temper, i. 73, 92, 110, 168, 236, 237, 260; ii. 98, 392;
+ thoroughness, i. 112, 323, 341, ii. 381.
+
+ _Political Opinions_.
+ On Alien and Sedition Acts, ii. 196;
+ American nationality, i. 191, 250, 251, 255, 262, 279, ii. 7, 61,
+ 133, 145, 324, 325, 327, 328;
+ Articles of Confederation, i. 297, ii. 17, 24;
+ bank, ii. 110, 111;
+ colonial rights, i. 120, 124-126, 130;
+ Constitution, i. 38-41;
+ democracy, ii. 317-319;
+ Democratic party, ii. 214, 239, 240, 258, 261, 267, 268;
+ disunion, ii. 22;
+ duties of the executive, ii. 190;
+ education, ii. 81, 326, 330;
+ Federalist party, ii. 71, 246, 247, 259, 260, 261, 269-274, 298;
+ finance, ii. 107, 108, 112, 122;
+ foreign relations, ii. 25, 134, 142, 145, 147, 179, 217-219, 323;
+ French Revolution, ii. 139, 140, 295, 318;
+ independence of colonies, i. 131, 159, 160;
+ Indian policy, ii. 82, 87, 88, 91, 92, 104, 105;
+ Jay treaty, ii. 184-205;
+ judiciary, i. 150;
+ nominations to office, ii. 62;
+ party, ii. 70, 222, 233, 249;
+ protection, ii. 116-122;
+ slavery, i. 106-108;
+ Stamp Act, i. 119;
+ strong government, i. 298, ii. 18, 24, 129, 130;
+ treaty power, ii. 190, 207-210;
+ Virginia and Kentucky Resolutions, ii. 266, 267;
+ Western expansion, ii. 6, 8-16, 135, 163-165, 218, 322.
+
+ Washington, George Steptoe,
+ his sons educated by Washington, ii. 370.
+
+ Washington, John, brother of George,
+ letter of Washington, to, i. 132.
+
+ Washington, Lawrence, brother of George Washington,
+ educated in England, i. 54;
+ has military career, 54;
+ returns to Virginia and builds Mt. Vernon, 54;
+ marries into Fairfax family, 54, 55;
+ goes to West Indies for his health, 62;
+ dies, leaving George guardian of his daughter, 64;
+ chief manager of Ohio Company, 65;
+ gives George military education, 65.
+
+ Washington, Lund,
+ letter of Washington to, i. 152;
+ rebuked by Washington for entertaining British, ii. 303.
+
+ Washington, Martha, widow of Daniel P. Custis,
+ meets Washington, i. 101;
+ courtship of, and marriage, 101, 102;
+ hunts with her husband, 114;
+ joins him at Boston, 151;
+ holds levees as wife of President, ii. 54;
+ during his last illness, 300;
+ her correspondence destroyed, 368;
+ her relations with her husband, 368, 369.
+
+ Washington, Mary,
+ married to Augustine Washington, i. 39;
+ mother of George Washington, 39;
+ limited education but strong character, 40, 41;
+ wishes George to earn a living, 49;
+ opposes his going to sea, 49;
+ letters to, 88;
+ visited by her son, ii. 5.
+
+ Waters, Henry E.,
+ establishes Washington pedigree, i. 32.
+
+ Wayne, Anthony,
+ defeated after Brandywine, i. 198;
+ his opinion of Germantown, 199;
+ at Monmouth urges Washington to come, 235;
+ ready to attack Stony Point, 268;
+ his successful exploit, 269;
+ joins Lafayette in Virginia, 307;
+ appointed to command against Indians, ii. 100;
+ his character, 100;
+ organizes his force, 101;
+ his march, 102;
+ defeats the Indians, 103.
+
+ Weems, Mason L.,
+ influence of his life of Washington on popular opinion, i. 10;
+ originates idea of his priggishness, 11;
+ his character, 41, 43;
+ character of his book, 42;
+ his mythical "rectorate" of Mt. Vernon, 43, 44;
+ invents anecdotes of Washington's childhood, 44;
+ folly of cherry-tree and other stories, 46;
+ their evil influence, 47.
+
+ West, the,
+ its importance realized by Washington, ii. 7-16;
+ his influence counteracted by inertia of Congress, 8;
+ forwards inland navigation, 9;
+ desires to bind East to West, 9-11, 14;
+ formation of companies, 11-13;
+ on Mississippi navigation, 14-16, 164;
+ projects of Genet in, 162;
+ its attitude understood by Washington, 163, 164;
+ Washington wishes peace in order to develop it, 218, 219, 321.
+
+ "Whiskey Rebellion,"
+ passage of excise law, ii. 123;
+ outbreaks of violence in Pennsylvania and North Carolina, 124;
+ proclamation issued warning rioters to desist, 125;
+ renewed outbreaks in Pennsylvania, 125, 126;
+ the militia called out, 127;
+ suppression of the insurrection, 128;
+ real danger of movement, 129;
+ its suppression emphasizes national authority, 129, 130;
+ supposed by Washington to have been stirred up by Democratic clubs,
+ 242.
+
+ White Plains,
+ battle at, i. 173.
+
+ Wilkinson, James,
+ brings Gates's message to Washington at Trenton, i. 180;
+ brings news of Saratoga to Congress, 220;
+ nettled at Sherman's sarcasm, discloses Conway cabal, 220;
+ quarrels with Gates, 223;
+ resigns from board of war, 223, 226;
+ leads expedition against Indians, ii. 95.
+
+ Willett, Colonel,
+ commissioner to Creeks, his success, ii. 91.
+
+ William and Mary College,
+ Washington Chancellor of, ii. 339.
+
+ Williams,
+ Washington's teacher, i. 48, 51.
+
+ Willis, Lewis,
+ story of Washington's school days, i. 95.
+
+ Wilson, James,
+ appointed to Supreme Court, ii. 72.
+
+ Wilson, James, "of England,"
+ hunts with Washington, i. 115.
+
+ Wolcott, Oliver,
+ receives Fauchet letter, ii. 195;
+ succeeds Hamilton as Secretary of Treasury, 246.
+
+ Wooster, Mrs.,
+ letter of Washington to, ii. 61.
+
+
+ YORKTOWN,
+ siege of, i. 315-318.
+
+ "Young Man's Companion,"
+ used by George Washington, origin of his rules of conduct, i. 52.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's George Washington, Vol. II, by Henry Cabot Lodge
+
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