summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
-rw-r--r--.gitattributes3
-rw-r--r--37656-8.txt8577
-rw-r--r--37656-8.zipbin0 -> 192265 bytes
-rw-r--r--37656-h.zipbin0 -> 205684 bytes
-rw-r--r--37656-h/37656-h.htm12152
-rw-r--r--37656.txt8577
-rw-r--r--37656.zipbin0 -> 192217 bytes
-rw-r--r--LICENSE.txt11
-rw-r--r--README.md2
9 files changed, 29322 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6833f05
--- /dev/null
+++ b/.gitattributes
@@ -0,0 +1,3 @@
+* text=auto
+*.txt text
+*.md text
diff --git a/37656-8.txt b/37656-8.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..c607f74
--- /dev/null
+++ b/37656-8.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,8577 @@
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Thomas Hart Benton, by Theodore Roosevelt
+
+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: Thomas Hart Benton
+
+Author: Theodore Roosevelt
+
+Release Date: October 7, 2011 [EBook #37656]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THOMAS HART BENTON ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Julia Neufeld, Curtis Weyant and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
+file was produced from images generously made available
+by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
+
+
+
+
+
+Transcriber's Note: Passages in italics are indicated by _underscores_.
+Small caps have been replaced by ALL CAPS.
+
+ American Statesmen
+
+ EDITED BY
+
+ JOHN T. MORSE, JR.
+
+
+
+
+ American Statesmen
+
+ THOMAS HART BENTON
+
+ BY
+
+ THEODORE ROOSEVELT
+
+
+
+ BOSTON AND NEW YORK
+ HOUGHTON, MIFFLIN AND COMPANY
+ The Riverside Press, Cambridge
+ 1890
+
+
+
+ Copyright, 1886,
+ BY THEODORE ROOSEVELT.
+
+ _All rights reserved._
+
+
+ FIFTH EDITION.
+
+ _The Riverside Press, Cambridge, Mass., U. S. A._
+ Electrotyped and Printed by H. O. Houghton & Company.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS.
+
+
+ CHAPTER I.
+ PAGE
+
+ THE YOUNG WEST 1
+
+ CHAPTER II.
+
+ BENTON'S EARLY LIFE AND ENTRY INTO THE SENATE 23
+
+ CHAPTER III.
+
+ EARLY YEARS IN THE SENATE 47
+
+ CHAPTER IV.
+
+ THE ELECTION OF JACKSON, AND THE SPOILS SYSTEM 69
+
+ CHAPTER V.
+
+ THE STRUGGLE WITH THE NULLIFIERS 88
+
+ CHAPTER VI.
+
+ JACKSON AND BENTON MAKE WAR ON THE BANK 114
+
+ CHAPTER VII.
+
+ THE DISTRIBUTION OF THE SURPLUS 143
+
+ CHAPTER VIII.
+
+ THE SLAVE QUESTION APPEARS IN POLITICS 157
+
+ CHAPTER IX.
+
+ THE CHILDREN'S TEETH ARE SET ON EDGE 184
+
+ CHAPTER X.
+
+ LAST DAYS OF THE JACKSONIAN DEMOCRACY 209
+
+ CHAPTER XI.
+
+ THE PRESIDENT WITHOUT A PARTY 237
+
+ CHAPTER XII.
+
+ BOUNDARY TROUBLES WITH ENGLAND 260
+
+ CHAPTER XIII.
+
+ THE ABOLITIONISTS DANCE TO THE SLAVE BARONS' PIPING 290
+
+ CHAPTER XIV.
+
+ SLAVERY IN THE NEW TERRITORIES 317
+
+ CHAPTER XV.
+
+ THE LOSING FIGHT 341
+
+
+
+
+THOMAS HART BENTON.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+THE YOUNG WEST.
+
+
+Even before the end of the Revolutionary War the movement had begun
+which was to change in form a straggling chain of sea-board republics
+into a mighty continental nation, the great bulk of whose people would
+live to the westward of the Appalachian Mountains. The hardy and
+restless backwoodsmen, dwelling along the eastern slopes of the
+Alleghanies, were already crossing the mountain-crests and hewing their
+way into the vast, sombre forests of the Mississippi basin; and for the
+first time English-speaking communities were growing up along waters
+whose outlet was into the Gulf of Mexico and not into the Atlantic
+Ocean. Among these communities Kentucky and Tennessee were the earliest
+to form themselves into states; and around them, as a nucleus, other
+states of the woodland and the prairie were rapidly developed, until, by
+the close of the second decade in the present century, the region
+between the Great Lakes and the Gulf was almost solidly filled in, and
+finally, in 1820, by the admission of Missouri, the Union held within
+its borders a political body whose whole territory lay to the west of
+the Mississippi.
+
+All the men who founded these states were of much the same type; they
+were rough frontiersmen, of strong will and adventurous temper,
+accustomed to the hard, barren, and yet strangely fascinating life of
+those who dwell as pioneers in the wilderness. Moreover, they were
+nearly all of the same blood. The people of New York and New England
+were as yet filling out their own territory; it was not till many years
+afterwards that their stock became the predominant one in the
+northwestern country. Most of the men who founded the new states north
+of the Ohio came originally from the old states south of the Potomac;
+Virginia and North Carolina were the first of the original thirteen to
+thrust forth their children in masses, that they might shift for
+themselves in the then untrodden West.
+
+But though these early Western pioneers were for the most part of
+Southern stock, they were by no means of the same stamp as the men who
+then and thereafter formed the ruling caste in the old slave-holding
+states. They were the mountaineers, the men of the foot-hills and
+uplands, who lived in what were called the backwater counties. Many of
+them were themselves of northern origin. In striking contrast to the
+somewhat sluggish and peaceful elements going to make up the rest of its
+heterogeneous population, Pennsylvania also originally held within its
+boundaries many members of that most fiery and restless race, the
+Scotch-Irish. These naturally drew towards the wilder, western parts of
+the state, settling along the slopes of the numerous inland mountain
+ridges running parallel to the Atlantic coast; and from thence they
+drifted southward through the long valleys, until they met and mingled
+with their kinsfolk of Virginia and the Carolinas, when the movement
+again trended towards the West. In a generation or two, all, whether
+their forefathers were English, Scotch, Irish, or, as was often the
+case, German and Huguenot, were welded into one people; and in a very
+short time the stern and hard surroundings of their life had hammered
+this people into a peculiar and characteristically American type, which
+to this day remains almost unchanged. In their old haunts we still see
+the same tall, gaunt men, with strongly marked faces and saturnine,
+resolute eyes; men who may pass half their days in listless idleness,
+but who are also able to show on occasion the fiercest intensity of
+purpose and the most sustained energy of action. We see them, moreover,
+in many places, even across to the Pacific coast and down to the Rio
+Grande. For after thronging through the gaps and passes of the
+Appalachians, and penetrating the forest region to the outskirts of the
+treeless country beyond, the whilom mountaineers and woodsmen, the
+wielders of the axe and rifle, then streamed off far to the West and
+South and even to the Northwest, their lumbering, white-topped wagons
+being, even to the present moment, a familiar sight to those who travel
+over the prairies and the great plains; while it is their descendants
+who, in the saddle instead of afoot, and with rope and revolver instead
+of axe and rifle, now form the bulk of the reckless horsemen who spend
+their lives in guarding the wandering cattle herds that graze over the
+vast, arid plains of the "Far West."
+
+The method of settlement of these states of the Mississippi valley had
+nothing whatever in common with the way in which California and the
+Australian colonies were suddenly filled up by the promiscuous overflow
+of a civilized population, which had practically no fear of any
+resistance from the stunted and scanty native races. It was far more
+closely akin to the tribe movements of the Germanic peoples in time
+past; to that movement, for example, by which the Juttish and Low Dutch
+sea-thieves on the coast of Britain worked their way inland at the cost
+of the Cymric Celts. The early settlers of the territory lying
+immediately west of the Alleghanies were all of the same kind; they were
+in search of homes, not of riches, and their actions were planned
+accordingly, except in so far as they were influenced by mere restless
+love of adventure and excitement. Individuals and single families, of
+course, often started off by themselves; but for the most part the men
+moved in bands, with their wives and their children, their cattle and
+their few household goods; each settler being from the necessity of the
+case also a fighter, ready, and often forced, to do desperate battle in
+defense of himself and his family. Where such a band or little party
+settled, there would gradually grow up a village or small town; for
+instance, where those renowned pioneers and heroes of the backwoods,
+Boone and Harrod, first formed permanent settlements after they had
+moved into Kentucky, now stand the towns of Boonsboro and Harrodsburg.
+
+The country whither these settlers went was not one into which timid men
+would willingly venture, and the founders of the West were perforce men
+of stern stuff, who from the very beginning formed a most warlike race.
+It is impossible to understand aright the social and political life of
+the section, unless we keep prominently before our minds that it derived
+its distinguishing traits largely from the extremely militant character
+acquired by all the early settlers during the long drawn out warfare in
+which the first two generations were engaged. The land was already held
+by powerful Indian tribes and confederacies, who waged war after war, of
+the most ferocious and bloody character, against the men of the border,
+in the effort to avert their inevitable doom, or at least to stem for
+the time being the invasion of the swelling tide of white settlement. At
+the present time, when an Indian uprising is a matter chiefly of
+annoyance, and dangerous only to scattered, outlying settlers, it is
+difficult to realize the formidable nature of the savage Indian wars
+waged at the end of the last and the beginning of the present centuries.
+The red nations were then really redoubtable enemies, able to send into
+the field thousands of well-armed warriors, whose ferocious bravery and
+skill rendered them quite as formidable antagonists as trained European
+soldiers would have been. Warfare with them did not affect merely
+outlying farms or hamlets; it meant a complete stoppage of the white
+movement westward, and great and imminent danger even to the large
+communities already in existence; a state of things which would have to
+continue until the armies raised among the pioneers were able, in fair
+shock of battle, to shatter the strength of their red foes. The
+victories of Wayne and Harrison were conditions precedent to the opening
+of the Ohio valley; Kentucky was won by a hundred nameless and bloody
+fights, whose heroes, like Shelby and Sevier, afterwards rose to
+prominent rank in civil life; and it was only after a hard-fought
+campaign and slaughtering victories that the Tennesseeans were able to
+break the power of the great Creek confederacy, which was thrust in
+between them and what were at that time the French and Spanish lands
+lying to the south and southwest.
+
+The founders of our Western States were valiant warriors as well as
+hardy pioneers, and from the very first their fighting was not confined
+to uncivilized foes. It was they who at King's Mountain slew gallant
+Ferguson, and completely destroyed his little army; it was from their
+ranks that most of Morgan's men were recruited, when that grizzled old
+bush-fighter smote Tarleton so roughly at the battle of the Cowpens.
+These two blows crippled Cornwallis, and were among the chief causes of
+his final overthrow. At last, during the War of 1812, there was played
+out the final act in the military drama of which the West had been the
+stage during the lifetime of a generation. For this war had a twofold
+aspect: on the sea-board it was regarded as a contest for the rights of
+our sailors and as a revolt against Great Britain's domineering
+insolence; west of the mountains, on the other hand, it was simply a
+renewal on a large scale of the Indian struggles, all the red-skinned
+peoples joining together in a great and last effort to keep the lands
+which were being wrested from them; and there Great Britain's part was
+chiefly that of ally to the savages, helping them with her gold and with
+her well-drilled mercenary troops. The battle of the Thames is memorable
+rather because of the defeat and death of Tecumseh, than because of the
+flight of Proctor and the capture of his British regulars; and for the
+opening of the Southwest the ferocious fight at the Horseshoe Bend was
+almost as important as the far more famous conflict of New Orleans.
+
+The War of 1812 brought out conspicuously the solidarity of interest in
+the West. The people there were then all pretty much of the same blood;
+and they made common cause against outsiders in the military field
+exactly as afterwards they for some time acted together politically.
+Further eastward, on the Niagara frontier, the fighting was done by the
+troops of New York and New England, unassisted by the Southern States;
+and in turn the latter had to shift for themselves when Washington was
+burned and Baltimore menaced. It was far otherwise in the regions lying
+beyond the Appalachians. Throughout all the fighting in the Northwest,
+where Ohio was the state most menaced, the troops of Kentucky formed the
+bulk of the American army, and it was the charge of their mounted
+riflemen which at a blow won the battle of the Thames. Again, on that
+famous January morning, when it seemed as if the fair Creole city was
+already in Packenham's grasp, it was the wild soldiery of Tennessee who,
+lolling behind their mud breastworks, peered out through the lifting fog
+at the scarlet array of the English veterans, as the latter, fresh from
+their long and unbroken series of victories over the best troops of
+Europe, advanced, for the first time, to meet defeat.
+
+This solidarity of interest and feeling on the part of the
+trans-Appalachian communities is a factor often not taken into account
+in relating the political history of the early part of this century;
+most modern writers (who keep forgetting that the question of slavery
+was then not one tenth as absorbing as it afterwards became) apparently
+deeming that the line of demarkation between North and South was at
+that period, as it has since in reality become, as strongly defined west
+of the mountains as east of them. That such was not the case was due to
+several different causes. The first comers into Tennessee and Kentucky
+belonged to the class of so-called poor whites, who owned few or no
+slaves, and who were far less sectionally southern in their feelings
+than were the rich planters of the low, alluvial plains towards the
+coast of the Atlantic; and though a slave-owning population quickly
+followed the first pioneers, yet the latter had imprinted a stamp on the
+character of the two states which was never wholly effaced,--as witness
+the tens of thousands of soldiers which both, even the more southern of
+the two, furnished to the Union army in the Civil War.
+
+If this immigration made Kentucky and Tennessee, and afterwards
+Missouri, less distinctively Southern in character than the South
+Atlantic States, it at the same time, by furnishing the first and for
+some time the most numerous element in the population of the states
+north of the Ohio, made the latter less characteristically Northern than
+was the case with those lying east of them. Up to 1810 Indiana kept
+petitioning Congress to allow slavery within her borders; Illinois, in
+the early days, felt as hostile towards Massachusetts as did Missouri.
+Moreover, at first the Southern States west of the mountains greatly
+outweighed the Northern, both in numbers and importance.
+
+Thus several things came about. In the first place, all the communities
+across the Alleghanies originally felt themselves to be closely knit
+together by ties of blood, sentiment, and interest; they felt that they
+were, taking them altogether, Western as opposed to Eastern. In the next
+place, they were at first Southern rather than Northern in their
+feeling. But, in the third place, they were by no means so extremely
+Southern as were the Southern Atlantic States. This was the way in which
+they looked at themselves; and this was the way in which at that time
+others looked at them. In our day Kentucky is regarded politically as
+being simply an integral portion of the solid South; but the greatest of
+her sons, Clay, was known to his own generation, not as a Southern
+statesman, but as "Harry of the West." Of the two presidents, Harrison
+and Taylor, whom the Whigs elected, one lived in Ohio and one in
+Louisiana; but both were chosen simply as Western men, and, as a matter
+of fact, both were born in Virginia. Andrew Jackson's victory over Adams
+was in some slight sense a triumph of the South over the North, but it
+was far more a triumph of the West over the East. Webster's famous
+sneer at old Zachary Taylor was aimed at him as a "frontier colonel;" in
+other words, though Taylor had a large plantation in Louisiana, Webster,
+and many others besides, looked upon him as the champion of the rough
+democracy of the West rather than as the representative of the polished
+slave-holders of the South.
+
+Thus, during the first part of this century, the term "Western" was as
+applicable to the states lying south of the Ohio as to those lying north
+of it. Moreover, at first the Central, or, as they were more usually
+termed, the Border States, were more populous and influential than were
+those on either side of them, and so largely shaped the general tone of
+Western feeling. While the voters in these states, whether Whigs or
+Democrats, accepted as their leaders men like Clay in Kentucky, Benton
+in Missouri, and Andrew Jackson in Tennessee, it could be taken for
+granted that on the whole they felt for the South against the North, but
+much more for the West against the East, and most strongly of all for
+the Union as against any section whatsoever. Many influences came
+together to start and keep alive this feeling; but one, more potent than
+all the others combined, was working steadily, and with ever-increasing
+power, against it; and when slavery finally brought about a break
+between the Northern and Southern States of the West as complete as that
+in the East, then the Democrats of the stamp of Jackson and Benton
+disappeared as completely from public life as did the Whigs of the stamp
+of Clay.
+
+Benton's long political career can never be thoroughly understood unless
+it is kept in mind that he was primarily a Western and not a Southern
+statesman; and it owes its especial interest to the fact that during its
+continuance the West first rose to power, acting as a unit, and to the
+further fact that it was brought to a close by the same causes which
+soon afterwards broke up the West exactly as the East was already
+broken. Benton was not one of the few statesmen who have left the
+indelible marks of their own individuality upon our history; but he was,
+perhaps, the most typical representative of the statesmanship of the
+Middle West at the time when the latter gave the tone to the political
+thought of the entire Mississippi valley. The political school which he
+represented came to its fullest development in the so-called Border
+States of Kentucky, Tennessee, and Missouri, and swayed the destinies of
+the West so long as the states to the north as well as the states to the
+south were content to accept the leadership of those that lay between
+them. It came to an end and disappeared from sight when people north of
+the Ohio at last set up their own standard, and when, after some
+hesitation, the Border States threw in their lot with the other side and
+concluded to follow the Southern communities, which they had hitherto
+led. Benton was one of those public men who formulate and express,
+rather than shape, the thought of the people who stand behind them and
+whom they represent. A man of strong intellect and keen energy, he was
+for many years the foremost representative of at least one phase of that
+thought; being, also, a man of high principle and determined courage,
+when a younger generation had grown up and the bent of the thought had
+changed, he declined to change with it, bravely accepting political
+defeat as the alternative, and going down without flinching a hair's
+breadth from the ground on which he had always stood.
+
+To understand his public actions as well as his political ideas and
+principles it is, of course, necessary to know at least a little of the
+men among whom he lived and from whom he sprang: the men who were the
+first of our people to press out beyond the limits of the thirteen old
+states; who filled Kentucky, Tennessee, Arkansas, and Missouri, and who
+for so long a time were the dominant class all through the West, until,
+at last, the flood of Northeastern immigration completely swamped their
+influence north of the Ohio, while along the Gulf coast the political
+control slipped from their hands into the grasp of the great planter
+class.
+
+The wood-choppers, game-hunters, and Indian-fighters, who first came
+over the mountains, were only the forerunners of the more regular
+settlers who followed them; but these last had much the same attributes
+as their predecessors. For many years after the settlements were firmly
+rooted, the life of the settlers was still subject to all the perils of
+the wilderness. Above all, the constant warfare in which they were
+engaged for nearly thirty-five years, and which culminated in the battle
+of New Orleans, left a deep and lasting imprint on their character.
+Their incessant wars were waged almost wholly by the settlers
+themselves, with comparatively little help from the federal government,
+and with hardly any regular troops as allies. A backwoods levy, whether
+raised to meet an Indian inroad or to march against the disciplined
+armies of the British, was merely a force of volunteers, made up from
+among the full-grown male settlers, who were induced to join either from
+motives of patriotism, or from love of adventure, or because they felt
+that their homes and belongings were in danger from which they could
+only extricate them by their own prowess. Every settler thus became more
+or less of a soldier, was always expert with the rifle, and was taught
+to rely upon his own skill and courage for his protection. But the
+military service in which he was from time to time engaged was of such a
+lawless kind, and was carried on with such utter absence of discipline,
+that it did not accustom him in the least to habits of self-command, or
+render him inclined to brook the exercise of authority by an outsider;
+so that the Western people grew up with warlike traditions and habits of
+thought, accustomed to give free rein to their passions, and to take
+into their own hands the avenging of real or supposed wrongs, but
+without any of the love for order and for acting in concert with their
+fellows which characterize those who have seen service in regular
+armies. On the contrary, the chief effect of this long-continued and
+harassing Border warfare was to make more marked the sullen and almost
+defiant self-reliance of the pioneer, and to develop his peculiarly
+American spirit of individual self-sufficiency, his impatience of
+outside interference or control, to a degree not known elsewhere, even
+on this continent. It also gave a distinct military cast to his way of
+looking at territory which did not belong to him. He stood where he was
+because he was a conqueror; he had wrested his land by force from its
+rightful Indian lords; he fully intended to repeat the same feat as soon
+as he should reach the Spanish lands lying to the west and southwest; he
+would have done so in the case of French Louisiana if it had not been
+that the latter was purchased, and was thus saved from being taken by
+force of arms. This belligerent, or, more properly speaking, piratical
+way of looking at neighboring territory, was very characteristic of the
+West, and was at the root of the doctrine of "manifest destiny."
+
+All the early settlers, and most of those who came after them, were
+poor, living narrow lives fraught with great hardship, and varying
+between toil and half-aimless roving; even when the conditions of their
+life became easier it was some time before the influence of their old
+existence ceased to make itself felt in their way of looking at things.
+The first pioneers were, it is true, soon followed by great
+slave-owners; and by degrees there grew up a clan of large landed
+proprietors and stock-raisers, akin to the planter caste which was so
+all-powerful along the coast; but it was never relatively either so
+large or so influential as the latter, and was not separated from the
+rest of the white population by anything like so wide a gap as that
+which, in the Southern Atlantic and Gulf States, marked the difference
+between the rich growers of cotton, rice, and sugar, and the squalid
+"poor whites" or "crackers."
+
+The people of the Border States were thus mainly composed of small
+land-owners, scattered throughout the country; they tilled their small
+farms for themselves, were hewers of their own wood, and drawers of
+their own water, and for generations remained accustomed to and skillful
+in the use of the rifle. The pioneers of the Middle West were not
+dwellers in towns; they kept to the open country, where each man could
+shift for himself without help or hindrance from his neighbors, scorning
+the irksome restraints and the lack of individual freedom of city life.
+They built but few cities of any size; the only two really important
+ones of whose inhabitants they formed any considerable part, St. Louis
+and New Orleans, were both founded by the French long before our people
+came across the mountains into the Mississippi valley. Their life was
+essentially a country life, alike for the rich and for the bulk of the
+population. The few raw frontier towns and squalid, straggling villages
+were neither seats of superior culture nor yet centres for the
+distribution of educated thought, as in the North. Large tracts of land
+remained always populated by a class of backwoodsmen differing but
+little from the first comers. Such was the district from which grand,
+simple old Davy Crockett went to Washington as a Whig congressman; and
+perhaps there was never a quainter figure in our national legislature
+than that of the grim old rifleman, who shares with Daniel Boone the
+honor of standing foremost in the list of our mighty hunters. Crockett
+and his kind had little in common with the men who ruled supreme in the
+politics of most of the Southern States; and even at this day many of
+their descendants in the wooded mountain land are Republicans; for when
+the Middle States had lost the control of the West, and when those who
+had hitherto followed such leaders as Jackson, Clay, and Benton, drifted
+with the tide that set so strongly to the South, it was only the men of
+the type of dogged, stubborn old Crockett who dared to make head against
+it. But, indeed, one of the characteristics of the people with whom we
+are dealing was the slowness and suspicion with which they received a
+new idea, and the tenacity with which they clung to one that they had at
+last adopted.
+
+They were above all a people of strong, virile character, certain to
+make their weight felt either for good or for evil. They had many
+virtues which can fairly be called great, and their faults were equally
+strongly marked. They were not a thrifty people, nor one given to
+long-sustained, drudging work; there were not then, nor are there now,
+to be found in this land such comfortable, prosperous homes and farms as
+those which dot all the country where dwell the men of Northeastern
+stock. They were not, as a rule, even ordinarily well educated; the
+public school formed no such important feature in their life as it did
+in the life of their fellow-citizens farther north. They had narrow,
+bitter prejudices and dislikes; the hard and dangerous lives they had
+led had run their character into a stern and almost forbidding mould.
+They valued personal prowess very highly, and respected no man who did
+not possess the strongest capacity for self-help, and who could not
+shift for himself in any danger. They felt an intense, although perhaps
+ignorant, pride in and love for their country, and looked upon all the
+lands hemming in the United States as territory which they or their
+children should some day inherit; for they were a race of masterful
+spirit, and accustomed to regard with easy tolerance any but the most
+flagrant violations of law. They prized highly such qualities as
+courage, loyalty, truth, and patriotism, but they were, as a whole,
+poor, and not over-scrupulous of the rights of others, nor yet with the
+nicest sense of money obligations; so that the history of their state
+legislation affecting the rights of debtor and creditor, whether public
+or private, in hard times, is not pleasant reading for an American who
+is proud of his country. Their passions, once roused, were intense, and
+if they really wished anything they worked for it with indomitable
+persistency. There was little that was soft or outwardly attractive in
+their character: it was stern, rude, and hard, like the lives they led;
+but it was the character of those who were every inch men, and who were
+Americans through to the very heart's core.
+
+In their private lives their lawless and arrogant freedom and lack of
+self-restraint produced much gross licentiousness and barbarous cruelty;
+and every little frontier community could tell its story of animal
+savagery as regards the home relations of certain of its members. Yet in
+spite of this they, as a whole, felt the family ties strongly, and in
+the main had quite a high standard of private morality. Many of them, at
+any rate, were, according to their lights, deeply and sincerely
+religious; though even their religion showed their strong,
+coarse-fibred, narrow natures. Episcopalianism was the creed of the rich
+slave-owner, who dwelt along the sea-board; but the Western settlers
+belonged to some one or other of the divisions of the great Methodist
+and Baptist churches. They were as savagely in earnest about this as
+about everything else; meekness, mildness, broad liberality, and gentle
+tolerance of difference in religious views were not virtues they
+appreciated. They were always ready to do battle for their faith, and,
+indeed, had to do it, as it was quite a common amusement for the wilder
+and more lawless members of the community to try to break up by force
+the great camp-meetings, which formed so conspicuous a feature in the
+social and religious life of the country. For even irreligion took the
+form of active rebellion against God, rather than disbelief in his
+existence.
+
+Physically they were, and are, especially in Kentucky, the finest
+members of our race; an examination of the statistics relating to the
+volunteers in the Civil War shows that the natives of no other state,
+and the men from no foreign country whatsoever, came up to them in
+bodily development.
+
+Such a people, in choosing men to represent them in the national
+councils, would naturally pay small heed to refined, graceful, and
+cultivated statesmanship; their allegiance would be given to men of
+abounding vitality, of rugged intellect, and of indomitable will. No
+better or more characteristic possessor of these attributes could be
+imagined than Thomas Benton.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+BENTON'S EARLY LIFE AND ENTRY INTO THE SENATE.
+
+
+Thomas Hart Benton was born on March 14, 1782, near Hillsborough, in
+Orange County, North Carolina,--the same state that fifteen years
+before, almost to a day, had seen the birth of the great political chief
+whose most prominent supporter he in after life became. Benton, however,
+came of good colonial stock; and his early surroundings were not
+characterized by the squalid poverty that marked Jackson's, though the
+difference in the social condition of the two families was of small
+consequence on the frontier, where caste was, and is, almost unknown,
+and social equality is not a mere figure of speech--particularly it was
+not so at that time in the Southwest, where there were no servants,
+except black slaves, and where even what in the North would be called
+"hired help" was almost an unknown quantity.
+
+Benton's father, who was a lawyer in good standing at the North Carolina
+bar, died when the boy was very young, leaving him to be brought up by
+his Virginian mother. She was a woman of force, and, for her time, of
+much education. She herself began the training of her son's mind,
+studying with him history and biography, while he also, of course, had
+access to his father's law library. The home in which he was brought up
+was, for that time and for that part of the country, straightlaced; his
+mother, though a Virginian, had many traits which belonged rather to the
+descendants of the Puritans, and possessed both their strength of
+character and their austerely religious spirit. Although living in a
+roistering age, among a class peculiarly given to all the coarser kinds
+of pleasure, and especially to drink and every form of gambling, she
+nevertheless preserved the most rigid decorum and morality in her own
+household, frowning especially upon all intemperance, and never
+permitting a pack of cards to be found within her doors. She was greatly
+beloved and respected by the son, whose mind she did so much to mould,
+and she lived to see him become one of the foremost statesmen of the
+country.
+
+Young Benton was always fond of reading. He began his studies at home,
+and continued them at a grammar school taught by a young New Englander
+of good ability, a very large proportion of the school-teachers of the
+country then coming from New England; indeed, school-teachers and
+peddlers were, on the whole, the chief contributions made by the
+Northeast to the _personnel_ of the new Southwest. Benton then began a
+course at Chapel Hill, the University of North Carolina, but broke off
+before completing it, as his mother decided to move her family westward
+to the almost unbroken wilderness near Nashville, Tennessee, where his
+father had left them a large tract of land. But he was such an
+insatiable student and reader that he rapidly acquired a very extensive
+knowledge, not only of law, but of history and even of Latin and English
+literature, and thus became a well-read and cultivated, indeed a
+learned, man; though his frequent displays of learning and knowledge
+were sometimes marked by a trace of that self-complacent, amusing
+pedantry so apt to characterize a really well-educated man who lives in
+a community in which he believes, and with which he has thoroughly
+identified himself, but whose members are for the most part below the
+average in mental cultivation.
+
+The Bentons founded a little town, named after them, and in which, of
+course, they took their position as leaders and rich landed proprietors.
+It lay on the very outskirts of the Indian country; indeed, the great
+war trail of the Southern Indians led right through the settlement, and
+they at all times swarmed around it. The change from the still somewhat
+rude civilization of North Carolina to the wildness on the border was
+far less abrupt and startling then than would be the case under similar
+circumstances now, and the Bentons soon identified themselves completely
+with the life and interests of the people around them. They even
+abandoned the Episcopalianism of their old home, and became Methodists,
+like their neighbors. Young Benton himself had his hands full, at first,
+in attending to his great backwoods farm, tilled by slaves, and in
+pushing the growth of the settlement by building first a rude log
+school-house (he himself taught school at one time, while studying law),
+and a meeting-house of the same primitive construction, then mills,
+roads, bridges, and so forth. The work hardened and developed him, and
+he readily enough turned into a regular frontiersman of the better and
+richer sort. The neighboring town of Nashville was a raw, pretentious
+place, where horse-racing, cock-fighting, gambling, whiskey-drinking,
+and the various coarse vices which masquerade as pleasures in frontier
+towns, all throve in rank luxuriance. It was somewhat of a change from
+Benton's early training, but he took to it kindly, and though never a
+vicious or debauched man, he bore his full share in the savage brawls,
+the shooting and stabbing affrays, which went to make up one of the
+leading features in the excessively unattractive social life of the
+place and epoch.
+
+At that time dueling prevailed more or less throughout the United
+States, and in the South and West to an extent never before or since
+attained. On the frontier, not only did every man of spirit expect now
+and then to be called on to engage in a duel, but he also had to make up
+his mind to take occasional part in bloody street-fights. Tennessee, the
+state where Benton then had his home, was famous for the affrays that
+took place within its borders; and that they were common enough among
+the people at large may be gathered from the fact that they were of
+continual occurrence among judges, high state officials, and in the very
+legislature itself, where senators and assemblymen were always becoming
+involved in undignified rows and foolish squabbles, apparently without
+fear of exciting any unfavorable comment, as witness Davy Crockett's
+naive account of his early experiences as a backwoods member of the
+Tennessee assembly. Like Jackson, Benton killed his man in a duel. This
+was much later, in 1817, when he was a citizen of Missouri. His
+opponent was a lawyer named Lucas. They fought twice, on Bloody Island,
+near St. Louis. On the first occasion both were wounded; on the second
+Lucas was killed. The latter came of a truculent family. A recent
+biographer of his father, Judge John R. Lucas, remarks, with refreshing
+unconsciousness of the grotesque humor of the chronicle: "This gentleman
+was one of the most remarkable men who ever settled west of the
+Mississippi River.... Towards the close of his life Judge Lucas became
+melancholy and dejected--the result of domestic affliction, for six of
+his sons met death by violence." One feels curious to know how the other
+sons died.
+
+But the most famous of Benton's affrays was that with Jackson himself,
+in 1813. This rose out of a duel of laughable rather than serious
+character, in which Benton's brother was worsted by General Carroll,
+afterwards one of Jackson's lieutenants at New Orleans. The encounter
+itself took place between the Benton brothers on one side, and on the
+other, Jackson, General Coffee, also of New Orleans fame, and another
+friend. The place was a great rambling Nashville inn, and the details
+were so intricate that probably not even the participants themselves
+knew exactly what had taken place, while all the witnesses impartially
+contradicted each other and themselves. At any rate, Jackson was shot
+and Benton was pitched headlong down-stairs, and all the other
+combatants were more or less damaged; but it ended in Jackson being
+carried off by his friends, leaving the Bentons masters of the field,
+where they strutted up and down and indulged in a good deal of loud
+bravado. Previous to this Benton and Jackson had been on the best of
+terms, and although there was naturally a temporary break in their
+friendship, yet it proved strong enough in the end to stand even such a
+violent wrench as that given by this preposterously senseless and almost
+fatal brawl. They not only became completely reconciled, but eventually
+even the closest and warmest of personal and political friends; for
+Benton was as generous and forgiving as he was hot-tempered, and
+Jackson's ruder nature was at any rate free from any small meanness or
+malice.
+
+In spite of occasional interludes of this kind, which must have given a
+rather ferocious fillip to his otherwise monotonous life, Benton
+completed his legal studies, was admitted to the bar, and began to
+practice as a frontier lawyer at Franklin. Very soon, however, he for
+the first time entered the more congenial field of politics, and in 1811
+served a single term in the lower house of the Tennessee legislature.
+Even thus early he made his mark. He had a bill passed introducing the
+circuit system into the state judiciary, a reform of much importance,
+especially to the poorer class of litigants; and he also introduced, and
+had enacted into a law, a bill providing that a slave should have the
+same right to the full benefit of a jury trial as would a white man
+suffering under the same accusation. This last measure is noteworthy as
+foreshadowing the position which Benton afterwards took in national
+politics, where he appeared as a slave-holder, it is true, but as one of
+the most enlightened and least radical of his class. Its passage also
+showed the tendency of Southern opinion at the time, which was
+undoubtedly in the direction of bettering the condition of the blacks,
+though the events of the next few years produced such a violent
+revulsion of feeling concerning the negro race that this current of
+public opinion was completely reversed. Benton, however, was made of
+sturdy stuff, and as he grew older his views on the question did not
+alter as did those of most of his colleagues.
+
+Shortly after he left the legislature the War of 1812 broke out, and its
+events impressed on Benton another of what soon became his cardinal
+principles. The war was brought on by the South and West, the Democrats
+all favoring it, while the Federalists, forming the then
+anti-Democratic party, especially in the Northeast, opposed it; and
+finally their more extreme members, at the famous Hartford Convention,
+passed resolutions supposed to tend towards the dissolution of the
+Union, and which brought upon the party the bitter condemnation of their
+antagonists. Says Benton himself: "At the time of its first appearance
+the right of secession was repulsed and repudiated by the Democracy
+generally.... The leading language in respect to it south of the Potomac
+was that no state had a right to withdraw from the Union, ... and that
+any attempt to dissolve it, or to obstruct the action of constitutional
+laws, was treason. If since that time political parties and sectional
+localities have exchanged attitudes on this question, it cannot alter
+the question of right." For, having once grasped an idea and made it his
+own, Benton clung to it with unyielding tenacity, no matter whether it
+was or was not abandoned by the majority of those with whom he had been
+in the habit of acting.
+
+Thus early Benton's political character became moulded into the shape
+which it ever afterwards retained. He was a slave-holder, but as
+advanced as a slave-holder could be; he remained to a certain extent a
+Southerner, but his Southernism was of the type prevalent immediately
+after the Revolution, and not of the kind that came to the fore prior to
+the Rebellion. He was much more a Westerner in his feelings, and more
+than all else he was emphatically a Union man.
+
+Like every other hot spirit of the West--and the West was full of little
+but hot spirits--Benton heartily favored the War of 1812. He served as a
+colonel of volunteers under Jackson, but never saw actual fighting, and
+his short term of soldiership was of no further account than to furnish
+an excuse to Polk, thirty-five years later, for nominating him
+commanding general in the time of the Mexican War,--an incident which,
+as the nomination was rejected, may be regarded as merely ludicrous, the
+gross impropriety of the act safely defying criticism. He was of genuine
+use, however, in calling on and exciting the volunteers to come forward;
+for he was a fluent speaker, of fine presence, and his pompous
+self-sufficiency was rather admired than otherwise by the frontiersmen,
+while his force, energy, and earnestness commanded their respect. He
+also, when Jackson's reckless impetuosity got him into a snarl with the
+feeble national administration, whose imbecile incapacity to carry on
+the war became day by day more painfully evident, went to Washington,
+and there finally extricated his chief by dint of threatening that, if
+"justice" was not done him, Tennessee would, in future political
+contests, be found ranged with the administration's foes. For Benton
+already possessed political influence, and being, like most of his
+class, anti-Federalist, or Democratic, in sentiment, was therefore of
+the same party as the people at Washington, and was a man whose
+representations would have some weight with them.
+
+During his stay in Tennessee Benton's character was greatly influenced
+by his being thrown into close contact with many of the extraordinary
+men who then or afterwards made their mark in the strange and
+picturesque annals of the Southwest. Jackson even thus early loomed up
+as the greatest and arch-typical representative of his people and his
+section. The religious bent of the time was shown in the life of the
+grand, rugged old Methodist, Peter Cartwright, who, in the far-off
+backwoods, was a preacher and practical exponent of "muscular
+Christianity" half a century before the day when, under Bishop Selwyn
+and Charles Kingsley, it became a cult among the most highly civilized
+classes of England. There was David Crockett, rifleman and congressman,
+doomed to a tragic and heroic death in that remarkable conflict of which
+it was said at the time, that "Thermopylæ had its messengers of death,
+but the Alamo had none;" and there was Houston, who, after a singular
+and romantic career, became the greatest of the statesmen and soldiers
+of Texas. It was these men, and their like, who, under the shadow of
+world-old forests and in the sunlight of the great, lonely plains,
+wrought out the destinies of a nation and a continent, and who, with
+their rude war-craft and state-craft, solved problems that, in the
+importance of their results, dwarf the issues of all European struggles
+since the day of Waterloo as completely as the Punic wars in their
+outcome threw into the shade the consequences of the wars waged at the
+same time between the different Greek monarchies.
+
+Benton, in his mental training, came much nearer to the statesmen of the
+sea-board, and was far better bred and better educated, than the rest of
+the men around him. But he was, and was felt by them to be, thoroughly
+one of their number, and the most able expounder of their views; and it
+is just because he is so completely the type of a great and important
+class, rather than because even of his undoubted and commanding ability
+as a statesman, that his life and public services will always repay
+study. His vanity and boastfulness were faults which he shared with
+almost all his people; and, after all, if they overrated the
+consequence of their own deeds, the deeds, nevertheless, did possess
+great importance, and their fault was slight compared to that committed
+by some of us at the present day, who have gone to the opposite extreme
+and try to belittle the actions of our fathers. Benton was deeply imbued
+with the masterful, overbearing spirit of the West,--a spirit whose
+manifestations are not always agreeable, but the possession of which is
+certainly a most healthy sign of the virile strength of a young
+community. He thoroughly appreciated that he was helping to shape the
+future of a country, whose wonderful development is the most important
+feature in the history of the nineteenth century; the non-appreciation
+of which fact is in itself sufficient utterly to disqualify any American
+statesman from rising to the first rank.
+
+It was not in Tennessee, however, that Benton rose to political
+prominence, for shortly after the close of the war he crossed the
+Mississippi and made his permanent home in the territory of Missouri.
+Missouri was then our extreme western outpost, and its citizens
+possessed the characteristic western traits to an even exaggerated
+extent. The people were pushing, restless, and hardy; they were lawless
+and violent to a degree. In spite of the culture and education of some
+families, society, as a whole, was marked by florid unconventionality
+and rawness. The general and widespread intemperance of the judges and
+high officials of state was even more marked than their proclivities for
+brawling. The lawyers, as usual, furnished the bulk of the politicians;
+success at the bar depended less upon learning than upon "push" and
+audacity. The fatal feuds between individuals and families were as
+frequent and as bloody as among Highland clans a century before. The
+following quotations are taken at random from a work on the Bench and
+Bar of Missouri, by an ex-judge of its supreme court: "A man by the name
+of Hiram K. Turk, and four sons, settled in 1839 near Warsaw, and a
+personal difficulty occurred between them and a family of the name of
+Jones, resulting in the death of one or two. The people began to take
+sides with one or the other, and finally a general outbreak took place,
+in which many were killed, resulting in a general reign of terror and of
+violence beyond the power of the law to subdue." The social annals of
+this pleasant town of Warsaw could not normally have been dull; in 1844,
+for instance, they were enlivened by Judge Cherry and Senator Major
+fighting to the death on one of its principal streets, the latter being
+slain. The judges themselves were by no means bigoted in their support
+of law and order. "In those days it was common for people to settle
+their quarrels during court week.... Judge Allen took great delight in
+these exhibitions, and would at any time adjourn his court to witness
+one.... He (Allen) always traveled with a holster of large pistols in
+front of his saddle, and a knife with a blade at least a foot long."
+Hannibal Chollop was no mere creature of fancy; on the contrary, his
+name was legion, and he flourished rankly in every town throughout the
+Mississippi valley. But, after all, this ruffianism was really not a
+whit worse in its effects on the national character than was the case
+with certain of the "universal peace" and "non-resistance" developments
+in the Northeastern States; in fact, it was more healthy. A class of
+professional non-combatants is as hurtful to the real, healthy growth of
+a nation as is a class of fire-eaters; for a weakness or folly is
+nationally as bad as a vice, or worse; and, in the long run, a Quaker
+may be quite as undesirable a citizen as is a duelist. No man who is not
+willing to bear arms and to fight for his rights can give a good reason
+why he should be entitled to the privilege of living in a free
+community. The decline of the militant spirit in the Northeast during
+the first half of this century was much to be regretted. To it is due,
+more than to any other cause, the undoubted average individual
+inferiority of the Northern compared to the Southern troops; at any
+rate, at the beginning of the great war of the Rebellion. The
+Southerners, by their whole mode of living, their habits, and their love
+of out-door sports, kept up their warlike spirit; while in the North the
+so-called upper classes developed along the lines of a wealthy and timid
+bourgeoisie type, measuring everything by a mercantile standard (a
+peculiarly debasing one if taken purely by itself), and submitting to be
+ruled in local affairs by low foreign mobs, and in national matters by
+their arrogant Southern kinsmen. The militant spirit of these last
+certainly stood them in good stead in the Civil War. The world has never
+seen better soldiers than those who followed Lee; and their leader will
+undoubtedly rank as without any exception the very greatest of all the
+great captains that the English-speaking peoples have brought forth--and
+this, although the last and chief of his antagonists may himself claim
+to stand as the full equal of Marlborough and Wellington.
+
+The other Western States still kept touch on the old colonial
+communities of the sea-coast, having a second or alternative outlet
+through Louisiana, newly acquired by the United States, it is true, but
+which was nevertheless an old settled land. Missouri, however, had lost
+all connection with the sea-coast, and though, through her great river
+towns, swarming with raftsmen and flat-boatmen, she drove her main and
+most thriving trade with the other Mississippi cities, yet her restless
+and adventure-loving citizens were already seeking other outlets for
+their activity, and were establishing trade relations with the Mexicans;
+being thus the earliest among our people to come into active contact
+with the Hispano-Indian race from whom we afterwards wrested so large a
+part of their inheritance. Missouri was thrust out beyond the
+Mississippi into the vast plains-country of the Far West, and except on
+the river-front was completely isolated, being flanked on every side by
+great stretches of level wilderness, inhabited by roaming tribes of
+warlike Indians. Thus for the first time the borderers began to number
+in their ranks plainsmen as well as backwoodsmen. In such a community
+there were sure to be numbers of men anxious to take part in any
+enterprise that united the chance of great pecuniary gain with the
+certainty of even greater personal risk, and both these conditions were
+fulfilled in the trading expeditions pushed out from Missouri across the
+trackless wastes lying between it and the fringe of Mexican settlements
+on the Rio del Norte. The route followed by these caravans, which
+brought back furs and precious metals, soon became famous under the name
+of the Santa Fé trail; and the story of the perils, hardships, and gains
+of the adventurous traders who followed it would make one of the most
+striking chapters of American history.
+
+Among such people Benton's views and habits of thought became more
+markedly Western and ultra-American than ever, especially in regard to
+our encroachments upon the territory of neighboring powers. The general
+feeling in the West upon this last subject afterwards crystallized into
+what became known as the "Manifest Destiny" idea, which, reduced to its
+simplest terms, was: that it was our manifest destiny to swallow up the
+land of all adjoining nations who were too weak to withstand us; a
+theory that forthwith obtained immense popularity among all statesmen of
+easy international morality. It cannot be too often repeated that no one
+can understand even the domestic, and more especially the foreign,
+policy of Benton and his school without first understanding the
+surroundings amidst which they had been brought up and the people whose
+chosen representatives they were. Recent historians, for instance,
+always speak as if our grasping after territory in the Southwest was
+due solely to the desire of the Southerners to acquire lands out of
+which to carve new slave-holding states, and as if it was merely a move
+in the interests of the slave-power. This is true enough so far as the
+motives of Calhoun, Tyler, and the other public leaders of the Gulf and
+southern sea-board states were concerned. But the hearty Western support
+given to the movement was due to entirely different causes, the chief
+among them being the fact that the Westerners honestly believed
+themselves to be indeed created the heirs of the earth, or at least of
+so much of it as was known by the name of North America, and were
+prepared to struggle stoutly for the immediate possession of their
+heritage.
+
+One of Benton's earliest public utterances was in regard to a matter
+which precisely illustrates this feeling. It was while Missouri was
+still a territory, and when Benton, then a prominent member of the St.
+Louis bar, had by his force, capacity, and power as a public speaker
+already become well known among his future constituents. The treaty with
+Spain, by which we secured Florida, was then before the Senate, which
+body had to consider it several times, owing to the dull irresolution
+and sloth of the Spanish government in ratifying it. The bounds it gave
+us were far too narrow to suit the more fiery Western spirits, and these
+cheered Benton to the echo when he attacked it in public with fierce
+vehemence. "The magnificent valley of the Mississippi is ours, with all
+its fountains, springs, and floods; and woe to the statesman who shall
+undertake to surrender one drop of its water, one inch of its soil to
+any foreign power." So he said, his words ringing with the boastful
+confidence so well liked by the masterful men of the West, strong in
+their youth, and proudly conscious of their strength. The treaty was
+ratified in the Senate, nevertheless, all the old Southern States
+favoring it, and the only votes at any stage recorded against it being
+of four Western senators, coming respectively from Ohio, Kentucky,
+Tennessee, and Louisiana. So that in 1818, at any rate, the desire for
+territorial aggrandizement at the expense of Maine or Mexico was common
+to the West as a whole, both to the free and the slave states, and was
+not exclusively favored by the Southerners. The only effect of Benton's
+speech was to give rise to the idea that he was hostile to the Southern
+and Democratic administration at Washington, and against this feeling he
+had to contend in the course of his successful candidacy for the United
+States senatorship the following year, when Missouri was claiming
+admittance to the Union.
+
+It was in reference to this matter of admitting Missouri that the
+slavery question for the first time made its appearance in national
+politics, where it threw everything into confusion and for the moment
+overshadowed all else; though it vanished almost as quickly as it had
+appeared, and did not again come to the front for several years. The
+Northerners, as a whole, desiring to "restrict" the growth of slavery
+and the slave-power, demanded that Missouri, before being admitted as a
+state, should abolish slavery within her boundaries. The South was
+equally determined that she should be admitted as a slave state; and for
+the first time the politicians of the country divided on geographical
+rather than on party lines, though the division proved but temporary,
+and was of but little interest except as foreshadowing what was to come
+a score of years later. Even within the territory itself the same
+contest was carried on with the violence bred by political conflicts in
+frontier states, there being a very respectable "restriction" party,
+which favored abolition. Benton was himself a slave-holder, and as the
+question was in no way one between the East and the West, or between the
+Union as a whole and any part of it, he naturally gave full swing to his
+Southern feelings, and entered with tremendous vigor into the contest on
+the anti-restriction side. So successful were his efforts, and so great
+was the majority of the Missourians who sympathized with him, that the
+restrictionists were completely routed and succeeded in electing but one
+delegate to the constitutional convention. In Congress the matter was
+finally settled by the passage of the famous Missouri Compromise bill, a
+measure Southern in its origin, but approved at the time by many if not
+most Northerners, and disapproved by not a few Southerners. Benton
+heartily believed in it, announcing somewhat vaguely that he was
+"equally opposed to slavery agitation and to slavery extension." By its
+terms Missouri was admitted as a slave state, while slavery was
+abolished in all the rest of the old province of Louisiana lying north
+and west of it and north of the parallel of 36° 30'. Owing to an
+objectionable clause in its Constitution, the admission was not fully
+completed until 1821, and then only through the instrumentality of Henry
+Clay. But Benton took his seat immediately, and entered on his thirty
+years' of service in the United States Senate. His appearance in
+national politics was thus coincident with the appearance of the
+question which, it is true, almost immediately sank out of sight for a
+period of fifteen years, but which then reappeared to stay for good and
+to become of progressively absorbing importance, until, combining
+itself with the still greater question of national unity, it dwarfed all
+other issues, cleft the West as well as the East asunder, and, as one of
+its minor results, brought about the political downfall of Benton
+himself and of his whole school in what were called the Border States.
+
+Before entering the Senate, Benton did something which well illustrates
+his peculiar uprightness, and the care which he took to keep his public
+acts free from the least suspicion of improper influence. When he was at
+the bar in St. Louis, real estate litigation was much the most important
+branch of legal business. The condition of Missouri land-titles was very
+mixed, since many of them were based upon the thousands of "concessions"
+of land made by the old French and Spanish governments, which had been
+ratified by Congress, but subject to certain conditions which the Creole
+inhabitants, being ignorant and lawless, had generally failed to
+fulfill. By an act of Congress these inchoate claims were to be brought
+before the United States recorder of land titles; and the Missouri bar
+were divided as to what action should be taken on them, the majority
+insisting that they should be held void, while Benton headed the
+opposite party, which was averse to forfeiting property on technical
+grounds, and advocated the confirmation of every honest claim. Further
+and important legislation was needed to provide for these claims.
+Benton, being much the most influential member of the bar who had
+advocated the confirmation of the claims, and being so able, honest, and
+energetic, was the favorite counsel of the claimants, and had hundreds
+of their titles under his professional charge. Of course in such cases
+the compensation of the lawyer depended solely upon his success; and
+success to Benton would have meant wealth. Nevertheless, and though his
+action was greatly to his own pecuniary hurt, the first thing he did
+when elected senator was to convene his clients, and tell them that
+henceforth he could have nothing more to do, as their attorney, with the
+prosecution of their claims, giving as his reason that their success
+largely depended upon the action of Congress, of which he was now
+himself a member, so that he was bound to consult, not any private
+interest, but the good of the community as a whole. He even refused to
+designate his successor in the causes, saying that he was determined not
+only to be quite unbiased in acting upon the subject of these claims as
+senator, but not to have, nor to be suspected of having, any personal
+interest in the fate of any of them. Many a modern statesman might most
+profitably copy his sensitiveness.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+EARLY YEARS IN THE SENATE.
+
+
+When Benton took his seat in the United States Senate, Monroe, the last
+president of the great house of Virginia, was about beginning his second
+term. He was a courteous, high-bred gentleman, of no especial ability,
+but well fitted to act as presidential figure-head during the
+politically quiet years of that era of good feeling which lasted from
+1816 till 1824. The Federalist party, after its conduct during the war,
+had vanished into well-deserved obscurity, and though influences of
+various sorts were working most powerfully to split the dominant and
+all-embracing Democracy into factional fragments, these movements had
+not yet come to a head.
+
+The slavery question, it cannot be too often said, was as yet of little
+or no political consequence. The violent excitement over the admission
+of Missouri had subsided as quickly as it had arisen; and though the
+Compromise bill was of immense importance in itself, and still more as
+giving a hint of what was to come, it must be remembered that its effect
+upon general politics, during the years immediately succeeding its
+passage, was slight. Later on, the slavery question became of such
+paramount consequence, and so completely identified with the movement
+for the dissolution of the Union, that it seems impossible for even the
+best of recent historians of American politics to understand that such
+was not the case at this time. One writer of note even goes so far as to
+state that "From the night of March 2, 1820, party history is made up
+without interruption or break of the development of geographical [the
+context shows this to mean Northern and Southern] parties." There is
+very little ground for such a sweeping assertion until a considerable
+time after the date indicated; indeed, it was more than ten years later
+before any symptom of the development spoken of became at all marked.
+Until then, parties divided even less on geographical lines than had
+been the case earlier, during the last years of the existence of the
+Federalists; and what little division there was had no reference to
+slavery. Nor was it till nearly a score of years after the passage of
+the Missouri Compromise bill that the separatist spirit began to
+identify itself for good with the idea of the maintenance of slavery.
+Previously to that there had been outbursts of separatist feeling in
+different states, but always due to entirely different causes. Georgia
+flared up in hot defiance of the federal government, when the latter
+rubbed against her on the question of removing the Cherokees from within
+her borders. But her having negro slaves did not affect her feelings in
+the least, and her attitude was just such as any Western state with
+Indians on its frontier is now apt to assume so far as it dares,--such
+an attitude as Arizona, for example, would at this moment take in
+reference to the Apaches, if she were able. Slavery was doubtless
+remotely one of the irritating causes that combined to work South
+Carolina up to a fever heat of insanity over the nullification
+excitement. But in its immediate origin nullification arose from the
+outcry against the protective tariff, and it is almost as unfair to
+ascribe it in any way to the influence of slavery as it would be to
+assign a similar cause for the Virginia and Kentucky resolutions of
+1798, or to say that the absence of slavery was the reason for the
+abortively disloyal agitation in New England, which culminated in the
+Hartford Convention. The separatist feeling is ingrained in the fibre of
+our race, and though in itself a most dangerous failing and weakness, is
+yet merely a perversion and distortion of the defiant and self-reliant
+independence of spirit which is one of the chief of the race virtues;
+and slavery was partly the cause and partly merely the occasion of the
+abnormal growth of the separatist movement in the South. Nor was the
+tariff question so intimately associated with that of slavery as has
+been commonly asserted. This might be easily guessed from the fact that
+the originator and chief advocate of a high tariff himself came from a
+slave state, and drew many of his warmest supporters from among the
+slave-holding sugar-planters. Except in the futile discussion over the
+proposed Panama Congress it was not till Benton's third senatorial term
+that slavery became of really great weight in politics.
+
+One of the first subjects that attracted Benton's attention in the
+Senate was the Oregon question, and on this he showed himself at once in
+his true character as a Western man, proud alike of every part of his
+country, and as desirous of seeing the West extended in a northerly as
+in a southerly direction. Himself a slave-holder, from a slave state, he
+was one of the earliest and most vehement advocates of the extension of
+our free territory northwards along the Pacific coast. All the country
+stretching north and south of the Oregon River was then held by the
+United States in joint possession with Great Britain. But the whole
+region was still entirely unsettled, and as a matter of fact our
+British rivals were the only parties in actual occupation. The title to
+the territory was doubtful, as must always be the case when it rests
+upon the inaccurate maps of forgotten explorers, or upon the chance
+landings of stray sailors and traders, especially if the land in dispute
+is unoccupied and of vast but uncertain extent, of little present value,
+and far distant from the powers claiming it. The real truth is that such
+titles are of very little practical value, and are rightly enough
+disregarded by any nations strong enough to do so. Benton's intense
+Americanism, and his pride and confidence in his country and in her
+unlimited capacity for growth of every sort, gifted him with the power
+to look much farther into the future, as regarded the expansion of the
+United States, than did his colleagues; and moreover caused him to
+consider the question from a much more far-seeing and statesmanlike
+stand-point. The land belonged to no man, and yet was sure to become
+very valuable; our title to it was not very good, but was probably
+better than that of any one else. Sooner or later it would be filled
+with the overflow of our population, and would border on our dominion,
+and on our dominion alone. It was therefore just, and moreover in the
+highest degree desirable, that it should be made a part of that
+dominion at the earliest possible moment. Benton introduced a bill to
+enable the president to terminate the arrangement with Great Britain and
+make a definite settlement in our favor; and though the Senate refused
+to pass it, yet he had the satisfaction of bringing the subject
+prominently before the people, and, moreover, of outlining the way in
+which it would have to be and was finally settled. In one of his
+speeches on the matter he said, using rather highflown language, (for he
+was unfortunately deficient in sense of humor): "Upon the people of
+Eastern Asia the establishment of a civilized power on the opposite
+coast of America could not fail to produce great and wonderful benefits.
+Science, liberal principles in government, and the true religion might
+cast their lights across the intervening sea. The valley of the Columbia
+might become the granary of China and Japan, and an outlet to their
+imprisoned and exuberant population." Could he have foreseen how, in the
+future, the Americans of the valley of the Columbia would greet the
+"imprisoned and exuberant population" of China, he would probably have
+been more doubtful as to the willingness of the latter empire to accept
+our standard of the true religion and liberal principles of government.
+In the course of the same speech he for the first time, and by what was
+then considered a bold flight of imagination, suggested the possibility
+of sending foreign ministers to the Oriental nations, to China, Japan,
+and Persia, "and even to the Grand Turk."
+
+Better success attended a bill he introduced to establish a trading-road
+from Missouri through the Indian country to New Mexico, which, after
+much debate, passed both houses and was signed by President Monroe. The
+road thus marked out and established became, and remained for many
+years, a great thoroughfare, and among the chief of the channels through
+which our foreign commerce flowed. Until Benton secured the enactment of
+this law, so important to the interests and development of the West, the
+overland trade with Mexico had been carried on by individual effort and
+at the cost of incalculable hazard, hardship, and risk of life. Mexico,
+with its gold and silver mines, its strange physical features, its
+population utterly foreign to us in race, religion, speech, and ways of
+life, and especially because of the glamour of mystery which surrounded
+it and partly shrouded it from sight, always dazzled and strongly
+attracted the minds of the Southwesterners, occupying much the same
+place in their thoughts that the Spanish Main did in the imagination of
+England during the reign of Elizabeth. The young men of the Mississippi
+valley looked upon an expedition with one of the bands of armed traders,
+who wound their way across Indian-haunted wastes, through deep canyons
+and over lofty mountain passes, to Santa Fé, Chihuahua, and Sonora, with
+the same feelings of eager excitement and longing that were doubtless
+felt by some of their forefathers more than two centuries previously in
+regard to the cruises of Drake and Hawkins. The long wagon trains or
+pack trains of the traders carried with them all kinds of goods, but
+especially cotton, and brought back gold and silver bullion, bales of
+furs and droves of mules; and, moreover, they brought back tales of
+lawless adventure, of great gains and losses, of fights against Indians
+and Mexicans, and of triumphs and privations, which still further
+inflamed the minds of the Western men. Where they had already gone as
+traders, who could on occasion fight, they all hoped on some future day
+to go as warriors, who would acquire gain by their conquests. These
+hopes were openly expressed, and with very little more idea of there
+being any right or wrong in the matter than so many Norse Vikings might
+have felt. The Southwesterners are credited with altogether too complex
+motives when it is supposed that they were actuated in regard to the
+conquest of northern Mexico by a desire to provide for additional slave
+states to offset the growth of the North; their emotions in regard to
+their neighbor's land were in the main perfectly simple and purely
+piratical. That the Northeast did not share in the greed for new
+territory felt by the other sections of the country was due partly to
+the decline in its militant spirit, (a decline on many accounts
+sincerely to be regretted,) and partly to its geographical situation,
+since it adjoined Canada, an unattractive and already well-settled
+country, jealously guarded by the might of Great Britain.
+
+Another question, on which Benton showed himself to be thoroughly a
+representative of Western sentiment, was the removal of the Indian
+tribes. Here he took a most active and prominent part in reporting and
+favoring the bills, and in advocating the treaties, by which the Indian
+tribes of the South and West were forced or induced, (for the latter
+word was very frequently used as a euphemistic synonym of the former,)
+to abandon great tracts of territory to the whites and to move farther
+away from the boundaries of their ever-encroaching civilization. Nor was
+his action wholly limited to the Senate, for it was at his instance that
+General Clark, at St. Louis, concluded the treaties with the Kansas and
+Osage tribes, by which the latter surrendered to the United States all
+the vast territory which they nominally owned west of Missouri and
+Arkansas, except small reserves for themselves. Benton, as was to be
+expected, took the frontier view of the Indian question, which, by the
+way, though often wrong, is much more apt to be right than is the
+so-called humanitarian or Eastern view. But, so far as was compatible
+with having the Indians removed, he always endeavored to have them
+kindly and humanely treated. There was, of course, much injustice and
+wrong inevitably attendant upon the Indian policy advocated by him, and
+by the rest of the Southern and Western statesmen; but it is difficult
+to see what other course could have been pursued with most of the
+tribes. In the Western States there were then sixty millions of acres of
+the best land, owned in great tracts by barbarous or half-barbarous
+Indians, who were always troublesome and often dangerous neighbors, and
+who did not come in any way under the laws of the states in which they
+lived. The states thus encumbered would evidently never have been
+satisfied until all their soil was under their own jurisdiction and open
+to settlement. The Cherokees had advanced far on the road toward
+civilization, and it was undoubtedly a cruel grief and wrong to take
+them away from their homes; but the only alternative would have been to
+deprive them of much of their land, and to provide for their gradually
+becoming citizens of the states in which they were. For a movement of
+this sort the times were not then, and, unfortunately, are not yet ripe.
+
+Much maudlin nonsense has been written about the governmental treatment
+of the Indians, especially as regards taking their land. For the simple
+truth is that they had no possible title to most of the lands we took,
+not even that of occupancy, and at the most were in possession merely by
+virtue of having butchered the previous inhabitants. For many of its
+actions towards them the government does indeed deserve the severest
+criticism; but it has erred quite as often on the side of too much
+leniency as on the side of too much severity. From the very nature of
+things, it was wholly impossible that there should not be much mutual
+wrong-doing and injury in the intercourse between the Indians and
+ourselves. It was equally out of the question to let them remain as they
+were, and to bring the bulk of their number up to our standard of
+civilization with sufficient speed to enable them to accommodate
+themselves to the changed condition of their surroundings. The policy
+towards them advocated by Benton, which was much the same as, although
+more humane than, that followed by most other Western men who have had
+practically to face the problem, worked harshly in many instances, and
+was the cause of a certain amount of temporary suffering. But it was
+infinitely better for the nation, as a whole, and, in the end, was
+really more just and merciful, than it would have been to attempt
+following out any of the visionary schemes which the more impracticable
+Indian enthusiasts are fond of recommending.
+
+It was during Monroe's last term that Henry Clay brought in the first
+protective tariff bill, as distinguished from tariff bills to raise
+revenue with protection as an incident only. It was passed by a
+curiously mixed vote, which hardly indicated any one's future position
+on the tariff excepting that of Clay himself; Massachusetts, under the
+lead of Webster, joining hands with the Southern sea-coast states to
+oppose it, while Tennessee and New York split, and Missouri and
+Kentucky, together with most of the North, favored it. Benton voted for
+it, but on the great question of internal improvements he stood out
+clearly for the views that he ever afterwards held. This was first
+brought up by the veto, on constitutional grounds, of the Cumberland
+Road bill, which had previously passed both houses with singular
+unanimity, Benton's vote being one of the very few recorded against it.
+In regard to all such matters Benton was strongly in favor of a strict
+construction of the Constitution and of guarding the rights of the
+states, in spite of his devoted attachment to the Union. While voting
+against this bill, and denying the power or the right of the federal
+government to take charge of improvements which would benefit one state
+only, Benton was nevertheless careful to reserve to himself the right to
+support measures for improving national rivers or harbors yielding
+revenues. The trouble is, that however much the two classes of cases may
+differ in point of expediency, they overlap so completely that it is
+wholly impossible to draw a hard and fast line between them, and the
+question of constitutionality, if waived in the one instance, can
+scarcely with propriety be raised in the other.
+
+With the close of Monroe's second term the "era of good feeling" came to
+an end, and the great Democratic-Republican party split up into several
+fragments, which gradually crystallized round two centres. But in 1824
+this process was still incomplete, and the presidential election of that
+year was a simple scramble between four different candidates,--Jackson,
+Adams, Clay, and Crawford. Jackson had the greatest number of votes, but
+as no one had a majority, the election was thrown into the House of
+Representatives, where the Clay men, inasmuch as their candidate was out
+of the race, went over to Adams and elected him. Benton at the time, and
+afterwards in his "Thirty Years' View," inveighed against this choice as
+being a violation of what he called the "principle demos krateo"--a
+barbarous phrase for which he had a great fondness, and which he used
+and misused on every possible occasion, whether in speaking or writing.
+He insisted that, as Jackson had secured the majority of the electoral
+vote, it was the duty of the House of Representatives to ratify promptly
+this "choice of the people." The Constitution expressly provided that
+this need not be done. So Benton, who on questions of state rights and
+internal improvements was so pronounced a stickler for a strict
+construction of the Constitution, here coolly assumed the absurd
+position that the Constitution was wrong on this particular point, and
+should be disregarded, on the ground that there was a struggle "between
+the theory of the Constitution and the democratic principle." His
+proposition was ridiculous. The "democratic principle" had nothing more
+to do with the matter than had the law of gravitation. Either the
+Constitution was or it was not to be accepted as a serious document,
+that meant something; in the former case the election of Adams was
+proper in every aspect, in the latter it was unnecessary to have held
+any election at all.
+
+At this period every one was floundering about in efforts to establish
+political relations, Benton not less than others; for he had begun the
+canvass as a supporter of Clay, and had then gone over to Crawford. But
+at the end he had become a Jacksonian Democrat, and during the rest of
+his political career he figured as the most prominent representative of
+the Jacksonian Democracy in the Senate. Van Buren himself, afterwards
+Jackson's prime favorite and political heir, was a Crawford man during
+this campaign.
+
+Adams, after his election, which was owing to Clay's support, gave Clay
+the position of secretary of state in his cabinet. The affair
+unquestionably had an unfortunate look, and the Jacksonians, especially
+Jackson, at once raised a great hue and cry that there had been a
+corrupt bargain. Benton, much to his credit, refused to join in the
+outcry, stating that he had good and sufficient reasons--which he
+gave--to be sure of its falsity; a position which brought him into
+temporary disfavor with many of his party associates, and which a man
+who had Benton's ambition and bitter partisanship, without having his
+sturdy pluck, would have hesitated to take. The assault was directed
+with especial bitterness against Clay, whom Jackson ever afterwards
+included in the very large list of individuals whom he hated with the
+most rancorous and unreasoning virulence. Randolph of Roanoke, the
+privileged eccentric of the Senate, in one of those long harangues in
+which he touched upon everybody and everything, except possibly the
+point at issue, made a rabid onslaught upon the Clay-Adams coalition as
+an alliance of "the blackleg and the Puritan." Clay, who was susceptible
+enough to the charge of loose living, but who was a man of rigid honor
+and rather fond than otherwise of fighting, promptly challenged him, and
+a harmless interchange of shots took place. Benton was on the field as
+the friend of both parties, and his account of the affair is very
+amusing in its description of the solemn, hair-splitting punctilio with
+which it is evident that both Randolph and many of his contemporaries
+regarded points of dueling honor, which to us seem either absurd,
+trivial, or wholly incomprehensible.
+
+Two tolerably well-defined parties now emerged from the chaos of
+contending politicians; one was the party of the administration, whose
+members called themselves National Republicans, and later on Whigs; the
+other was the Jacksonian Democracy. Adams's inaugural address and first
+message outlined the Whig policy as favoring a protective tariff,
+internal improvements, and a free construction of the Constitution
+generally. The Jacksonians accordingly took the opposite side on all
+these points, partly from principle and partly from perversity. In the
+Senate they assailed with turgid eloquence every administration measure,
+whether it was good or bad, very much of their opposition being purely
+factious in character. There has never been a time when there was more
+rabid, objectless, and unscrupulous display of partisanship. Benton,
+little to his credit, was a leader in these purposeless conflicts. The
+most furious of them took place over the proposed Panama mission. This
+was a scheme that originated in the fertile brain of Henry Clay, whose
+Americanism was of a type quite as pronounced as Benton's, and who was
+always inclined to drag us into a position of hostility to European
+powers. The Spanish-American States, having succeeded in winning their
+independence from Spain, were desirous of establishing some principle of
+concert in action among the American republics as a whole, and for this
+purpose proposed to hold an international congress at Panama. Clay's
+fondness for a spirited and spectacular foreign policy made him grasp
+eagerly at the chance of transforming the United States into the head of
+an American league of free republics, which would be a kind of
+cis-Atlantic offset to the Holy Alliance of European despotisms. Adams
+took up the idea, nominated ministers to the Panama Congress, and gave
+his reasons for his course in a special message to the Senate. The
+administration men drew the most rosy and impossible pictures of the
+incalculable benefits which would be derived from the proposed congress;
+and the Jacksonians attacked it with an exaggerated denunciation that
+was even less justified by the facts.
+
+Adams's message was properly open to attack on one or two points;
+notably in reference to its proposals that we should endeavor to get the
+Spanish-American States to introduce religious tolerance within their
+borders. It was certainly an unhappy suggestion that we should endeavor
+to remove the mote of religious intolerance from our brother's eye while
+indignantly resenting the least allusion to the beam of slavery in our
+own. It was on this very point of slavery that the real opposition
+hinged. The Spanish States had emancipated their comparatively small
+negro populations, and, as is usually the case with Latin nations, did
+not have a very strong caste feeling against the blacks, some of whom
+accordingly had risen to high civic and military rank; and they also
+proposed to admit to their congress the negro republic of Hayti. Certain
+of the slave-holders of the South fiercely objected to any such
+association; and on this occasion Benton for once led and voiced the
+ultra-Southern feeling on the subject, announcing in his speech that
+diplomatic intercourse with Hayti should not even be discussed in the
+senate chamber, and that we could have no association with republics who
+had "black generals in their armies and mulatto senators in their
+congresses." But this feeling on the part of the slave-holders against
+the measure was largely, although not wholly, spurious; and really had
+less to do with the attitude of the Jacksonian Democrats than had a mere
+factious opposition to Adams and Clay. This was shown by the vote on the
+confirmation of the ministers, when the senators divided on party and
+not on sectional lines. The nominations were confirmed, but not till
+after such a length of time that the ministers were unable to reach
+Panama until after the congress had adjourned.
+
+The Oregon question again came up during Adams's term, the
+administration favoring the renewal of the joint occupation convention,
+by which we held the country in common with Great Britain. There was
+not much public feeling in the matter; in the East there was none
+whatever. But Benton, when he opposed the renewal, and claimed the whole
+territory as ours, gave expression to the desires of all the Westerners
+who thought over the subject at all. He was followed by only half a
+dozen senators, all but one from the West, and from both sides of the
+Ohio--Illinois, Kentucky, Tennessee, Mississippi; the Northwest and
+Southwest as usual acting together.
+
+The vote on the protective tariff law of 1828 furnished another
+illustration of the solidarity of the West. New England had abandoned
+her free trade position since 1824, and the North went strongly for the
+new tariff; the Southern sea-coast states, except Louisiana, opposed it
+bitterly; and the bill was carried by the support of the Western States,
+both the free and the slave. This tariff bill was the first of the
+immediate irritating causes which induced South Carolina to go into the
+nullification movement. Benton's attitude on the measure was that of a
+good many other men who, in their public capacities, are obliged to
+appear as protectionists, but who lack his frankness in stating their
+reasons. He utterly disbelieved in and was opposed to the principle of
+the bill, but as it had bid for and secured the interest of Missouri by
+a heavy duty on lead, he felt himself forced to support it; and so he
+announced his position. He simply went with his state, precisely as did
+Webster, the latter, in following Massachusetts' change of front and
+supporting the tariff of 1828, turning a full and complete somersault.
+Neither the one nor the other was to blame. Free traders are apt to look
+at the tariff from a sentimental stand-point; but it is in reality
+purely a business matter, and should be decided solely on grounds of
+expediency. Political economists have pretty generally agreed that
+protection is vicious in theory and harmful in practice; but if the
+majority of the people in interest wish it, and it affects only
+themselves, there is no earthly reason why they should not be allowed to
+try the experiment to their hearts' content. The trouble is that it
+rarely does affect only themselves; and in 1828 the evil was peculiarly
+aggravated on account of the unequal way in which the proposed law would
+affect different sections. It purported to benefit the rest of the
+country, but it undoubtedly worked real injury to the planter states,
+and there is small ground for wonder that the irritation over it in the
+region so affected should have been intense.
+
+During Adams's term Benton began his fight for disposing of the public
+lands to actual settlers at a small cost. It was a move of enormous
+importance to the whole West; and Benton's long and sturdy contest for
+it, and for the right of preëmption, entitle him to the greatest credit.
+He never gave up the struggle, although repulsed again and again, and at
+the best only partially successful; for he had to encounter much
+opposition, especially from the short-sighted selfishness of many of the
+Northeasterners, who wished to consider the public lands purely as
+sources of revenue. He utterly opposed the then existing system of
+selling land to the highest bidder--a most hurtful practice; and
+objected to the establishment of an arbitrary minimum price, which
+practically kept all land below a certain value out of the market
+altogether. He succeeded in establishing the preëmption system, and had
+the system of renting public mines, etc., abolished; and he struggled
+for the principle of giving land outright to settlers in certain cases.
+As a whole, his theory of a liberal system of land distribution was
+undoubtedly the correct one, and he deserves the greatest credit for
+having pushed it as he did.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+THE ELECTION OF JACKSON, AND THE SPOILS SYSTEM.
+
+
+In the presidential election of 1828 Jackson and Adams were pitted
+against each other as the only candidates before the people, and Jackson
+won an overwhelming victory. The followers of the two were fast
+developing respectively into Democrats and Whigs, and the parties were
+hardening and taking shape, while the dividing lines were being drawn
+more clearly and distinctly. But the contest was largely a personal one,
+and Jackson's success was due to his own immense popularity more than to
+any party principles which he was supposed to represent. Almost the
+entire strength of Adams was in the Northeast; but it is absolutely
+wrong to assume, because of this fact, that the election even remotely
+foreshadowed the way in which party lines would be drawn in the coming
+sectional antagonism over slavery. Adams led Jackson in the two slave
+states of Maryland and Delaware; and in the free states outside of New
+England Jackson had an even greater lead over Adams. East of the
+Alleghanies it may here and there have been taken as in some sort a
+triumph of the South over the North; but its sectional significance, as
+far as it had any, really came from its being a victory of the West over
+the East. Infinitely more important than this was the fact that it
+represented the overwhelmingly successful upheaval of the most extreme
+democratic elements in the community.
+
+Until 1828 all the presidents, and indeed almost all the men who took
+the lead in public life, alike in national and in state affairs, had
+been drawn from what in Europe would have been called the "upper
+classes." They were mainly college-bred men of high social standing, as
+well educated as any in the community, usually rich or at least
+well-to-do. Their subordinates in office were of much the same material.
+It was believed, and the belief was acted upon, that public life needed
+an apprenticeship of training and experience. Many of our public men had
+been able; almost all had been honorable and upright. The change of
+parties in 1800, when the Jeffersonian Democracy came in, altered the
+policy of the government, but not the character of the officials. In
+that movement, though Jefferson had behind him the mass of the people as
+the rank and file of his party, yet all his captains were still drawn
+from among the men in the same social position as himself. The
+Revolutionary War had been fought under the leadership of the colonial
+gentry; and for years after it was over the people, as a whole, felt
+that their interests could be safely intrusted to and were identical
+with those of the descendants of their revolutionary leaders. The
+classes in which were to be found almost all the learning, the talent,
+the business activity, and the inherited wealth and refinement of the
+country, had also hitherto contributed much to the body of its rulers.
+
+The Jacksonian Democracy stood for the revolt against these rulers; its
+leaders, as well as their followers, all came from the mass of the
+people. The majority of the voters supported Jackson because they felt
+he was one of themselves, and because they understood that his election
+would mean the complete overthrow of the classes in power and their
+retirement from the control of the government. There was nothing to be
+said against the rulers of the day; they had served the country and all
+its citizens well, and they were dismissed, not because the voters could
+truthfully allege any wrong-doing whatsoever against them, but solely
+because, in their purely private and personal feelings and habits of
+life, they were supposed to differ from the mass of the people. This
+was such an outrageously absurd feeling that the very men who were
+actuated by it, or who, like Benton, shaped and guided it, were ashamed
+to confess the true reason of their actions, and tried to cloak it
+behind an outcry, as vague and senseless as it was clamorous, against
+"aristocratic corruption" and other shadowy and spectral evils. Benton
+even talked loosely of "retrieving the country from the deplorable
+condition in which the enlightened classes had sunk it," although the
+country was perfectly prosperous and in its usual state of quiet,
+healthy growth. On the other hand, the opponents of Jackson indulged in
+talk almost as wild, and fears even more extravagant than his
+supporters' hopes; and the root of much of their opposition lay in a
+concealed but still existent caste antagonism to a man of Jackson's
+birth and bringing up. In fact, neither side, in spite of all their loud
+talk of American Republicanism, had yet mastered enough of its true
+spirit to be able to see that so long as public officers did their whole
+duty to all classes alike, it was not in the least the affair of their
+constituents whether they chose to spend their hours of social
+relaxation in their shirt-sleeves or in dress coats.
+
+The change was a great one; it was not a change of the policy under
+which the government was managed, as in Jefferson's triumph, but of the
+men who controlled it. The two great democratic victories had little in
+common; almost as little as had the two great leaders under whose
+auspices they were respectively won,--and few men were ever more unlike
+than the scholarly, timid, and shifty doctrinaire, who supplanted the
+elder Adams, and the ignorant, headstrong, and straightforward soldier,
+who was victor over the younger. That the change was the deliberate
+choice of the great mass of the people, and that it was one for the
+worse, was then, and has been ever since, the opinion of most thinking
+men; certainly the public service then took its first and greatest step
+in that downward career of progressive debasement and deterioration
+which has only been checked in our own days. But those who would,
+off-hand, decry the democratic principle on this account would do well
+to look at the nearly contemporaneous career of the pet heroes of a
+trans-Atlantic aristocracy before passing judgment. A very charming
+English historian of our day[1] has compared Wellington with Washington;
+it would have been far juster to have compared him with Andrew Jackson.
+Both were men of strong, narrow minds and bitter prejudices, with few
+statesmanlike qualities, who, for brilliant military services, were
+raised to the highest civil positions in the gift of the state. The
+feeling among the aristocratic classes of Great Britain in favor of the
+Iron Duke was nearly as strong and quite as unreasonable as was the
+homage paid by their homelier kinsfolk across the Atlantic to Old
+Hickory. Wellington's military successes were far greater, for he had
+more chances; but no single feat of his surpassed the remarkable victory
+won against his ablest lieutenant and choicest troops by a much smaller
+number of backwoods riflemen under Andrew Jackson. As a statesman
+Wellington may have done less harm than Jackson, for he had less
+influence; but he has no such great mark to his credit as the old
+Tennessean's attitude toward the Nullifiers. If Jackson's election is a
+proof that the majority is not always right, Wellington's elevation may
+be taken as showing that the minority, or a fraction thereof, is in its
+turn quite as likely to be wrong.
+
+[1: Justin McCarthy.]
+
+This caste antagonism was the distinguishing feature in the election of
+1828, and the partially sectional character of the contest was due to
+the different degree of development the caste spirit had reached in
+different portions of the Union. In New England wealth was quite evenly
+distributed, and education and intelligence were nearly universal; so
+there the antagonism was slight, the bulk of the New England vote being
+given, as usually before and since, in favor of the right candidate. In
+the Middle States, on the contrary, the antagonism was very strong. In
+the South it was of but little political account as between the whites
+themselves, they all being knit together by the barbarous bond of a
+common lordship of race; and here the feeling for Jackson was largely
+derived from the close kinship still felt for the West. In the West
+itself, where Jackson's great strength lay, the people were still too
+much on the same plane of thought as well as of material prosperity, and
+the wealthy and cultivated classes were of too limited extent to admit
+of much caste feeling against the latter; and, accordingly, instead of
+hostility to them, the Western caste spirit took the form of hostility
+to their far more numerous representatives who had hitherto formed the
+bulk of the political rulers of the East.
+
+New England was not only the most advanced portion of the Union, as
+regards intelligence, culture, and general prosperity, but was also most
+disagreeably aware of the fact, and was possessed with a self-conscious
+virtue that was peculiarly irritating to the Westerners, who knew that
+they were looked down upon, and savagely resented it on every occasion;
+and, besides, New England was apt to meddle in affairs that more nearly
+concerned other localities. Several of Benton's speeches, at this time,
+show this irritation against the Northeast, and also incidentally bring
+out the solidarity of interest felt throughout the West. In a long and
+able speech, favoring the repeal of the iniquitous "salt tax," or high
+duty on imported salt (a great hobby of his, in which, after many
+efforts, he was finally successful), he brought out the latter point
+very strongly, besides complaining of the disproportionate lightness of
+the burden imposed upon the Northeast by the high tariff, of which he
+announced himself to be but a moderate adherent. In common with all
+other Western statesmen, he resented keenly the suspicion with which the
+Northeast was then only too apt to regard the West, quoting in one of
+his speeches with angry resentment a prevalent New England sneer at "the
+savages beyond the Alleghanies." At the time we are speaking of it must
+be remembered that many even of the most advanced Easterners were
+utterly incapable of appreciating the almost limitless capacity of their
+country for growth and expansion, being in this respect far behind their
+Western brethren; indeed, many regarded the acquisition of any new
+territory in the West with alarm and regret, as tending to make the
+Union of such unwieldy size that it would break of its own weight.
+
+Benton was the leading opponent of a proposal, introduced by Senator
+Foot of Connecticut, to inquire into the expediency of limiting the
+sales of public lands to such lands as were then in the market. The
+limitation would have been most injurious to the entire West, which was
+thus menaced by the action of a New Englander, while Benton appeared as
+the champion of the whole section, North and South alike, in the speech
+wherein he strenuously and successfully opposed the adoption of the
+resolution, and at the same time bitterly attacked the quarter of the
+country from which it came, as having from the earliest years opposed
+everything that might advance the interests of the people beyond the
+Alleghanies. Webster came to the assistance of the mover of the measure
+in a speech wherein, among other things, he claimed for the North the
+merit of the passage of the Ordinance of 1787, in relation to the
+Northwest Territory, and especially of the anti-slavery clause therein
+contained. But Benton here caught him tripping, and in a very good
+speech showed that he was completely mistaken in his facts. The debate
+now, however, completely left the point at issue, taking a bitterly
+sectional turn, and giving rise to the famous controversy between
+Hayne, of South Carolina, who for the first time on the floor of the
+Senate announced the doctrine of nullification, and Webster, who, in
+response to his antagonist, voiced the feeling of the Union men of the
+North in that wonderful and magnificent speech known ever since under
+the name of the "Reply to Hayne," and the calling forth of which will
+henceforward be Hayne's sole title to fame. Benton, though himself a
+strong Union and anti-nullification man, was still too excited over the
+subject-matter of the bill and the original discussion over it to
+understand that the debate had ranged off upon matters of infinitely
+greater importance, and entirely failed to realize that he had listened
+to the greatest piece of oratory of the century. On the contrary,
+encouraged by his success earlier in the debate, he actually attempted a
+kind of reply to Webster, attacking him with invective and sarcasm as an
+alarmist, and taunting him with the memory of the Hartford Convention,
+which had been held by members of the Federalist party, to which Webster
+himself had once belonged. Benton afterwards became convinced that
+Webster's views were by no means those of a mere alarmist, and frankly
+stated that he had been wrong in his position; but at the time, heated
+by his original grievance, as a Western man, against New England, he
+failed entirely to understand the true drift of Hayne's speech. Much of
+New England's policy to the West was certainly excessively
+narrow-minded.
+
+Jackson's administration derives a most unenviable notoriety as being
+the one under which the "spoils system" became, for the first time,
+grafted on the civil service of the nation; appointments and removals in
+the public service being made dependent upon political qualifications,
+and not, as hitherto, upon merit or capacity. Benton, to his honor,
+always stoutly opposed this system. It is unfair to assert that Jackson
+was the originator of this method of appointment; but he was certainly
+its foster-father, and more than any one else is responsible for its
+introduction into the affairs of the national government. Despite all
+the Eastern sneers at the "savages" of the West, it was from Eastern men
+that this most effective method of debauching political life came. The
+Jacksonian Democrats of the West, when they introduced it into the
+working of the federal government, simply copied the system which they
+found already firmly established by their Eastern allies in New York and
+Pennsylvania. For many years the course of politics throughout the
+country had been preparing and foreshadowing the advent of the "spoils
+system." The greatest single stroke in its favor had been done at the
+instigation of Crawford, when that scheming politician was seeking the
+presidency, and, to further his ends, he procured the passage by
+Congress of a law limiting the term of service of all public officials
+to four years, thus turning out of office all the fifty thousand public
+servants during each presidential term. This law has never been
+repealed, every low politician being vitally interested in keeping it as
+it is, and accordingly it is to be found on the statute-books at the
+present day; and though it has the company of some other very bad
+measures, it still remains very much the worst of all, as regards both
+the evil it has done and that which it is still doing. This four years'
+limitation law was passed without comment or protest, every one voting
+in its favor, its probable working not being comprehended in the least.
+Says Benton, who, with all his colleagues, voted for it: "The object of
+the law was to pass the disbursing officers every four years under the
+supervision of the appointing power, for the inspection of their
+accounts, in order that defaulters might be detected and dropped, while
+the faithful should be ascertained and continued.... It was found to
+operate contrary to its intent, and to have become the facile means of
+getting rid of faithful disbursing officers, instead of retaining
+them." New York has always had a low political standard, one or the
+other of its great party and factional organizations, and often both or
+all of them, being at all times most unlovely bodies of excessively
+unwholesome moral tone. Aaron Burr introduced the "spoils system" into
+her state affairs, and his methods were followed and improved upon by
+Marcy, Wright, Van Buren, and all the "Albany Regency." In 1829 these
+men found themselves an important constituent portion of the winning
+party, and immediately, by the help of the only too willing Jackson,
+proceeded to apply their system to affairs at Washington. It was about
+this time that, in the course of a debate in the Senate, Marcy gave
+utterance to the now notorious maxim, "To the victors belong the
+spoils."
+
+Under Adams the non-partisan character of the public service had been
+guarded with a scrupulous care that could almost be called exaggerated.
+Indeed, Adams certainly went altogether too far in his non-partisanship
+when it came to appointing cabinet and other high officers, his views on
+such points being not only fantastic, but absolutely wrong. The
+colorless character of his administration was largely due to his having,
+in his anxiety to avoid blind and unreasoning adherence to party,
+committed the only less serious fault of paying too little heed to
+party; for a healthy party spirit is prerequisite to the performance of
+effective work in American political life. Adams was not elected purely
+for himself, but also on account of the men and the principles that he
+was supposed to represent; and when he partly surrounded himself with
+men of opposite principles, he just so far, though from the best of
+motives, betrayed his supporters, and rightly forfeited much of their
+confidence. But, under him, every public servant felt that, so long as
+he faithfully served the state, his position was secure, no matter what
+his political opinions might be.
+
+With the incoming of the Jacksonians all this changed, and terribly for
+the worse. A perfect reign of terror ensued among the office-holders. In
+the first month of the new administration more removals took place than
+during all the previous administrations put together. Appointments were
+made with little or no attention to fitness, or even honesty, but solely
+because of personal or political services. Removals were not made in
+accordance with any known rule at all; the most frivolous pretexts were
+sufficient, if advanced by useful politicians who needed places already
+held by capable incumbents. Spying and tale-bearing became prominent
+features of official life, the meaner office-holders trying to save
+their own heads by denouncing others. The very best men were
+unceremoniously and causelessly dismissed; gray-headed clerks, who had
+been appointed by the earlier presidents,--by Washington, the elder
+Adams, and Jefferson,--being turned off at an hour's notice, although a
+quarter of a century's faithful work in the public service had unfitted
+them to earn their living elsewhere. Indeed, it was upon the best and
+most efficient men that the blow fell heaviest; the spies, tale-bearers,
+and tricksters often retained their positions. In 1829 the public
+service was, as it always had been, administered purely in the interest
+of the people; and the man who was styled the especial champion of the
+people dealt that service the heaviest blow it has ever received.
+
+Benton himself always took a sound stand on the civil service question,
+although his partisanship led him at times to defend Jackson's course
+when he must have known well that it was indefensible. He viewed with
+the greatest alarm and hostility the growth of the "spoils system," and
+early introduced, as chairman of a special committee, a bill to repeal
+the harmful four years' limitation act. In discussing this proposed bill
+afterwards, he wrote, in words that apply as much at this time as they
+did then: "The expiration of the four years' term came to be considered
+as the termination and vacation of all the offices on which it fell,
+and the creation of vacancies to be filled at the option of the
+president. The bill to remedy this defect gave legal effect to the
+original intention of the law by confining the vacation of office to
+actual defaulters. The power of the president to dismiss civil officers
+was not attempted to be curtailed, but the restraints of responsibility
+were placed upon its exercise by requiring the cause of dismission to be
+communicated to Congress in each case. The section of the bill to that
+effect was in these words: _That in all nominations made by the
+president to the Senate, to fill vacancies occasioned by an exercise of
+the president's power to remove from office, the fact of the removal
+shall be stated to the Senate at the same time that the nomination is
+made, with a statement of the reasons for which such officer may have
+been removed._ This was intended to operate as a restraint upon removals
+without cause."
+
+In the "Thirty Years' View" he again writes, in language which would be
+appropriate from every advanced civil service reformer of the present
+day, that is, from every disinterested man who has studied the workings
+of the "spoils system" with any intelligence:--
+
+ I consider "sweeping" removals, as now practiced by both parties, a
+ great political evil in our country, injurious to individuals, to
+ the public service, to the purity of elections, and to the harmony
+ and union of the people. Certainly no individual has a right to an
+ office; no one has an estate or property in a public employment; but
+ when a mere ministerial worker in a subordinate station has learned
+ its duties by experience and approved his fidelity by his conduct,
+ it is an injury to the public service to exchange him for a novice
+ whose only title to the place may be a political badge or partisan
+ service. It is exchanging experience for inexperience, tried ability
+ for untried, and destroying the incentive to good conduct by
+ destroying its reward. To the party displaced it is an injury, he
+ having become a proficient in that business, expecting to remain in
+ it during good behavior, and finding it difficult, at an advanced
+ age, and with fixed habits, to begin a new career in some new walk
+ of life. It converts elections into scrambles for office, and
+ degrades the government into an office for rewards and punishments;
+ and divides the people of the Union into two adverse parties, each
+ in its turn, and as it becomes dominant, to strip and proscribe the
+ other.
+
+Benton had now taken the position which he was for many years to hold,
+as the recognized senatorial leader of a great and well-defined party.
+Until 1828 the prominent political chiefs of the nation had either been
+its presidents, or had been in the cabinets of these presidents. But
+after Jackson's time they were in the Senate, and it was on this body
+that public attention was concentrated. Jackson's cabinet itself showed
+such a falling off, when compared with the cabinets of any of his
+predecessors, as to justify the caustic criticism that, when he took
+office, there came in "the millennium of the minnows." In the Senate, on
+the contrary, there were never before or since so many men of commanding
+intellect and powers. Calhoun had been elected as vice-president on the
+Jacksonian ticket, and was thus, in 1829, presiding over the body of
+which he soon became an active member; Webster and Clay were already
+taking their positions as the leaders of the great National Republican,
+or, as it was afterwards called, Whig party.
+
+When the rupture between Calhoun and the Jacksonian Democrats, and the
+resignation of the former from the vice-presidency took place, three
+parties developed in the United States Senate. One was composed of the
+Jacksonian Democrats, with Benton at their head; one was made up of the
+little band of Nullifiers, led by Calhoun; and the third included the
+rather loose array of the Whigs, under Clay and Webster. The feeling of
+the Jacksonians towards Calhoun and the Nullifiers and towards Clay and
+the Clay Whigs were largely those of personal animosity; but they had
+very little of this sentiment towards Webster and his associates, their
+differences with them being on questions of party principle, or else
+proceeding from merely sectional causes.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+THE STRUGGLE WITH THE NULLIFIERS.
+
+
+During both Jackson's presidential terms he and his adherents were
+engaged in two great struggles; that with the Nullifiers, and that with
+the Bank. Although these struggles were in part synchronous, it will be
+easier to discuss each by itself.
+
+The nullification movement in South Carolina, during the latter part of
+the third and early part of the fourth decades in the present century,
+had nothing to do, except in the most distant way, with slavery. Its
+immediate cause was the high tariff; remotely it sprang from the same
+feelings which produced the Virginia and Kentucky resolutions of 1798.
+
+Certain of the Slave States, including those which raised hemp, indigo,
+and sugar, were high-tariff states; indeed, it was not till towards the
+close of the presidency of Monroe that there had been much sectional
+feeling over the policy of protection. Originally, while we were a
+purely agricultural and mercantile people, free trade was the only
+economic policy which occurred to us as possible to be followed, the
+first tariff bill being passed in 1816. South Carolina then was inclined
+to favor the system, Calhoun himself supporting the bill, and, his
+subsequent denials to the contrary notwithstanding, distinctly
+advocating the policy of protection to native industries; while
+Massachusetts then and afterwards stoutly opposed its introduction, as
+hostile to her interests. However, the bill was passed, and
+Massachusetts had to submit to its operation. After 1816 new tariff laws
+were enacted about every four years, and soon the coast Slave States,
+except Louisiana, realized that their working was hurtful to the
+interests of the planters. New England also changed her attitude; and
+when the protective tariff bill of 1828 came up, its opponents and
+supporters were sharply divided by sectional lines. But these lines were
+not such as would have divided the states on the question of slavery.
+The Northeast and Northwest alike favored the measure, as also did all
+the Southern States west of the Alleghanies, and Louisiana. It was
+therefore passed by an overwhelming vote, against the solid opposition
+of the belt of Southern coast states stretching from Virginia to
+Mississippi, and including these two.
+
+The states that felt themselves harmed by the tariff did something more
+than record their disapproval by the votes of their representatives in
+Congress. They nearly all, through their legislatures, entered emphatic
+protests against its adoption, as being most harmful to them and
+dangerous to the Union; and some accompanied their protests with threats
+as to what would be done if the obnoxious laws should be enforced. They
+certainly had grounds for discontent. In 1828 the tariff, whether it
+benefited the country as a whole or not, unquestionably harmed the
+South; and in a federal Union it is most unwise to pass laws which shall
+benefit one part of the community to the hurt of another part, when the
+latter receives no compensation. The truculent and unyielding attitude
+of the extreme protectionists was irritating in the extreme; for cooler
+men than the South Carolinians might well have been exasperated at such
+an utterance as that of Henry Clay, when he stated that for the sake of
+the "American system"--by which title he was fond of styling a doctrine
+already ancient in mediæval times--he would "defy the South, the
+president and the devil."
+
+On the other hand, both the good and the evil effects of the tariff were
+greatly exaggerated. Some harm to the planter states was doubtless
+caused by it; but their falling back, as compared with the North, in
+the race for prosperity, was doubtless caused much more by the presence
+of slavery, as Dallas, of Pennsylvania, pointed out in the course of
+some very temperate and moderate remarks in the Senate. Clay's
+assertions as to what the tariff had done for the West were equally
+ill-founded, as Benton showed in a good speech, wherein he described
+picturesquely enough the industries and general condition of his portion
+of the country, and asserted with truth that its revived prosperity was
+due to its own resources, entirely independent of federal aid or
+legislation. He said: "I do not think we are indebted to the high tariff
+for our fertile lands and our navigable rivers; and I am certain we are
+indebted to these blessings for the prosperity we enjoy." "In all that
+comes from the soil the people of the West are rich. They have an
+abundant supply of food for man and beast, and a large surplus to send
+abroad. They have the comfortable living which industry creates for
+itself in a rich soil, but beyond this they are poor.... They have no
+roads paved or macadamized; no canals or aqueducts; no bridges of stone
+across the innumerable streams; no edifices dedicated to eternity; no
+schools for the fine arts; not a public library for which an ordinary
+scholar would not apologize." Then he went on to speak of the commerce
+of the West and its exports, "the marching myriads of living animals
+annually taking their departure from the heart of the West, defiling
+through the gorges of the Cumberland, the Alleghany, and the Appalachian
+mountains, or traversing the plains of the South, diverging as they
+march, ... and the flying steamboats and the fleets of floating arks,
+loaded with the products of the forest, the farm, and the pasture,
+following the courses of our noble rivers, and bearing their freights to
+the great city" of New Orleans.
+
+Unfortunately Benton would interlard even his best speeches with
+theories of economics often more or less crude, and, still worse, with a
+series of classic quotations and allusions; for he was grievously
+afflicted with the rage for cheap pseudo-classicism that Jefferson and
+his school had borrowed from the French revolutionists. Nor could he
+resist the temptation to drag in allusions to some favorite hobby. The
+repeal of the salt-tax was an especial favorite of his. He was perfectly
+right in attacking the tax, and deserves the greatest credit for the
+persistency which finally won him the victory. But his associates,
+unless of a humorous turn of mind, must have found his allusions to it
+rather tiresome, as when, apropos of the commerce of the Mississippi,
+and without any possible excuse for speaking of the iniquity of taxing
+salt, he suddenly alluded to New Orleans as "that great city which
+revives upon the banks of the Mississippi the name of the greatest of
+the emperors[2] that ever reigned upon the banks of the Tiber, and who
+eclipsed the glory of his own heroic exploits by giving an order to his
+legions never to levy a contribution of salt upon a Roman citizen!"
+
+[2: Aurelian.]
+
+It must be admitted that the tariff did some harm to the South, and that
+it was natural for the latter to feel resentment at the way in which it
+worked. But it must also be remembered that no law can be passed which
+does not distribute its benefits more or less unequally, and which does
+not, in all probability, work harm in some cases. Moreover, the South
+was estopped from complaining of one section being harmed by a law that
+benefited, or was supposed to benefit, the country at large, by her
+position in regard to the famous embargo and non-intervention acts.
+These inflicted infinitely more damage and loss in New England than any
+tariff law could inflict on South Carolina, and, moreover, were put into
+execution on account of a quarrel with England forced on by the West and
+South contrary to the desire of the East. Yet the Southerners were
+fierce in their denunciations of such of the Federalists as went to the
+extreme in opposition to them. Even in 1816 Massachusetts had been
+obliged to submit with good grace to the workings of a tariff which she
+deemed hostile to her interests, and which many Southerners then
+advocated. Certainly, even if the new tariff laws were ill-advised,
+unjust, and unequal in their working, yet they did not, in the most
+remote degree, justify any effort to break up the Union; especially the
+South had no business to complain when she herself had joined in laying
+heavier burdens on the shoulders of New England.
+
+Complain she did, however; and soon added threats to complaints, and was
+evidently ready to add acts to threats. Georgia, at first, took the lead
+in denunciation; but South Carolina soon surpassed her, and finally went
+to the length of advocating and preparing for separation from the Union;
+a step that produced a revulsion of feeling even among her fellow
+anti-tariff states. The South Carolinian statesmen now proclaimed the
+doctrine of nullification,--that is, proclaimed that if any state deemed
+a federal law improper, it could proceed to declare that law null and
+void so far as its own territory was concerned,--and, as a corollary,
+that it had the right forcibly to prevent execution of this void law
+within its borders. This was proclaimed, not as an exercise of the right
+of revolution, which, in the last resort, belongs, of course, to every
+community and class, but as a constitutional privilege. Jefferson was
+quoted as the father of the idea, and the Kentucky resolutions of
+1798-99, which he drew, were cited as the precedent for the South
+Carolinian action. In both these last assertions the Nullifiers were
+correct. Jefferson was the father of nullification, and therefore of
+secession. He used the word "nullify" in the original draft which he
+supplied to the Kentucky legislature, and though that body struck it out
+of the resolutions which they passed in 1798, they inserted it in those
+of the following year. This was done mainly as an unscrupulous party
+move on Jefferson's part, and when his side came into power he became a
+firm upholder of the Union; and, being constitutionally unable to put a
+proper value on truthfulness, he even denied that his resolutions could
+be construed to favor nullification--though they could by no possibility
+be construed to mean anything else.
+
+At this time it is not necessary to discuss nullification as a
+constitutional dogma; it is an absurdity too great to demand serious
+refutation. The United States has the same right to protect itself from
+death by nullification, secession, or rebellion, that a man has to
+protect himself from death by assassination. Calhoun's hair-splitting
+and metaphysical disquisitions on the constitutionality of nullification
+have now little more practical interest than have the extraordinary
+arguments and discussions of the school-men of the Middle Ages.
+
+But at the time they were of vital interest, for they were words which
+it was known South Carolina was prepared to back up by deeds. Calhoun
+was vice-president, the second officer in the federal government, and
+yet also the avowed leader of the most bitter disunionists. His state
+supported him by an overwhelming majority, although even within its own
+borders there was an able opposition, headed by the gallant and loyal
+family of the Draytons,--the same family that afterwards furnished the
+captain of Farragut's flag-ship, the glorious old Hartford. There was a
+strong sentiment in the other Southern States in his favor; the public
+men of South Carolina made speech after speech goading him on to take
+even more advanced ground.
+
+In Washington the current at first seemed to be all setting in favor of
+the Nullifiers; they even counted on Jackson's support, as he was a
+Southerner and a states'-rights man. But he was also a strong Unionist,
+and, moreover, at this time, felt very bitterly towards Calhoun, with
+whom he had just had a split, and had in consequence remodeled his
+cabinet, thrusting out all Calhoun's supporters, and adopting Van Buren
+as his political heir,--the position which it was hitherto supposed the
+great Carolina separatist occupied.
+
+The first man to take up the gauntlet the Nullifiers had thrown down was
+Webster, in his famous reply to Hayne. He, of course, voiced the
+sentiment of the Whigs, and especially of the Northeast, where the high
+tariff was regarded with peculiar favor, where the Union feeling was
+strong, and where there was a certain antagonism felt towards the South.
+The Jacksonian Democrats, whose strength lay in the West, had not yet
+spoken. They were, for the most part, neither ultra protectionists nor
+absolute free-traders; Jackson's early presidential utterances had given
+offense to the South by not condemning all high-tariff legislation, but
+at the same time had declared in favor of a much more moderate degree of
+protection than suited the Whigs. Only a few weeks after Webster's
+speech Jackson's chance came, and he declared himself in unmistakable
+terms. It was on the occasion of the Jefferson birthday banquet, April
+13, 1830. An effort was then being made to have Jefferson's birthday
+celebrated annually; and the Nullifiers, rightly claiming him as their
+first and chief apostle, attempted to turn this particular feast into a
+demonstration in favor of nullification. Most of the speakers present
+were actively or passively in favor of the movement, and the toasts
+proposed strongly savored of the new doctrine. But Jackson, Benton, and
+a number of other Union men were in attendance also, and when it came to
+Jackson's turn he electrified the audience by proposing: "Our federal
+Union; it must be preserved." Calhoun at once answered with: "The Union;
+next to our liberty the most dear; may we all remember that it can only
+be preserved by respecting the rights of the states and distributing
+equally the benefit and burden of the Union." The issue between the
+president and the vice-president was now complete, and the Jacksonian
+Democracy was squarely committed against nullification. Jackson had
+risen to the occasion as only a strong and a great man could rise, and
+his few, telling words, finely contrasting at every point with Calhoun's
+utterances, rang throughout the whole country, and will last as long as
+our government. One result, at least, the Nullifiers accomplished,--they
+completely put an end to the Jefferson birthday celebrations.
+
+The South Carolinians had no intention of flinching from the contest
+which they had provoked, even when they saw that the North and West were
+united against them, and though the tide began to set the same way in
+their sister states of the South; North Carolina, among the latter,
+being the first and most pronounced in her support of the president and
+denunciation of the Nullifiers. The men of the Palmetto State have
+always ranked high for hotheaded courage, and they soon showed that they
+had wills as fiery as that of Jackson himself. Yet in the latter they
+had met an antagonist well worthy of any foeman's steel. In declining an
+invitation to be present at Charleston, on July 4, 1831, the president
+again defined most clearly his position in favor of the Union, and his
+words had an especial significance because he let it be seen that he was
+fully determined to back them up by force if necessary. But his letter
+only had the effect of inflaming still more the minds of the South
+Carolinians. The prime cause of irritation, the tariff, still remained;
+and in 1832, Clay, having entered the Senate after a long retirement
+from politics, put the finishing stroke to their anger by procuring the
+passage of a new tariff bill, which left the planter states almost as
+badly off as did the law of 1828. Jackson signed this, although not
+believing that it went far enough in the reduction of duties.
+
+In the presidential election of 1832, Jackson defeated Clay by an
+enormous majority; Van Buren was elected vice-president, there being
+thus a Northern man on the ticket. South Carolina declined to take part
+in the election, throwing away her vote. Again, it must be kept in mind
+that the slave question did not shape, or, indeed, enter into this
+contest at all, directly, although beginning to be present in the
+background as a source of irritation. In 1832 there was ten-fold more
+feeling in the North against Masonry, and secret societies generally,
+than there was against slavery.
+
+Benton threw himself in, heart and soul, with the Union party, acting as
+Jackson's right-hand man throughout the contest with South Carolina, and
+showing an even more resolute and unflinching front than Old Hickory
+himself. No better or trustier ally than the Missouri statesman, in a
+hard fight for a principle, could be desired. He was intensely national
+in all his habits of thought; he took a deep, personal pride in all his
+country,--North, South, East, and West. He had been very loath to
+believe that any movement hostile to the Union was really on foot; but
+once thoroughly convinced of it he chose his own line of action without
+an instant's hesitation.
+
+A fortnight after the presidential election South Carolina passed her
+ordinance of nullification, directed against the tariff laws generally,
+and against those of 1828 and 1832 in particular. The ordinance was to
+take effect on February 1st; and if meantime the federal government
+should make any attempt to enforce the laws, the fact of such attempt
+was to end the continuance of South Carolina in the Union.
+
+Jackson promptly issued a proclamation against nullification, composed
+jointly by himself and the great Louisiana jurist and statesman,
+Livingston. It is one of the ablest, as well as one of the most
+important, of all American state papers. It is hard to see how any
+American can read it now without feeling his veins thrill. Some claim it
+as being mainly the work of Jackson, others as that of Livingston; it is
+great honor for either to have had a hand in its production.
+
+In his annual message the president merely referred, in passing, to the
+Nullifiers, expressing his opinion that the action in reducing the
+duties, which the extinction of the public debt would permit and
+require, would put an end to the proceedings. As matters grew more
+threatening, however, South Carolina making every preparation for war
+and apparently not being conciliated in the least by the evident desire
+in Congress to meet her more than half-way on the tariff question,
+Jackson sent a special message to both houses. He had already sent
+General Scott to Charleston, and had begun the concentration of certain
+military and naval forces in or near the state boundaries. He now asked
+Congress to pass a measure to enable him to deal better with possible
+resistance to the laws. South Carolina having complained of the
+oppressed condition in which she found herself, owing to the working of
+the tariff, Jackson, in his message, with some humor, quoted in reply
+the last Thanksgiving proclamation of her governor, wherein he dilated
+upon the state's unexampled prosperity and happiness.
+
+It must always be kept in mind in describing the attitude of the
+Jacksonian Democrats towards the Nullifiers that they were all along,
+especially in the West, hostile to a very high tariff. Jackson and
+Benton had always favored a much lower tariff than that established in
+1828 and hardly changed in 1832. It was no change of front on their part
+now to advocate a reduction of duties. Jackson and Benton both felt that
+there was much ground for South Carolina's original complaint, although
+as strongly opposed to her nullification attitude as any Northerner.
+Most of the Southern senators and representatives, though opposed to
+nullification, were almost equally hostile to the high tariff; and very
+many others were at heart in sympathy with nullification itself. The
+intensely national and anti-separatist tone of Jackson's declaration,--a
+document that might well have come from Washington or Lincoln, and that
+would have reflected high honor on either,--though warmly approved by
+Benton, was very repugnant to many of the Southern Democrats, and was
+too much even for certain of the Whigs. In fact, it reads like the
+utterance of some great Federalist or Republican leader. The feeling in
+Congress, as a whole, was as strong against the tariff as it was against
+nullification; and Jackson had to take this into account, all the more
+because not only was he in some degree of the same way of thinking, but
+also many of his followers entertained the sentiment even more
+earnestly.
+
+Calhoun introduced a series of nullification resolutions into the
+Senate, and defended them strongly in the prolonged constitutional
+debate that followed. South Carolina meanwhile put off the date at which
+her decrees were to take effect, so that she might see what Congress
+would do. Beyond question, Jackson's firmness, and the way in which he
+was backed up by Benton, Webster, and their followers, was having some
+effect. He had openly avowed his intention, if matters went too far, of
+hanging Calhoun "higher than Haman." He unquestionably meant to
+imprison him, as well as the other South Carolina leaders, the instant
+that state came into actual collision with the Union; and to the end of
+his life regretted, and with reason, that he had not done so without
+waiting for an overt act of resistance. Some historians have treated
+this as if it were an idle threat; but such it certainly was not.
+Jackson undoubtedly fully meant what he said, and would have acted
+promptly had the provocation occurred, and, moreover, he would have been
+sustained by the country. He was not the man to weigh minutely what
+would and what would not fall just on one side or the other of the line
+defining treason; nor was it the time for too scrupulous adherence to
+precise wording. Had a collision occurred, neither Calhoun nor his
+colleague would ever have been permitted to leave Washington; and brave
+though they were, the fact unquestionably had much influence with them.
+
+Webster was now acting heartily with Benton. He introduced a set of
+resolutions which showed that in the matters both of the tariff and of
+nullification his position was much the same as was that of the
+Missourian. Unfortunately Congress, as a whole, was by no means so
+stiff-kneed. A certain number of Whigs followed Webster, and a certain
+number of Democrats clung to Benton; but most Southerners were very
+reluctant to allow pressure to be brought to bear on South Carolina, and
+many Northerners were as willing to compromise as Henry Clay himself. In
+accordance with Jackson's recommendations two bills were introduced: one
+the so-called "Force bill," to allow the president to take steps to
+defend the federal authority in the event of actual collision; and the
+other a moderate, and, on the whole, proper tariff bill, to reduce
+protective duties. Both were introduced by administration supporters.
+Benton and Webster warmly sustained the "Force bill," which was bitterly
+attacked by the Nullifiers and by most of the Southerners, who really
+hardly knew what stand to take, the leading opponent being Tyler of
+Virginia, whose disunion attitude was almost as clearly marked as that
+of Calhoun himself. The measure was eminently just, and was precisely
+what the crisis demanded; and the Senate finally passed it and sent it
+to the House.
+
+All this time an obstinate struggle was going on over the tariff bill.
+Calhoun and his sympathizers were beginning to see that there was real
+danger ahead, alike to themselves, their constituents, and their
+principles, if they followed unswervingly the course they had laid
+down; and the weak-kneed brethren on the other side, headed by Clay,
+were becoming even more uneasy. Calhoun wished to avert collision with
+the federal government; Clay was quite as anxious to avoid an outbreak
+in the South and to save what he could of the protective system, which
+was evidently doomed. Calhoun was willing to sacrifice some of his
+constitutional theories in regard to protection; Clay was ready greatly
+to reduce protection itself. Each, of them, but especially Clay, was
+prepared to shift his stand somewhat from that of abstract moral right
+to that of expediency. Benton and Webster were too resolute and
+determined in their hostility to any form of yielding to South
+Carolina's insolent defiance to admit any hope of getting them to accept
+a compromise; but the majority of the members were known to be only too
+ready to jump at any half-way measure which would patch up the affair
+for the present, no matter what the sacrifice of principle or how great
+the risk incurred for the future. Accordingly, Clay and Calhoun met and
+agreed on a curious bill, in reality recognizing the protective system,
+but making a great although gradual reduction of duties; and Clay
+introduced this as a "compromise measure." It was substituted in the
+House for the administration tariff bill, was passed and sent to the
+Senate. It gave South Carolina much, but not all, that she demanded.
+Her representatives announced themselves satisfied, and supported it,
+together with all their Southern sympathizers. Webster and Benton fought
+it stoutly to the last, but it was passed by a great majority; a few
+Northerners followed Webster, and Benton received fair support from his
+Missouri colleagues and the Maryland senators; the other senators, Whigs
+and Democrats alike, voted for the measure. Many of the Southerners were
+imbued with separatist principles, although not yet to the extent that
+Calhoun was; others, though Union men, did not possess the unflinching
+will and stern strength of character that enabled Benton to stand out
+against any section of the country, even his own, if it was wrong. Silas
+Wright, of New York, a typical Northern "dough-face" politician, gave
+exact expression to the "dough-face" sentiment, which induced Northern
+members to vote for the compromise, when he stated that he was
+unalterably opposed to the principle of the bill, but that on account of
+the attitude of South Carolina, and of the extreme desire which he had
+to remove all cause of discontent in that state, and in order to enable
+her again to become an affectionate member of the Union, he would vote
+for what was satisfactory to her, although repugnant to himself.
+Wright, Marcy, and their successors in New York politics, almost up to
+the present day, certainly carried cringing subserviency to the South to
+a pitch that was fairly sublime.
+
+The "Force bill" and the compromise tariff bill passed both houses
+nearly simultaneously, and were sent up to the president, who signed
+both on the same day. His signing the compromise bill was a piece of
+weakness out of keeping with his whole character, and especially out of
+keeping with his previous course towards the Nullifiers. The position
+assumed by Benton and Webster, that South Carolina should be made to
+submit first and should have the justice of her claims examined into
+afterwards, was unquestionably the only proper attitude.
+
+Benton wrote:--
+
+ My objections to this bill, and to its mode of being passed, were
+ deep and abiding, and went far beyond its own obnoxious provisions,
+ and all the transient and temporary considerations connected with
+ it.... A compromise made with a state in arms is a capitulation to
+ that state.... The injury was great then, and a permanent evil
+ example. It remitted the government to the condition of the old
+ confederation, acting upon sovereignties instead of individuals. It
+ violated the feature of our Union which discriminated it from all
+ confederacies that ever existed, and which was wisely and
+ patriotically put into the Constitution to save it from the fate
+ which had attended all confederacies, ancient and modern.... The
+ framers of our Constitution established a Union instead of a
+ League--to be sovereign and independent within its sphere, acting
+ upon persons through its own laws and courts, instead of acting on
+ communities through persuasion or force. The effect of this
+ compromise legislation was to destroy this great feature of our
+ Union--to bring the general and state governments into conflict--and
+ to substitute a sovereign state for an offending individual as often
+ as a state chose to make the cause of that individual her own.
+
+Not only was Benton's interpretation of the Constitution sound, and one
+that by the course of events has now come to be universally accepted,
+but his criticisms on the wisdom of the compromise bill were perfectly
+just. Had the Anti-Nullifiers stood firm, the Nullifiers would probably
+have given way, and if not, would certainly have been crushed. Against a
+solid North and West, with a divided South, even her own people not
+being unanimous, and with Jackson as chief executive, South Carolina
+could not have made even a respectable resistance. A salutary lesson
+then might very possibly have saved infinite trouble and bloodshed
+thereafter. But in Jackson's case it must be remembered that, so far as
+his acts depended purely upon his own will and judgment, no fault can be
+found with him; he erred only in ratifying a compromise agreed to by the
+vast majority of the representatives of the people in both houses of
+Congress.
+
+The battle did not result in a decisive victory for either side. This
+was shown by the very fact that each party insisted that it had won a
+signal triumph. Calhoun and Clay afterwards quarreled in the senate
+chamber as to which had given up the more in the compromise. South
+Carolina had declared, first, that the tariff was unconstitutional, and
+therefore to be opposed upon principle; second, that it worked injustice
+to her interests, and must be abolished forthwith; thirdly, that, if it
+were not so abolished, she would assert her power to nullify a federal
+law, and, if necessary, would secede from the Union. When her
+representatives agreed to the compromise bill, they abandoned the first
+point; the second was decided largely in her favor, though protection
+was not by any means entirely given up; the third she was allowed to
+insist upon with impunity, although the other side, by passing the
+"Force bill," showed that in case matters did proceed to extremities
+they were prepared to act upon the opposite conviction. Still, she
+gained most of that for which she contended, and the victory, as a
+whole, rested with her. Calhoun's purposes seem to have been, in the
+main, pure; but few criminals have worked as much harm to their country
+as he did. The plea of good intentions is not one that can be allowed to
+have much weight in passing historical judgment upon a man whose
+wrong-headedness and distorted way of looking at things produced, or
+helped to produce, such incalculable evil; there is a wide political
+applicability in the remark attributed to a famous Texan, to the effect
+that he might, in the end, pardon a man who shot him on purpose, but
+that he would surely never forgive one who did so accidentally.
+
+Without doubt, the honors of the nullification dispute were borne off by
+Benton and Webster. The latter's reply to Hayne is, perhaps, the
+greatest single speech of the nineteenth century, and he deserves the
+highest credit for the stubbornness with which he stood by his colors to
+the last. There never was any question of Webster's courage; on the
+occasions when he changed front he was actuated by self-interest and
+ambition, not by timidity. Usually he appears as an advocate rather than
+an earnest believer in the cause he represents; but when it came to be a
+question of the Union, he felt what he said with the whole strength of
+his nature.
+
+An even greater meed of praise attaches to Benton for the unswerving
+fidelity which he showed to the Union in this crisis. Webster was a
+high-tariff man, and was backed up by all the sectional antipathies of
+the Northeast in his opposition to the Nullifiers; Benton, on the
+contrary, was a believer in a low tariff, or in one for revenue merely,
+and his sectional antipathies were the other way. Yet, even when
+deserted by his chief, and when he was opposed to every senator from
+south of the Potomac and the Ohio, he did not flinch for a moment from
+his attitude of aggressive loyalty to the national Union. He had a
+singularly strong and upright character; this country has never had a
+statesman more fearlessly true to his convictions, when great questions
+were at stake, no matter what might be the cost to himself, or the
+pressure from outside,--even when, as happened later, his own state was
+against him. Intellectually he cannot for a moment be compared to the
+great Massachusetts senator; but morally he towers much higher.
+
+Yet, while praising Jackson and Benton for their behavior towards South
+Carolina, we cannot forget that but a couple of years previously they
+had not raised their voices even in the mildest rebuke of Georgia for
+conduct which, though not nearly so bad in degree as that of South
+Carolina, was of much the same kind. Towards the close of Adams's term,
+Georgia had bid defiance to the mandates of the Supreme Court, and
+proceeded to settle the Indian question within her borders without
+regard to the authority of the United States, and these matters were
+still unsettled when Jackson became president. Unfortunately he let his
+personal feelings bias him; and, as he took the Western and Georgian
+view of the Indian question, and, moreover, hated the Supreme Court
+because it was largely Federalist in its composition, he declined to
+interfere. David Crockett, himself a Union man and a nationalist to the
+backbone, rated Jackson savagely, and with justice, for the
+inconsistency of his conduct in the two cases, accusing him of having,
+by his harmful leniency to Georgia, encouraged South Carolina to act as
+she did, and ridiculing him because, while he smiled at the deeds of the
+one state, when the like acts were done by the other, "he took up the
+rod of correction and shook it over her".
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+JACKSON AND BENTON MAKE WAR ON THE BANK.
+
+
+If the struggle with the Nullifiers showed Benton at his best, in the
+conflict with the Bank he exhibited certain qualities which hardly place
+him in so favorable a light. Jackson's attack upon the Bank was a move
+undertaken mainly on his own responsibility, and one which, at first,
+most of his prominent friends were alarmed to see him undertake. Benton
+alone supported him from the beginning. Captain and lieutenant alike
+intensely appreciated the joy of battle; they cared for a fight because
+it was a fight, and the certainty of a struggle, such as would have
+daunted weaker or more timid men, simply offered to them an additional
+inducement to follow out the course they had planned. Benton's
+thorough-going support was invaluable to Jackson. The president sorely
+needed a friend in the Senate who would uphold him through thick and
+thin, and who yet commanded the respect of all his opponents by his
+strength, ability, and courage. To be sure, Benton's knowledge of
+financial economics was not always profound; but, on the other hand, a
+thorough mastery of the laws of finance would have been, in this fight,
+a very serious disadvantage to any champion of Jackson.
+
+The rights and wrongs of this matter have been worn threadbare in
+countless discussions. For much of the hostility of Jackson and Benton
+towards the Bank, there were excellent grounds; but many of their
+actions were wholly indefensible and very harmful in their results to
+the country. An assault upon what Benton called "the money power" is apt
+to be popular in a democratic republic, partly on account of the vague
+fear with which the poorer and more ignorant voters regard a powerful
+institution, whose working they do not understand, and partly on account
+of the jealousy they feel towards those who are better off than
+themselves. When these feelings are appealed to by men who are intensely
+in earnest, and who are themselves convinced of the justice and wisdom
+of their course, they become very formidable factors in any political
+contest.
+
+The struggle first became important when the question of the re-charter
+of the Bank was raised, towards the end of Jackson's first term, the
+present charter still having three years to run. This charter had in it
+many grave faults; and there might well be a question as to whether it
+should be renewed. The Bank itself, beyond doubt, possessed enormous
+power; too much power for its own or outsiders' good. Its president,
+Biddle, was a man of some ability, but conceited to the last degree,
+untruthful, and to a certain extent unscrupulous in the use he made of
+the political influence of the great moneyed institution over which he
+presided. Some of the financial theories on which he managed the Bank
+were wrong; yet, on the whole, it was well conducted, and under its care
+the monetary condition of the country was quiet and good, infinitely
+better than it had been before, or than, under the auspices of the
+Jacksonian Democracy, it afterwards became.
+
+The two great reasons for Jackson's success throughout his political
+career were to be found in the strength of the feeling in his favor
+among the poorer and least educated classes of voters, and in the ardent
+support given him by the low politicians, who, by playing on his
+prejudices and passions, moulded him to their wishes, and who organized
+and perfected in their own and his interests a great political machine,
+founded on the "spoils system"; and both the Jacksonian rank and file
+and the Jacksonian politicians soon agreed heartily in their opposition
+to the Bank. Jackson and Benton opposed it for the same reasons that the
+bulk of their followers did; that is to say, partly from honest and
+ignorant prejudice and partly from a well-founded feeling of distrust as
+to some of its actions. The mass of their fellow party-leaders and
+henchmen assailed it with the cry that it was exerting its influence to
+debauch politics, while at the same time they really sought to use it as
+a power in politics on their own side.
+
+Jackson, in his first annual message in 1829, had hinted that he was
+opposed to the re-charter of the Bank, then a question of the future and
+not to arise for four or five years. At the same time he had called in
+question the constitutionality and expediency of the Bank's existence,
+and had criticised as vicious its currency system. The matter of
+constitutionality had been already decided by the Supreme Court, the
+proper tribunal, and was, and had been for years, an accepted fact; it
+was an absurdity to call it in question. As regards the matter of
+expediency, certainly the Jacksonians failed signally to put anything
+better in its place. Yet it was undeniable that there were grave defects
+in the currency system.
+
+The president's message roused but little interest, and what little it
+did rouse was among the Bank's friends. At once these began to prepare
+the way for the re-charter by an active and extensive agitation in its
+favor. The main bank was at Philadelphia, but it had branches
+everywhere, and naturally each branch bank was a centre of opposition to
+the president's proposed policy. As the friends of the Bank were greatly
+interested, and as the matter did not immediately concern those who
+afterwards became its foes, the former, for the time, had it all their
+own way, and the drift of public opinion seemed to be strongly in its
+favor.
+
+Benton was almost the only public man of prominence who tried to stem
+this tide from the beginning. Jackson's own party associates were
+originally largely against him, and so he stood all the more in need of
+the vigorous support which he received from the Missouri senator.
+Indeed, it would be unfair in the matter of the attack on the Bank to
+call Benton Jackson's follower; he might with more propriety be called
+the leader in the assault, although of course he could accomplish little
+compared with what was done by the great popular idol. He had always
+been hostile to the Bank, largely as a matter of Jeffersonian tradition,
+and he had shown his hostility by resolutions introduced in the Senate
+before Jackson was elected president.
+
+Early in 1831 he asked leave to introduce a resolution against the
+re-charter of the Bank; his purpose being merely to give formal notice
+of war against it, and to attempt to stir up a current of feeling
+counter to that which then seemed to be generally prevailing in its
+favor. In his speech he carefully avoided laying stress upon any such
+abstract point as that of constitutionality, and dwelt instead upon the
+questions that would affect the popular mind; assailing the Bank "as
+having too much power over the people and the government, over business
+and politics, and as too much disposed to exercise that power to the
+prejudice of the freedom and equality which should prevail in a
+republic, to be allowed to exist in our country." The force of such an
+argument in a popular election will be acknowledged by all practical
+politicians. But, although Benton probably believed what he said, or at
+any rate most of it, he certainly ought not to have opened the
+discussion of a great financial measure with a demagogic appeal to caste
+prejudices. He wished to substitute a gold currency in the place of the
+existing bank-notes, and was not disturbed at all as to how he would
+supply the place of the Bank, saying: "I am willing to see the charter
+expire, without providing any substitute for the present Bank. I am
+willing to see the currency of the federal government left to the hard
+money mentioned and intended in the Constitution; ... every species of
+paper might be left to the state authorities, unrecognized by the
+federal government!" Of the beauties of such a system as the last the
+country later on received practical demonstration. Some of his
+utterances, however, could be commended to the friends of greenbacks and
+of dishonest money even at the present day, as when he says: "Gold and
+silver are the best currency for a republic; it suits the men of middle
+property and the working people best; and if I was going to establish a
+workingman's party it should be on the basis of hard money--a hard-money
+party against a paper party." The Bank was in Philadelphia; much of the
+stock was held in the East, and a good deal was held abroad, which gave
+Benton a chance to play on sectional feelings, as follows: "To whom is
+all the power granted? To a company of private individuals, many of them
+foreigners, and the mass of them residing in a remote and narrow corner
+of the Union, unconnected by any sympathy with the fertile regions of
+the Great Valley, in which the natural power of this Union--the power of
+numbers--will be found to reside long before the renewed term of a
+second charter would expire." Among the other sentences occurs the
+following bit of pure demagogic pyrotechnics: "It [the Bank] tends to
+aggravate the inequality of fortunes; to make the rich richer and the
+poor poorer; to multiply nabobs and paupers; and to deepen and widen the
+gulf which separates Dives from Lazarus. A great moneyed power is
+favorable to great capitalists, for it is the principle of money to
+favor money. It is unfavorable to small capitalists, for it is the
+principle of money to eschew the needy and unfortunate. It is injurious
+to the laboring classes." Altogether it was not a speech to be proud of.
+The Senate refused permission to introduce the resolution by the close
+vote of twenty-three to twenty.
+
+Benton lived only a generation after that one which had itself
+experienced oppression from a king, from an aristocratic legislature and
+from a foreign power; and so his rant about the undue influence of
+foreigners in our governmental affairs, and his declamation over the
+purely supposititious powers that were presumed to be conspiring against
+the welfare of the poorer classes probably more nearly expressed his
+real feelings than would be the case with the similar utterances of any
+leading statesman nowadays. He was an enthusiastic believer in the
+extreme Jeffersonian doctrinaire views as to the will of the majority
+being always right, and as to the moral perfection of the average
+voter. Like his fellow-statesmen he failed to see the curious absurdity
+of supporting black slavery, and yet claiming universal suffrage for
+whites as a divine right, not as a mere matter of expediency resulting
+on the whole better than any other method. He had not learned that the
+majority in a democracy has no more right to tyrannize over a minority
+than, under a different system, the latter would have to oppress the
+former; and that, if there is a moral principle at stake, the saying
+that the voice of the people is the voice of God may be quite as untrue,
+and do quite as much mischief, as the old theory of the divine right of
+kings. The distinguishing feature of our American governmental system is
+the freedom of the individual; it is quite as important to prevent his
+being oppressed by many men as it is to save him from the tyranny of
+one.
+
+This speech on the re-charter showed a great deal of wide reading and
+much information; but a good part of it was sheer declamation, in the
+turgid, pompous style that Benton, as well as a great many other
+American public speakers, was apt to mistake for genuine oratory. His
+subsequent speech on the currency, however, was much better. This was
+likewise delivered on the occasion of asking leave to present a joint
+resolution, which leave was refused. The branch draft system was the
+object of the assault. These branch drafts were for even sums of small
+denomination, circulating like bank-notes; they were drawn on the parent
+bank at Philadelphia to the order of some officer of the branch bank and
+were indorsed by the latter to bearer. Thus paper was issued at one
+place which was payable at another and a distant place; and among other
+results there ensued a constant inflation of credit. They were very
+mischievous in their workings; they had none of the marks of convertible
+bank-notes or money, and so long as credit was active there could be no
+check on the inflation of the currency by them. Payment could be
+voluntarily made at the branch banks whence issued, but if it was
+refused the owner had only the right to go to Philadelphia and sue the
+directors there. Most of these drafts were issued at the most remote and
+inaccessible branches, the payment of them being, therefore, much
+delayed by distance and difficulty; nor were the directors liable for
+excessive issues. They constituted the bulk of all the paper seen in
+circulation; they were supposed to be equivalent to money, but being
+bills of exchange they were merely negotiable instruments; they did not
+have the properties of bank-notes, which are constantly and directly
+interchangeable with money. In their issue Biddle had laid himself open
+to attack; and in defending them he certainly did not always speak the
+truth, willfully concealing or coloring facts. Moreover, his
+self-satisfaction and the foolish pride in his own power, which he could
+not conceal, led him into making imprudent boasts as to the great power
+the Bank could exercise over other local banks, and over the general
+prosperity of the country, while dilating upon its good conduct in not
+using this power to the disadvantage of the public. All this was playing
+into Benton's hands. He showed some of the evils of the branch draft
+system, although apparently not seeing others that were quite as
+important. He attacked the Bank for some real and many imaginary
+wrongdoings; and quoted Biddle himself as an authority for the existence
+of powers dangerous to the welfare of the state.
+
+The advocates of the Bank were still in the majority in both houses of
+Congress, and soon began preparations for pushing through a bill for the
+re-charter. The issue began to become political. Webster, Clay, and most
+of the other anti-administration men were for the Bank; and so when the
+convention of the National Republicans, who soon afterwards definitely
+assumed the name of Whigs, took place, they declared heartily in its
+favor, and nominated for the presidency its most enthusiastic
+supporter, Henry Clay. The Bank itself unquestionably preferred not to
+be dragged into politics; but Clay, thinking he saw a chance for a
+successful stroke, fastened upon it, and the convention that nominated
+him made the fight against Jackson on the ground that he was hostile to
+the Bank. Even had this not already been the case no more certain method
+of insuring his hostility could have been adopted.
+
+Still, however, many of Jackson's supporters were also advocates of
+re-charter; and the bill for that purpose commanded the majority in
+Congress. Benton took the lead in organizing the opposition, not with
+the hope of preventing its passage, but "to attack incessantly, assail
+at all points, display the evil of the institution, rouse the people,
+and prepare them to sustain the veto." In other words, he was preparing
+for an appeal to the people, and working to secure an anti-Bank majority
+in the next Congress. He instigated and prepared the investigation into
+the affairs of the Bank, which was made in the House, and he led the
+harassing parliamentary warfare carried on against the re-chartering
+bill in the Senate. He himself seems to have superintended the
+preparation of the charges which were investigated by the House. A great
+flurry was made over them, Benton and all his friends claiming that
+they were fully substantiated; but the only real point scored was that
+against the branch drafts. Benton, with the majority of the committee of
+investigation, had the loosest ideas as to what a bank ought to do, loud
+though they were in denunciation of what this particular Bank was
+alleged to have done.
+
+Webster made the great argument in favor of the re-charter bill. Benton
+took the lead in opposition, stating, what was probably true,--that the
+bill was brought up so long before the charter expired for political
+reasons, and criticising it as premature; a criticism unfortunately
+applicable with even greater force to Jackson's message. His speech was
+largely mere talking against time, and he wandered widely from the
+subject. Among other things he invoked the aid of the principle of
+states'-rights, because the Bank then had power to establish branches in
+any state, whether the latter liked it or not, and free from state
+taxation. He also appealed to the Western members as such, insisting
+that the Bank discriminated against their section of the country in
+favor of the East; the facts being that the shrewdness and commercial
+morality of the Northeast, particularly of New England, saved them from
+the evils brought on the Westerners by the foolishness with which they
+abused their credit and the laxness with which they looked on monetary
+obligations. But in spite of all that Benton could do the bill passed
+both houses, the Senate voting in its favor by twenty-eight ayes against
+twenty nays.
+
+Jackson, who never feared anything, and was more than ready to accept
+the fight which was in some measure forced on him, yet which in some
+degree he had courted, promptly vetoed the bill in a message which
+stated some truths forcibly and fearlessly, which developed some very
+queer constitutional and financial theories, and which contained a
+number of absurdities, evidently put in, not for the benefit of the
+Senate, but to influence voters at the coming presidential election. The
+leaders of the opposition felt obliged to make a show of trying to pass
+the bill over the veto in order to get a chance to answer Jackson.
+Webster again opened the argument. Clay made the fiercest onslaught,
+assailing the president personally, besides attacking the veto power,
+and trying to discredit its use. But the presidential power of veto is
+among the best features of our government, and Benton had no difficulty
+in making a good defense of it; although many of the arguments adduced
+by him in its favor were entirely unsound, being based on the wholly
+groundless assumption that the function of the president corresponded
+to that of the ancient Roman tribune of the people, and was supposed to
+be exercised in the interests of the people to control the
+legislature--thus willfully overlooking the fact that the legislature
+also was elected by the people. When on his ultra-democratic hobby
+Benton always rode very loose in the saddle, and with little knowledge
+of where he was going. Clay and Benton alike drew all sorts of analogies
+between the state of affairs in the United States and that formerly
+prevailing in France, England, and above all in the much-suffering
+republics of antiquity. Benton insisted that the Bank had wickedly
+persuaded the West to get in debt to it so as to have that section in
+its power, and that the Western debt had been created with a view to
+political engineering; the fact being that the Westerners had run into
+debt purely by their own fault, and that the Bank itself was seriously
+alarmed at the condition of its Western branches. The currency being in
+much worse shape in the West than in the Northeast, gold and silver
+naturally moved towards the latter place; and this result of their own
+shortcomings was again held up as a grievance of the Westerners against
+the Bank. He also read a severe lecture on the interests of party
+discipline to the Democrats who had voted for the re-charter, assuring
+them that they could not continue to be both for the Bank and for
+Jackson. The Jacksonian Democracy, nominally the party of the multitude,
+was in reality the nearest approach the United States has ever seen to
+the "one man power;" and to break with Jackson was to break with the
+Democratic party. The alternative of expulsion or of turning a
+somersault being thus plainly presented to the recalcitrant members,
+they for the most part chose the latter, and performed the required feat
+of legislative acrobatics with the most unobtrusive and submissive
+meekness. The debate concluded with a sharp and undignified interchange
+of personalities between the Missouri and Kentucky senators, Clay giving
+Benton the lie direct, and the latter retorting in kind. Each side, of
+course, predicted the utter ruin of the country, if the other prevailed.
+Benton said that, if the Bank conquered, the result would be the
+establishment of an oligarchy, and then of a monarchy, and finally the
+death of the Republic by corruption. Webster stated as his belief that,
+if the sentiments of the veto message received general approbation, the
+Constitution could not possibly survive its fiftieth year. Webster,
+however, in that debate, showed to good advantage. Benton was no match
+for him, either as a thinker or as a speaker; but with the real leader
+of the Whig party, Henry Clay, he never had much cause to fear
+comparison.
+
+All the state banks were of course rabidly in favor of Jackson; and the
+presidential election of 1832 was largely fought on the bank issue. In
+Pennsylvania, however, the feeling for the Bank was only less strong
+than that for Jackson; and accordingly that Boeotian community sapiently
+cast its electoral votes for the latter, while instructing its senators
+and representatives to support the former. But the complete and hopeless
+defeat of Clay by Jackson sealed the fate of the Bank. Jackson was not
+even content to let it die naturally by the lapse of its charter. His
+attitude towards it so far had been one for which much could be said;
+indeed, very good grounds can be shown for thinking his veto proper. But
+of the impropriety of his next step there could be no possible question.
+Congress had passed a resolution declaring its belief in the safety of
+the United States deposits in the Bank; but the president, in the summer
+of 1833, removed these deposits and placed them in certain state banks.
+He experienced some difficulty in getting a secretary of the treasury
+who would take such a step; finally he found one in Taney.
+
+The Bank memorialized Congress at once; and the anti-administration
+majority in the Senate forthwith took up the quarrel. They first
+rejected Jackson's nominations for bank directors, and then refused to
+confirm Taney himself. Two years later Jackson made the latter Chief
+Justice of the Supreme Court, in which position he lived to do even more
+mischief than he had time or opportunity to accomplish as secretary of
+the treasury.
+
+Benton was the administration champion in the Senate. Opposed to him
+were Webster and Clay, as leaders of the Whigs, supported for the time
+being by Calhoun. The feeling of Clay and Calhoun against the president
+was bitterly personal, and was repaid by his rancorous hatred. But
+Webster, though he was really on most questions even more antagonistic
+to the ideas of the Jacksonian school, always remained personally on
+good terms with its leaders.
+
+Clay introduced a resolution directing the return of the deposits;
+Benton opposed it; it passed by a vote of twenty-eight to eighteen, but
+was lost in the House. Clay then introduced a resolution demanding to
+know from the president whether the paper alleged to have been published
+by his authority as having been read to the cabinet, in relation to the
+removal of the deposits, was genuine or not; and, if it was, asking for
+a copy. Benton opposed the motion, which nevertheless passed. But the
+president refused to accede to the demand. Meanwhile the new departure
+in banking, inaugurated by the president, was working badly. One of the
+main grounds for removing the deposits was the allegation that they were
+used to debauch politics. This was never proved against the old United
+States Bank; but under Jackson's administration, which corrupted the
+public service in every way, the deposits became fruitful sources of
+political reward and bribery.
+
+Clay then introduced his famous resolution censuring the president for
+his action, and supported it in a long and fiery speech; a speech which,
+like most of Clay's, was received by his followers at the time with
+rapture, but in which this generation fails to find the sign of that
+remarkable ability with which his own contemporaries credited the great
+Kentuckian. He attacked Jackson with fierce invective, painting him as
+an unscrupulous tyrant, who was inaugurating a revolution in the
+government of the Union. But he was outdone by Calhoun, who, with
+continual interludes of complacent references to the good already done
+by the Nullifiers, assailed Jackson as one of a band of artful, corrupt,
+and cunning politicians, and drew a picture even more lurid than Clay's
+of the future of the country, and the danger of impending revolution.
+Webster's speeches were more self-contained in tone. Benton was the only
+Jacksonian senator who could contend with the great Nullifier and the
+two great Whigs; and he replied at length, and in much the same style as
+they had spoken.
+
+The Senate was flooded with petitions in favor of the Bank, which were
+presented with suitable speeches by the leading Whigs. Benton ridiculed
+the exaggerated tone of alarm in which these petitions were drawn, and
+declared that the panic, excitement, and suffering existing in business
+circles throughout the country were due to the deliberate design of the
+Bank, and afforded a fresh proof that the latter was a dangerous power
+to the state.
+
+The resolution of censure was at last passed by a vote of twenty-six to
+twenty, and Jackson, in a fury, sent in a written protest against it,
+which the Senate refused to receive. The excitement all over the country
+was intense throughout the struggle. The suffering, which was really
+caused by the president's act, but which was attributed by his
+supporters to the machinations of the Bank, was very real; even Benton
+admitted this, although contending that it was not a natural result of
+the policy pursued, but had been artificially excited--or, as he very
+clumsily phrased it, "though fictitious and forged, yet the distress
+was real, and did an immensity of damage." Neither Jackson nor Benton
+yielded an inch to the outside pressure; the latter was the soul of the
+fight in Congress, making over thirty speeches during the struggle.
+
+During the debate on receiving the president's protest, Benton gave
+notice of his intention at an early day to move to expunge from the
+journal the resolution of censure. This idea was entirely his own, and
+he gave the notice without having consulted anybody. It was, however, a
+motion after Jackson's own heart, as the latter now began to look upon
+the affair as purely personal to himself. His party accepted this view
+of the matter with a servile alacrity only surpassed by the way in which
+its leaders themselves bowed down before the mob; and for the next two
+years the state elections were concerned purely with personal politics,
+the main point at issue in the choice for every United States senator
+being, whether he would or would not support Benton's expunging
+resolution. The whole affair seems to us so puerile that we can hardly
+understand the importance attached to it by the actors themselves. But
+the men who happened at that period to be the leaders in public affairs
+were peculiarly and frankly incapable of separating in their minds
+matters merely affecting themselves from matters affecting their
+constituents. Each firmly believed that if he was not the whole state,
+he was at least a most important fraction of it; and this was as plainly
+seen in Webster's colossal egoism and the frank vanity of Henry Clay as
+in Benton's ponderous self-consciousness and the all-pervading
+personality of Andrew Jackson.
+
+Some of the speeches on the expunging resolution show delicious,
+although entirely unconscious, humor. If there ever was a wholly
+irrational state of mind it was that in which the Jacksonians
+perpetually kept themselves. Every canvass on Jackson's behalf was one
+of sound, fury, and excitement, of appeal to the passions, prejudices,
+and feelings, but never the reason, of the people. A speech for him was
+generally a mere frantic denunciation of whatever and whoever was
+opposed to him, coupled with fulsome adulation of "the old hero." His
+supporters rarely indeed spoke to the cool judgment of the country, for
+the very excellent reason that the cool judgment of the country was apt
+to be against them. Such being the case, it is amusing to read in
+Benton's speech on receiving the protest the following sentences,
+apparently uttered in solemn good faith, and with sublime
+unconsciousness of irony:--
+
+ To such a community [the American body politic]--in an appeal on a
+ great question of constitutional law to the understandings of such a
+ people--declamation, passion, epithets, opprobrious language, will
+ stand for nothing. They will float harmless and unheeded through the
+ empty air, and strike in vain upon the ear of a sober and
+ dispassionate tribunal. Indignation, real or affected; wrath,
+ however hot; fury, however enraged; asseverations, however violent;
+ denunciation, however furious, will avail nothing. Facts, inexorable
+ facts, are all that will be attended to; reason, calm and
+ self-possessed, is all that will be listened to.
+
+The description of the mass of Jacksonian voters as forming "a sober and
+dispassionate tribunal" is an artistic touch of fancy quite unique, but
+admirably characteristic of Benton, whose statements always rose
+vigorously to the necessities of the occasion.
+
+Webster, in an effort to make the best of untoward circumstances,
+brought in a bill to re-charter the Bank for a short period, at the same
+time doing away with some of the features that were objectionable in the
+old charter. This bill might have passed, had it not been opposed by the
+extreme Bank men, including Clay and Calhoun. In the course of the
+debate over it Benton delivered a very elaborate and carefully studied
+speech in favor of hard money and a currency of the precious metals; a
+speech which is to this day well worth careful reading. Some of his
+financial theories were crude and confused; but on the main question he
+was perfectly sound. Both he and Jackson deserve great credit for having
+done much to impress the popular mind with the benefit of hard, that is
+to say honest, money. Benton was the strongest hard-money man then in
+public life, being, indeed, popularly nicknamed "Old Bullion." He
+thoroughly appreciated that a metallic currency was of more vital
+importance to the laboring men and to men of small capital generally
+than to any of the richer classes. A metallic currency is always surer
+and safer than a paper currency; where it exists a laboring man
+dependent on his wages need fear less than any other member of the
+community the evils of bad banking. Benton's idea of the danger to the
+masses from "the money power" was exaggerated; but in advocating a sound
+gold currency he took the surest way to overcome any possible dangerous
+tendency. A craze for "soft," or dishonest, money--a greenback movement,
+or one for short weight silver dollars--works more to the disadvantage
+of the whole mass of the people than even to that of the capitalists; it
+is a move directly in the interests of "the money power," which its
+loud-mouthed advocates are ostensibly opposing in the interests of
+democracy.
+
+Benton continued his speeches. The panic was now subsiding; there had
+not been time for Jackson's ruinous policy of making deposits in
+numerous state banks, and thereby encouraging wild inflation of credit,
+to bear fruit and, as it afterwards did, involve the whole country in
+financial disaster. Therefore Benton was able to exult greatly over the
+favorable showing of affairs in the report of the secretary of the
+treasury. He also procured the passage of a gold currency law, which,
+however, fixed the ratio of value between gold and silver at sixteen to
+one; an improper proportion, but one which had prevailed for three
+centuries in the Spanish-American countries, from which he copied it. In
+consequence of this law gold, long banished, became once more a
+circulating medium of exchange.
+
+The Bank of the United States afterwards was turned into the State Bank
+of Pennsylvania; it was badly managed and finally became insolvent. The
+Jacksonians accepted its downfall as a vindication of their policy; but
+in reality it was due to causes not operative at the time of the great
+struggle between the president and the Senate over its continued
+existence. Certainly by no possible financial policy could it have
+produced such widespread ruin and distress as did the system introduced
+by Jackson.
+
+Long after the Bank controversy had lost all practical bearing it
+continued to be agitated by the chief parties to it, who still felt sore
+from the various encounters. Jackson assailed it again in his message; a
+friendly committee of the Senate investigated it and reported in its
+favor, besides going out of their way to rake up charges against Jackson
+and Benton. The latter replied in a long speech, and became involved in
+personalities with the chairman, Tyler of Virginia. Neither side paid
+attention to any but the partisan aspect of the question, and the
+discussions were absolutely profitless.
+
+The whole matter was threshed over again and again, long after nothing
+but chaff was left, during the debates on Benton's expunging resolution.
+Few now would defend this resolution. The original resolution of censure
+may have been of doubtful propriety; but it was passed, was entered on
+the record, and had become a part of the journal of the Senate. It would
+have been perfectly proper to pass another resolution condemning or
+reversing the original one, and approving the course of the president;
+but it was in the highest degree improper to set about what was in form
+falsifying the record. Still, Benton found plenty of precedents in the
+annals of other legislative bodies for what he proposed to do, and the
+country, as a whole, backed him up heartily. He was further stimulated
+by the knowledge that there was probably no other legislative act in
+which Jackson took such intense interest, or which could so gratify his
+pride; the mortification to Clay and Calhoun would be equally great.
+Benton's motion failed more than once, but the complexion of the Senate
+was rapidly changed by the various states substituting Democratic for
+Whig or anti-Jackson senators. Some of the changes were made, as in
+Virginia, by senators refusing to vote for the expunging resolution, as
+required by the state legislatures, and then resigning their seats,
+pursuant to a ridiculous theory of the ultra Democrats, which, if
+carried out, would completely nullify the provision for a six year's
+senatorial term. Finally, at the very close of Jackson's administration,
+Benton found himself with a fair majority behind him, and made the final
+move. His speech was of course mainly filled with a highly colored
+account of the blessings wrought for the American people by Andrew
+Jackson, and equally of course the latter was compared at length to a
+variety of ancient Roman worthies. The final scene in the Senate had an
+element of the comic about it. The expungers held a caucus and agreed to
+sit the session out until the resolution was passed; and with prudent
+forethought Benton, well aware that when hungry and tired his followers
+might show less inflexibility of purpose, provided in an adjoining
+committee-room "an ample supply of cold hams, turkeys, rounds of beef,
+pickles, wines, and cups of hot coffee," wherewith to inspirit the
+faint-hearted.
+
+Fortified by the refreshments, the expungers won a complete victory. If
+the language of Jackson's admirers was overdrawn and strained to the
+last degree in lauding him for every virtue that he had or had not, it
+must be remembered that his opponents went quite as far wrong on the
+other side in their denunciations and extravagant prophecies of gloom.
+Webster made a very dignified and forcible speech in closing the
+argument against the resolution, but Calhoun and Clay were much less
+moderate,--the latter drawing a vivid picture of a rapidly approaching
+reign of lawless military violence, and asserting that his opponents had
+"extinguished one of the brightest and purest lights that ever burnt at
+the altar of civil liberty." As a proper finale Jackson, to show his
+appreciation, gave a great dinner to the expungers and their wives,
+Benton sitting at the head of the table. Jackson and Benton solemnly
+thought that they were taking part in a great act of justice, and were
+amusingly unable to see the comic side of their acts. They probably
+really believed most of their own denunciations of the Bank, and very
+possibly thought that the wickedness of its followers might tempt them
+to do any desperate deed. At any rate they enjoyed posing alike to
+themselves and to the public as persons of antique virtue, who had
+risked both life and reputation in a hazardous but successful attempt to
+save the liberties of the people from the vast and hostile forces of the
+aristocratic "money power."
+
+The best verdict on the expunging resolution was given by Webster when
+he characterized the whole affair as one which, if it were not regarded
+as a ruthless violation of a sacred instrument, would appear to be
+little elevated above the character of a contemptible farce.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+THE DISTRIBUTION OF THE SURPLUS.
+
+
+Benton was supremely self-satisfied with the part he had played in the
+struggle with the Bank. But very few thinking men would now admit that
+his actions, as a whole, on the occasion in question, were to his
+credit, although in the matter of the branch drafts he was perfectly
+right, and in that of the re-charter at least occupied defensible
+ground. His general views on monetary matters, however, were sound, and
+on some of the financial questions that shortly arose he occupied a
+rather lonely pre-eminence of good sense among his fellow senators; such
+being particularly the case as regards the various mischievous schemes
+in relation to disposing of the public lands, and of the money drawn
+from their sale. The revenue derived from all sources, including these
+sales of public lands, had for some years been much in excess of the
+governmental expenses, and a surplus had accumulated in the treasury.
+This surplus worked more damage than any deficit would have done.
+
+There were gold mines in the Southern States, which had been growing
+more and more productive; and, as the cost of freighting the bullion was
+excessive, a bill was introduced to establish branch mints at New
+Orleans and in the gold regions of Georgia and North Carolina. Benton
+advocated this strongly, as a constitutional right of the South and
+West, and as greatly in the interest of those two sections; and also as
+being another move in favor of a hard-money currency as opposed to one
+of paper. There was strong opposition to the bill; many of the Whigs
+having been carried so far by their heated devotion to the United States
+Bank in its quarrel that they had become paper-money men. But the vote
+was neither sectional nor partisan in its character. Clay led the
+opposition, while Webster supported Benton.
+
+Before this time propositions to distribute among the states the revenue
+from the public lands had become common; and they were succeeded by
+propositions to distribute the lands themselves, and then by others to
+distribute all the surplus revenue. Calhoun finally introduced an
+amendment to the Constitution to enable the surplus in the treasury
+during the next eight years to be distributed among the various states;
+the estimate being that for the time mentioned there would be about nine
+millions surplus annually. Benton attacked the proposal very ably,
+showing the viciousness of a scheme which would degrade every state
+government into the position of a mendicant, and would allow money to be
+collected from the citizens with one hand in order to be given back to
+them with the other; and also denying that the surplus would reach
+anything like the dimensions indicated. He ridiculed the idea of making
+a constitutional amendment to cover so short a period of time; and
+stated that he would greatly prefer to see the price paid for public
+lands by incoming settlers reduced, and what surplus there was expended
+on strengthening the defenses of the United States against foreign
+powers. This last proposition was eminently proper. We were then, as
+always, in our chronic state of utter defenselessness against any
+hostile attack, and yet were in imminent danger of getting embroiled
+with at least one great power--France. Our danger is always that we
+shall spend too little, and not too much, in keeping ourselves prepared
+for foreign war. Calhoun's resolution was a total failure, and was never
+even brought to a vote.
+
+Benton's proposed method of using the surplus came in with peculiar
+propriety on account of the conduct of the Whigs and Nullifiers in
+joining to oppose the appropriation of three millions of dollars for
+purposes of defense, which was provided for in the general fortification
+bill. The House passed this bill by a great majority. It was eminently
+proper that we should at once take steps to provide for the very
+possible contingency of a war with France, as the relations with that
+power were growing more threatening every day; but the opposition of the
+anti-Jackson men to the administration and to all its measures had
+become so embittered that they were willing to run the risk of seriously
+damaging the national credit and honor, if they could thereby score a
+point against their political adversaries. Accordingly, under the lead
+of Webster, Clay, and Calhoun, they defeated the bill in the Senate, in
+spite of all that could be done to save it by Benton, who, whatever his
+faults, was always patriotic. The appropriation had been very irregular
+in form, and under ordinary circumstances there would have been good
+justification for inquiring into it before permitting its passage; but
+under the circumstances its defeat at the moment was most unfortunate.
+For the president had been pressing France, even to the point of
+tolerably plain threats, in order to induce or compel her to fulfill the
+conditions of the recent treaty by which she had bound herself to pay a
+considerable indemnity, long owing by her to the United States for
+depredations on our commerce. Now she menaced war, avowedly on the
+ground that we were unprepared to resist her; and this vote in the
+Senate naturally led the French government to suppose that Jackson was
+not sustained by the country in the vigorous position which he had
+assumed. In speaking on the message of the president which alluded to
+this state of affairs, Benton strongly advocated our standing firmly for
+our rights, making a good speech, which showed much historical learning.
+He severely reproached the anti-administration senators for their
+previous conduct in causing the loss of the defense appropriation bill,
+and for preferring to do worse than waste the surplus by distributing it
+among the different states instead of applying it according to the
+provisions of that wise measure.
+
+This brought on a bitter wrangle, in which Benton certainly had the best
+of it. Calhoun was in favor of humiliating non-resistance; he never
+advocated warlike measures when the dignity of the nation was at stake,
+fond though he was of threatening violence on behalf of slavery or that
+form of secession known as nullification. Benton quoted from speeches in
+the French Chamber of Deputies to show that the French were encouraged
+to take the position that they did on account of the action of the
+Senate, and the disposition shown by a majority among the senators
+rather to pull down the president in a party struggle than to uphold him
+in his efforts to save the national honor in a contest with France. A
+curious feature of his speech was that in which he warned the latter
+power that, in the event of a conflict, it would have to do with a
+branch of the same race which, "from the days of Agincourt and Crecy, of
+Blenheim and Ramillies, down to the days of Salamanca and Waterloo, has
+always known perfectly well how to deal with the impetuous and fiery
+courage of the French." This sudden out-cropping of what, in Bentonian
+English, might be called Pan-Anglo-Saxon sentiment was all the more
+surprising inasmuch as both Benton himself and the party to which he
+belonged were strongly anti-English in their way of looking at our
+foreign policy, at least so far as North America was concerned. In the
+end France yielded, though trying to maintain her dignity by stating
+that she had not done so, and the United States received what was due
+them.
+
+Benton strongly opposed the payment by the United States of the private
+claims of its citizens for damages arising from the French spoliations
+at the end of the last century. He pointed out that the effort to pay
+such claims, scores of years after the time of their accruing, rarely
+benefits any of the parties originally in interest, and can only do real
+service to dishonest speculators. His speech on this matter would not be
+bad reading for some of the pension-jobbing congressmen of the present
+day, and their supporters; but as concerned these French claims he could
+have been easily answered.
+
+In the controversy over the bill introduced by Clay, to distribute the
+revenue derived from the public lands among the states for the next five
+years, Benton showed to great advantage compared both to the introducer
+of the bill himself, and to Webster, his supporter. He had all along
+taken the view of the land question that would be natural to a
+far-seeing Western statesman desirous of encouraging immigration. He
+wished the public lands to be sold in small parcels to actual settlers,
+at prices that would allow any poor man who was thrifty to take up a
+claim. He had already introduced a bill to sell them at graduated
+prices, the minimum being established at a dollar and twenty-five cents
+an acre; but if land remained unsold at this rate for three years it was
+then to be sold for what it would bring in the market. This bill passed
+the Senate, but failed in the House.
+
+In opposing Clay's distribution scheme Benton again brought forward his
+plan of using the surplus to provide for the national defenses; and in
+his speech showed the strongly national turn of his mind, saying:--
+
+ In this great system of national defense the whole Union is equally
+ interested; for the country, in all that concerns its defenses, is
+ but a unit, and every section is interested in the defense of every
+ other section, and every individual citizen is interested in the
+ defense of the whole population. It is in vain to say that the navy
+ is on the sea, and the fortifications on the sea-board, and that the
+ citizens in the interior states, or in the valley of the
+ Mississippi, have no interest in these remote defenses. Such an idea
+ is mistaken and delusive; the inhabitant of Missouri or of Indiana
+ has a direct interest in keeping open the mouths of the rivers,
+ defending the sea-port towns, and preserving a naval force that will
+ protect the produce of his labor in crossing the ocean and arriving
+ safely in foreign markets.
+
+Benton's patriotism always included the whole country in spite of the
+strength of his local sympathies.
+
+The bill passed the Senate by a rather close vote, and went to the
+House, where it soon become evident that it was doomed to failure. There
+was another bill, practically of much the same import, before the
+Senate, providing for the distribution of the surplus among the states
+in proportion to their electoral votes, but omitting the excellent
+proviso concerning the defenses. To suit the views of Calhoun and the
+sticklers for strict construction generally, the form of this rival bill
+was changed, so that the "distribution" purported to be a "deposit"
+merely; the money being nominally only loaned to the states, who pledged
+their faith to return it when Congress should call for it. As it was of
+course evident that such a loan would never be repaid, the substitution
+of "deposit" for "distribution" can only be regarded as a verbal change
+to give the doctrinaires a loop-hole for escape from their previous
+position; they all took advantage of it, and the bill received
+overwhelming support, and was passed by both houses.
+
+Benton, however, stood out against it to the last, and in a very
+powerful speech foretold the evils which the plan would surely work. He
+scornfully exposed the way in which some of the members were trying, by
+a trick of wording, to hide the nature of the bill they were enacting
+into a law, and thus to seem to justify themselves for the support they
+were giving it. "It is in name a deposit; in form, a loan; in essence
+and design, a distribution," said Benton. He ridiculed the attitude of
+the hair-splitting strict constructionists, like Calhoun, who had
+always pretended most scrupulously to respect the exact wording of the
+Constitution, and who had previously refused to vote for distribution on
+the ground that it was unconstitutional:--
+
+ At the commencement of the present session a proposition was made
+ [by Calhoun] to amend the Constitution, to permit this identical
+ distribution to be made. That proposition is now upon our calendar,
+ for the action of Congress. All at once it is discovered that a
+ change of name will do as well as a change of the Constitution.
+ Strike out the word "distribute" and insert the word "deposit," and
+ incontinently the impediment is removed; the constitutional
+ difficulty is surmounted, and the distribution can be made.
+
+He showed that to the states themselves the moneys distributed would
+either be useless, or else--and much more probably--they would be
+fruitful sources of corruption and political debauchery. He was quite
+right. It would have been very much better to have destroyed the surplus
+than to have distributed it as was actually done. None of the states
+gained any real benefit by the transaction; most were seriously harmed.
+At the best, the money was squandered in the rage for public
+improvements that then possessed the whole people; often it was stolen
+outright, or never accounted for. In the one case, it was an incentive
+to extravagance; in the other, it was a corruption fund. Yet the
+popular feeling was strongly in favor of the measure at the time, and
+Benton was almost the only public man of note who dared to resist it. On
+this occasion, as in the closing act of the struggle with the
+Nullifiers, he showed more backbone than did his great chief; for
+Jackson signed the bill, although criticising it most forcibly and
+pungently.
+
+The success of this measure naturally encouraged the presentation of
+others. Clay attempted to revive his land-money distribution bill, but
+was defeated, mainly through Benton's efforts. Three or four other
+similar schemes, including one of Calhoun's, also failed. Finally a
+clause providing for a further "deposit" of surplus moneys with the
+states was tacked to a bill appropriating money for defenses, thereby
+loading it down so that it was eventually lost. In the Senate the
+"deposit" amendment was finally struck out, in spite of the opposition
+of Clay, Calhoun, and Webster. Throughout the whole discussion of the
+distribution of the surplus Benton certainly shines by comparison with
+any one of his three great senatorial rivals.
+
+He shows to equally great advantage compared to them in the part taken
+by him in reference to Jackson's so-called specie circulars. The craze
+for speculation had affected the sales of public lands, which were
+increasing at an extraordinary rate, nearly twenty-five million dollars'
+worth being sold in 1836. As a rule, the payments were made in the notes
+of irresponsible banks, gotten up in many cases by the land speculators
+themselves. The sales were running up to five millions a month, with
+prospect of a boundless increase, so that all the public land bade fair
+to be converted into inconvertible paper. Benton had foreseen the evil
+results attending such a change, and, though well aware that he was
+opposing powerful interests in his own section of the country, had
+already tried to put a stop to it by law. In his speech he had stated
+that the unprecedented increase in the sale of public lands was due to
+the accommodations received by speculators from worthless banks, whose
+notes in small denominations would be taken to some distant part of the
+country, whence it would be a long time before they were returned and
+presented for payment. The speculators, with paper of which the real
+value was much below par, could outbid settlers and cultivators who
+could only offer specie, or notes that were its equivalent. He went on
+to say that "the effect was equally injurious to every interest
+concerned--except the banks and the speculators: it was injurious to the
+treasury, which was filling up with paper; to the new states, which
+were flooded with paper; and to settlers and cultivators, who were
+outbid by speculators loaded with this borrowed paper. A return to
+specie payments for lands was the remedy for all these evils."
+
+Benton's reasoning was perfectly sound. The effects on settlers, on the
+new states, and on the government itself were precisely such as he
+described, and the proposed remedy was the right one. But his bill
+failed; for the Whigs, including even Webster, had by this time worked
+themselves up until they were fairly crazy at the mere mention of
+paper-money banks.
+
+Jackson, however, not daunted by the fate of the bill, got Benton to
+draw up a treasury order, and had it issued. This served the same
+purpose, as it forbade the land-offices to receive anything but gold and
+silver in payment for land. It was not issued until Congress had
+adjourned, for fear that body might counteract it by a law; and this was
+precisely what was attempted at the next session, when a joint
+resolution was passed rescinding the order, and practically endeavoring
+to impose the worthless paper currency of the states upon the federal
+government. Benton stood almost alone in the fight he made against this
+resolution, although the right of the matter was so plainly on his
+side. In his speech he foretold clearly the coming of the great
+financial crisis that was then near at hand. The resolution, however,
+amounted to nothing, as it turned out, for it was passed so late in the
+session that the president, by simply withholding his signature from it,
+was enabled to prevent it from having effect.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+THE SLAVE QUESTION APPEARS IN POLITICS.
+
+
+Towards the close of Jackson's administration, slavery for the first
+time made its permanent appearance in national politics; although for
+some years yet it had little or no influence in shaping the course of
+political movements. In 1833 the abolition societies of the North came
+into prominence; they had been started a couple of years previously.
+
+Black slavery was such a grossly anachronistic and un-American form of
+evil, that it is difficult to discuss calmly the efforts to abolish it,
+and to remember that many of these efforts were calculated to do, and
+actually did, more harm than good. We are also very apt to forget that
+it was perfectly possible and reasonable for enlightened and virtuous
+men, who fully recognized it as an evil, yet to prefer its continuance
+to having it interfered with in a way that would produce even worse
+results. Black slavery in Hayti was characterized by worse abuse than
+ever was the case in the United States; yet, looking at the condition
+of that republic now, it may well be questioned whether it would not
+have been greatly to her benefit in the end to have had slavery continue
+a century or so longer,--its ultimate extinction being certain,--rather
+than to have had her attain freedom as she actually did, with the
+results that have flowed from her action. When an evil of colossal size
+exists, it is often the case that there is no possible way of dealing
+with it that will not itself be fraught with baleful results. Nor can
+the ultra-philanthropic method be always, or even often, accepted as the
+best. If there is one question upon which the philanthropists of the
+present day, especially the more emotional ones, are agreed, it is that
+any law restricting Chinese immigration is an outrage; yet it seems
+incredible that any man of even moderate intelligence should not see
+that no greater calamity could now befall the United States than to have
+the Pacific slope fill up with a Mongolian population.
+
+The cause of the Abolitionists has had such a halo shed round it by the
+after course of events, which they themselves in reality did very little
+to shape, that it has been usual to speak of them with absurdly
+exaggerated praise. Their courage, and for the most part their
+sincerity, cannot be too highly spoken of, but their share in
+abolishing slavery was far less than has commonly been represented; any
+single non-abolitionist politician, like Lincoln or Seward, did more
+than all the professional Abolitionists combined really to bring about
+its destruction. The abolition societies were only in a very restricted
+degree the causes of the growing feeling in the North against slavery;
+they are rather to be regarded as themselves manifestations or
+accompaniments of that feeling. The anti-slavery outburst in the
+Northern States over the admission of Missouri took place a dozen years
+before there was an abolition society in existence; and the influence of
+the professional abolitionists upon the growth of the anti-slavery
+sentiment as often as not merely warped it and twisted it out of proper
+shape,--as when at one time they showed a strong inclination to adopt
+disunion views, although it was self-evident that by no possibility
+could slavery be abolished unless the Union was preserved. Their
+tendency towards impracticable methods was well shown in the position
+they assumed towards him who was not only the greatest American, but
+also the greatest man, of the nineteenth century; for during all the
+terrible four years that sad, strong, patient Lincoln worked and
+suffered for the people, he had to dread the influence of the extreme
+Abolitionists only less than that of the Copperheads. Many of their
+leaders possessed no good qualities beyond their fearlessness and
+truth--qualities that were also possessed by the Southern fire-eaters.
+They belonged to that class of men that is always engaged in some
+agitation or other; only it happened that in this particular agitation
+they were right. Wendell Phillips may be taken as a very good type of
+the whole. His services against slavery prior to the war should always
+be remembered with gratitude; but after the war, and until the day of
+his death, his position on almost every public question was either
+mischievous or ridiculous, and usually both.
+
+When the abolitionist movement started it was avowedly designed to be
+cosmopolitan in character; the originators looked down upon any merely
+national or patriotic feeling. This again deservedly took away from
+their influence. In fact, it would have been most unfortunate had the
+majority of the Northerners been from the beginning in hearty accord
+with the Abolitionists; at the best it would have resulted at that time
+in the disruption of the Union and the perpetuation of slavery in the
+South.
+
+But after all is said, the fact remains, that on the main issue the
+Abolitionists were at least working in the right direction. Sooner or
+later, by one means or another, slavery had to go. It is beyond doubt a
+misfortune that in certain districts the bulk of the population should
+be composed of densely ignorant negroes, often criminal or vicious in
+their instincts; but such is the case, and the best, and indeed the only
+proper course to pursue, is to treat them with precisely the same
+justice that is meted out to whites. The effort to do so in time
+immediately past has not resulted so successfully as was hoped and
+expected; but nevertheless no other way would have worked as well.
+
+Slavery was chiefly responsible for the streak of coarse and brutal
+barbarism which ran through the Southern character, and which marked the
+ferocious outcry instantly raised by the whole Southern press against
+the Abolitionists. There had been an abortive negro rising in Virginia
+almost at the same time that the abolitionist movement first came into
+prominence; and this fact added to the rage and terror with which the
+South regarded the latter. The clamor against the North was deafening;
+and though it soon subsided for the time being, it never afterwards
+entirely died away. As has been shown already, there had always been a
+strong separatist feeling in the South; but hitherto its manifestations
+had been local and sporadic, never affecting all the states at the same
+time; for it had never happened that the cause which called forth any
+particular manifestation was one bearing on the whole South alike. The
+alien and sedition laws were more fiercely resented in Virginia and
+Kentucky than in South Carolina; the tariff, which so angered the
+latter, pleased Louisiana; and Georgia and Alabama alone were affected
+by the presence of great Indian communities within their borders. But
+slavery was an interest common to the whole South. When it was felt to
+be in any way menaced, all Southerners came together for its protection;
+and, from the time of the rise of the Abolitionists onward, the
+separatist movement throughout the South began to identify itself with
+the maintenance of slavery, and gradually to develop greater and greater
+strength. Its growth was furthered and hastened by the actions of the
+more ambitious and unscrupulous of the Southern politicians, who saw
+that it offered a chance for them to push themselves forward, and who
+were perfectly willing to wreak almost irreparable harm to the nation if
+by so doing they could advance their own selfish interests. It was in
+reference to these politicians that Benton quoted with approval a letter
+from ex-President Madison, which ran:--
+
+ The danger is not to be concealed, that the sympathy arising from
+ known causes, and the inculcated impression of a permanent
+ incompatibility of interests between the South and the North may put
+ it in the power of popular leaders, aspiring to the highest
+ stations, to unite the South, on some critical occasion, in a course
+ that will end by creating a new theatre of great, though inferior,
+ interest. In pursuing this course the first and most obvious step is
+ nullification, the next secession, and the last a farewell
+ separation.
+
+This was a pretty good forecast of the crisis that was precipitated by
+the greedy and reckless ambition of the secessionist leaders in 1860.
+The moral difference between Benedict Arnold on the one hand, and Aaron
+Burr or Jefferson Davis on the other, is precisely the difference that
+obtains between a politician who sells his vote for money and one who
+supports a bad measure in consideration of being given some high
+political position.
+
+The Abolitionists immediately contrived to bring themselves before the
+notice of Congress in two ways; by the presentation of petitions for the
+abolition of slavery in the District of Columbia, and by sending out to
+the Southern States a shoal of abolition pamphlets, newspapers, and
+rather ridiculous illustrated cuts. What the precise point of the last
+proceeding was no one can tell; the circulation of such writings as
+theirs in the South could not possibly serve any good purpose. But they
+had a right to send what they wished, and the conduct of many of the
+Southerners in trying to get a federal law passed to prohibit their
+writings from being carried in the mail was as wrong as it was foolish;
+while the brutal clamor raised in the South against the whole North as
+well as against the Abolitionists, and the conduct of certain Southern
+legislatures in practically setting prices on the heads of the leaders
+in the objectionable movement, in turn angered the North and gave the
+Abolitionists ten-fold greater strength than they would otherwise have
+had.
+
+The question first arose upon the presentation of a perfectly proper and
+respectful petition sent to the Senate by a society of Pennsylvania
+Quakers, and praying for the abolition of slavery in the District of
+Columbia. The District was solely under the control of Congress, and was
+the property of the nation at large, so that Congress was the proper and
+the only body to which any petition concerning the affairs of the
+District could be sent; and if the right of petition meant anything, it
+certainly meant that the people, or any portion thereof, should have the
+right to petition their representatives in regard to their own affairs.
+Yet certain Southern extremists, under the lead of Calhoun, were
+anxious to refuse to receive the paper. Benton voted in favor of
+receiving it, and was followed in his action by a number of other
+Southern senators. He spoke at length on the subject, and quite
+moderately, even crediting the petitioners, or many of them, with being
+"good people, aiming at benevolent objects, and endeavoring to
+ameliorate the condition of one part of the human race, without
+inflicting calamities on another part," which was going very far indeed
+for a slave-holding senator of that time. He was of course totally
+opposed to abolition and the Abolitionists, and showed that the only
+immediate effect of the movement had been to make the lot of the slaves
+still worse, and for the moment to do away with any chance of
+intelligently discussing the question of emancipation. For, like many
+other Southerners, he fondly cherished the idea of gradual peaceful
+emancipation,--an idea which the course of events made wholly visionary,
+but which, under the circumstances, might well have been realized. He
+proceeded to give most questionable praise to the North for some acts as
+outrageous and disgraceful as were ever perpetrated by its citizens,
+stating that--
+
+ Their conduct was above all praise, above all thanks, above all
+ gratitude. They had chased off the foreign emissaries, silenced the
+ gabbling tongues of female dupes, and dispersed the assemblages,
+ whether fanatical, visionary, or incendiary, of all that congregated
+ to preach against evils that affected others, not themselves; and to
+ propose remedies to aggravate the disease which they had pretended
+ to cure. They had acted with a noble spirit. They had exerted a
+ vigor beyond all law. They had obeyed the enactments, not of the
+ statute-book, but of the heart.
+
+These fervent encomiums were fully warranted by the acts of various
+Northern mobs, that had maltreated abolitionist speakers, broken up
+anti-slavery meetings, and committed numerous other deeds of lawless
+violence. But however flattered the Northerners of that generation may
+have been, in feeling that they thoroughly deserved Benton's eulogy, it
+is doubtful if their descendants will take quite the same pride in
+looking back to it. An amusing incident of the debate was Calhoun's
+attack upon one of the most subservient allies the South ever had in the
+Northern States; he caused to be sent up to the desk and read an
+abolition paper published in New Hampshire, which contained a bitter
+assault upon Franklin Pierce, then a member of Congress. Nominally he
+took this course to show that there was much greater strength in the
+abolition movement, and therefore much greater danger to the South, than
+the Northern senators were willing to admit; in reality he seems to
+have acted partly from wanton malice, partly from overbearing contempt
+for the truckling allies and apologists of slavery in the North, and
+partly from a desire not to see the discussion die out, but rather, in
+spite of his continual profession to the contrary, to see it maintained
+as a standing subject of irritation. He wished to refuse to receive the
+petitions, on the ground that they touched a subject that ought not even
+to be discussed; yet he must have known well that he was acting in the
+very way most fitted to give rise to discussion,--a fact that was
+pointed out to him by Benton, in a caustic speech. He also took the
+ground that the question of emancipation affected the states
+exclusively, and that Congress had no more jurisdiction over the subject
+in the District of Columbia than she had in the State of North Carolina.
+This precious contribution to the true interpretation of the
+Constitution was so farcically and palpably false that it is incredible
+that he should himself have believed what he was saying. He was still
+smarting from the nullification controversy; he had seceded from his
+party, and was sore with disappointed ambition; and it seems very
+improbable that he was honest in his professions of regret at seeing
+questions come up which would disturb the Union. On the contrary, much
+of the opposition he was continually making to supposititious federal
+and Northern encroachments on the rights of the South must have been
+merely factious, and it seems likely that, partly from a feeling of
+revenge and partly with the hope of gratifying his ambition, he was
+anxious to do all he could to work the South up to the highest pitch of
+irritation, and keep her there until there was a dissolution of the
+Union. Benton evidently thought that this was the case; and in reading
+the constant threats of nullification and secession which run through
+all Calhoun's speeches, and the innumerable references he makes to the
+alleged fact that he had come off victorious in his treasonable struggle
+over the tariff in 1833, it is difficult not to accept Benton's view of
+the matter. He always spoke of Calhoun with extreme aversion, and there
+were probably moments when he was inclined heartily to sympathize with
+Jackson's death-bed regret that he had not hung the South Carolina
+Nullifier. Doubtless in private life, or as regards any financial
+matters, Calhoun's conduct was always blameless; but it may well be that
+he has received far more credit for purity of motive in his public
+conduct than his actions fairly entitle him to.
+
+Calhoun was also greatly exercised over the circulation of abolition
+documents in the South. At his request a committee of five was appointed
+to draft a bill on the subject; he was chairman, and three of the other
+four members were from the Slave States; yet his report was so extreme
+that only one of the latter would sign it with him. He introduced into
+it a long argument to the effect that the Constitution was a mere
+compact between sovereign states, and inferentially that nullification
+and secession were justifiable and constitutional; and then drew a vivid
+picture of the unspeakable horrors with which, as he contended, the
+action of the Northern Abolitionists menaced the South. The bill
+subjected to penalties any postmaster who should knowingly receive and
+put into the mail any publication touching slavery, to go into any state
+which had forbidden by law the circulation of such a publication. In
+discussing this bill he asserted that Congress, in refusing to pass it,
+would be coöperating with the Abolitionists; and then he went on to
+threaten as usual that in such case nullification or secession would
+become necessary. Benton had become pretty well tired of these threats,
+his attachment to the Union even exceeding his dislike to seeing slavery
+meddled with; and he headed the list of half a dozen Southern senators
+who joined with the bulk of the Northerners in defeating the bill,
+which was lost by a vote of twenty-five to nineteen. A few of the
+Northern "dough-faces" voted with Calhoun. There is a painfully striking
+contrast between the courage shown by Benton, a slave-holder with a
+slave-holding constituency, in opposing this bill, and the obsequious
+subserviency to the extreme Southern feeling shown on the same occasion
+by Wright, Van Buren, and Buchanan--fit representatives of the sordid
+and odious political organizations of New York and Pennsylvania.
+
+Several other questions came up towards the end of Jackson's
+administration which were more or less remotely affected by the feeling
+about slavery. Benton succeeded in getting a bill through to extend the
+boundaries of the State of Missouri so as to take in territory lying
+northwest of her previous limit, the Indian title to which was
+extinguished by treaty. This annexed land lay north of the boundary for
+slave territory established by the Missouri Compromise; but Benton
+experienced no difficulty in getting his bill through. It was not,
+however, in the least a move designed in the interests of the slave
+power. Missouri's feeling was precisely that which would actuate Oregon
+or Washington Territory to-day, if either wished to annex part of
+Northern Idaho.
+
+The territories of Arkansas and Michigan had applied for admission into
+the Union as states; and as one would be a free and the other a slave
+state, it was deemed proper that they should come in together. Benton
+himself urged the admission of the free state of Michigan, while the
+interests of Arkansas were confided to Buchanan of Pennsylvania. The
+slavery question entered but little into the matter; although some
+objections were raised on that score, as well as on account of the
+irregular manner in which the would-be states had acted in preparing for
+admission. The real ground of opposition to the admission of the two new
+states was political, as it was known that they could both be relied
+upon for Democratic majorities at the approaching presidential election.
+Many Whigs, therefore, both from the North and the South, opposed it.
+
+The final removal of the Cherokees from Georgia and Alabama was brought
+about in 1836 by means of a treaty with those Indians. Largely through
+the instrumentality of Benton, and in spite of the opposition of Clay,
+Calhoun, and Webster, this instrument was ratified in the Senate by the
+close vote of thirty-one to fifteen. Although new slave territory was
+thus acquired, the vote on the treaty was factional and not sectional,
+being equally divided between the Northern and the Southern States,
+Calhoun and six other Southern senators opposing it, chiefly from
+hostility to the administration. The removal of the Indians was probably
+a necessity; undoubtedly it worked hardship in individual instances, but
+on the whole it did not in the least retard the civilization of the
+tribe, which was fully paid for its losses; and moreover, in its new
+home, continued to make progress in every way until it became involved
+in the great civil war, and received a setback from which it has not yet
+recovered. These Cherokees were almost the last Indians left in any
+number east of the Mississippi, and their removal solved the Indian
+problem so far as the old states were concerned.
+
+Later on Benton went to some trouble to disprove the common statement
+that we have robbed the original Indian occupants of their lands. He
+showed by actual statistics that up to 1840 we had paid to the Indians
+eighty-five millions of dollars for land purchases, which was over five
+times as much as the United States gave the great Napoleon for
+Louisiana; and about three times as much as we paid France, Spain, and
+Mexico together for the purchase of Louisiana, Florida, and California;
+while the amount of land received in return would not equal any one of
+these purchases, and was but a fractional part of Louisiana or
+California. We paid the Cherokees for their territory exactly as much as
+we paid the French, at the height of their power, for Louisiana; while
+as to the Creek and Choctaw nations, we paid each more for their lands
+than we paid for Louisiana and Florida combined. The dealings of the
+government with the Indian have often been unwise, and sometimes unjust;
+but they are very far indeed from being so black as is commonly
+represented, especially when the tremendous difficulties of the case are
+taken into account.
+
+Far more important than any of these matters was the acknowledgment of
+the independence of Texas; and in this, as well as in the troubles with
+Mexico which sprang from it, slavery again played a prominent part,
+although not nearly so important at first as has commonly been
+represented. Doubtless the slave-holders worked hard to secure
+additional territory out of which to form new slave states; but Texas
+and California would have been in the end taken by us, had there not
+been a single slave in the Mississippi valley. The greed for the
+conquest of new lands which characterized the Western people had nothing
+whatever to do with the fact that some of them owned slaves. Long before
+there had been so much as the faintest foreshadowing of the importance
+which the slavery question was to assume, the West had been eagerly
+pressing on to territorial conquest, and had been chafing and fretting
+at the restraint put upon it, and at the limits set to its strivings by
+the treaties established with foreign powers. The first settlers beyond
+the Alleghanies, and their immediate successors, who moved down along
+the banks of the Ohio, the Cumberland, and the Tennessee, and thence out
+to the Mississippi itself, were not generally slave-holders; but they
+were all as anxious to wrest the Mississippi valley from the control of
+the French as their descendants were to overrun the Spanish lands lying
+along the Rio Grande. In other words, slavery had very little to do with
+the Western aggressions on Mexican territory, however it might influence
+the views of Southern statesmen as to lending support to the Western
+schemes.
+
+The territorial boundaries of all the great powers originally claiming
+the soil of the West--France, Spain, and the United States--were very
+ill-defined, there being no actual possession of the lands in dispute,
+and each power making a great showing on its own map. If the extreme
+views of any one were admitted, its adversary, for the time being,
+would have had nothing. Thus before the treaty of 1819 with Spain our
+nominal boundaries and those of the latter power in the West overlapped
+each other; and the extreme Western men persisted in saying that we had
+given up some of the territory which belonged to us because we had
+consented to adopt a middle line of division, and had not insisted
+upon being allowed the full extent of our claims. Benton always took
+this view of it, insisting that we had given up our rights by the
+adoption of this treaty. Many Southerners improved on this idea, and
+spoke of the desirability of "re-annexing" the territory we had
+surrendered,--endeavoring by the use of this very inappropriate word
+to give a color of right to their proceedings. As a matter of fact it
+was inevitable, as well as in the highest degree desirable for the good
+of humanity at large, that the American people should ultimately crowd
+out the Mexicans from their sparsely populated Northern provinces. But
+it was quite as desirable that this should not be done in the interests
+of slavery.
+
+American settlers had begun to press into the outlying Spanish province
+of Texas before the treaty of 1819 was ratified. Their numbers went on
+increasing, and at first the Mexican government, having achieved
+independence of Spain, encouraged their incoming. But it soon saw that
+their presence boded danger, and forbade further immigration; without
+effect, however, as the settlers and adventurers came thronging in as
+fast as ever. The Americans had brought their slaves with them, and when
+the Mexican government issued a decree liberating all slaves, they
+refused to be bound by it; and this decree was among the reasons alleged
+for their revolt. It has been represented as the chief if not the sole
+cause of the rebellion; but in reality it was not the cause at all; it
+was merely one of the occasions. Long before slavery had been abolished
+in Mexico, and before it had become an exciting question in the United
+States, the infant colony of Texas, when but a few months old, had made
+an abortive attempt at insurrection. Any one who has ever been on the
+frontier, and who knows anything whatever of the domineering, masterful
+spirit and bitter race prejudices of the white frontiersmen, will
+acknowledge at once that it was out of the question that the Texans
+should long continue under Mexican rule; and it would have been a great
+misfortune if they had. It was out of the question to expect them to
+submit to the mastery of the weaker race, which they were supplanting.
+Whatever might be the pretexts alleged for revolt, the real reasons were
+to be found in the deeply-marked difference of race, and in the absolute
+unfitness of the Mexicans then to govern themselves, to say nothing of
+governing others. During the dozen years that the American colony in
+Texas formed part of Mexico, the government of the latter went through
+revolution after revolution,--republic, empire, and military
+dictatorship following one another in bewildering succession. A state of
+things like this in the central government, especially when the latter
+belonged to a race alien in blood, language, religion, and habits of
+life, would warrant any community in determining to shift for itself.
+Such would probably have been the result even on people as sober and
+peaceable as the Texan settlers were warlike, reckless, and overbearing.
+
+But the majority of those who fought for Texan independence were not men
+who had already settled in that territory, but, on the contrary, were
+adventurers from the States, who had come to help their kinsmen and to
+win for themselves, by their own prowess, homes on what was then Mexican
+soil. It may as well be frankly admitted that the conduct of the
+American frontiersmen all through this contest can be justified on no
+possible plea of international morality or law. Still, we cannot judge
+them by the same standard we should apply to the dealings between highly
+civilized powers of approximately the same grade of virtue and
+intelligence. Two nations may be contemporaneous so far as mere years
+go, and yet, for all that, may be existing among surroundings which
+practically are centuries apart. The nineteenth century on the banks of
+the Thames, the Seine, and the Rhine, or even of the Hudson and the
+Potomac, was one thing; the nineteenth century in the valley of the Rio
+Grande was another and quite a different thing.
+
+The conquest of Texas should properly be classed with conquests like
+those of the Norse sea-rovers. The virtues and faults alike of the
+Texans were those of a barbaric age. They were restless, brave, and
+eager for adventure, excitement, and plunder; they were warlike,
+resolute, and enterprising; they had all the marks of a young and hardy
+race, flushed with the pride of strength and self-confidence. On the
+other hand they showed again and again the barbaric vies of
+boastfulness, ignorance, and cruelty; and they were utterly careless of
+the rights of others, looking upon the possessions of all weaker races
+as simply their natural prey. A band of settlers entering Texas was
+troubled by no greater scruples of conscience than, a thousand years
+before, a ship-load of Knut's followers might have felt at landing in
+England; and when they were engaged in warfare with the Mexicans they
+could count with certainty upon assistance from their kinsfolk who had
+been left behind, and for the same reasons that had enabled Rolf's
+Norsemen on the sea-coast of France to rely confidently on Scandinavian
+help in their quarrels with their Karling over-lords. The great Texan
+hero, Houston, who drank hard and fought hard, who was mighty in battle
+and crafty in council, with his reckless, boastful courage and his
+thirst for changes and risks of all kinds, his propensity for private
+brawling, and his queerly blended impulses for good and evil, might,
+with very superficial alterations of character, stand as the type of an
+old-world Viking--plus the virtue of a deep and earnestly patriotic
+attachment to his whole country. Indeed his career was as picturesque
+and romantic as that of Harold Hardraada himself, and, to boot, was much
+more important in its results.
+
+Thus the Texan struggle for independence stirred up the greatest
+sympathy and enthusiasm in the United States. The administration
+remained nominally neutral, but obviously sympathized with the Texans,
+permitting arms and men to be sent to their help, without hindrance, and
+indeed doing not a little discreditable bullying in the diplomatic
+dealing with Mexico, which that unfortunate community had her hands too
+full to resent. Still we did not commit a more flagrant breach of
+neutrality than, for instance, England was at the same time engaged in
+committing in reference to the civil wars in Spain. The victory of San
+Jacinto, in which Houston literally annihilated a Mexican force twice
+the strength of his own, virtually decided the contest; and the Senate
+at once passed a resolution recognizing the independence of Texas.
+Calhoun wished that body to go farther, and forthwith admit Texas as a
+state into the Union; but Benton and his colleagues were not prepared to
+take such a step at so early a date, although intending of course that
+in the end she should be admitted. There was little opposition to the
+recognition of Texan independence, although a few members of the lower
+house, headed by Adams, voted against it. While a cabinet officer, and
+afterwards as president, Adams had done all that he could to procure by
+purchase or treaty the very land which was afterwards the cause of our
+troubles with Mexico.
+
+Much the longest and most elaborate speech in favor of the recognition
+of Texan independence was made by Benton, to whom the subject appealed
+very strongly. He announced emphatically that he spoke as a Western
+senator, voicing the feeling of the West; and he was right. The
+opposition to the growth of our country on its southwestern frontier
+was almost confined to the Northeast; the West as a whole, free states
+as well as slave, heartily favored the movement. The settlers of Texas
+had come mainly, it is true, from the slave states; but there were also
+many who had been born north of the Ohio. It was a matter of comment
+that the guns used at San Jacinto had come from Cincinnati--and so had
+some of those who served them.
+
+In Benton's speech he began by pointing out the impropriety of doing
+what Calhoun had done in attempting to complicate the question of the
+recognition of Texan independence with the admission of Texas as a
+state. He then proceeded to claim for us a good deal more credit than we
+were entitled to for our efforts to preserve neutrality; drew a very
+true picture of the commercial bonds that united us to Mexico, and of
+the necessity that they should not be lightly broken; gave a spirited
+sketch of the course of the war hitherto, condemning without stint the
+horrible butcheries committed by the Mexicans, but touching gingerly on
+the savage revenge taken by the Americans in their turn; and ended by a
+eulogy of the Texans themselves, and their leaders.
+
+It was the age of "spread-eagle" speeches, and many of Benton's were no
+exception to the rule. As a people we were yet in a condition of raw,
+crude immaturity; and our very sensitiveness to foreign criticism--a
+sensitiveness which we now find it difficult to understand--and the
+realization of our own awkwardness made us inclined to brag about and
+exaggerate our deeds. Our public speakers and writers acquired the
+abominable habit of speaking of everything and everybody in the United
+States in the superlative; and therefore, as we claimed the highest rank
+for all our fourth-rate men, we put it out of our power to do justice to
+the really first-rate ones; and on account of our continual
+exaggerations we were not believed by others, and hardly even believed
+ourselves, when we presented estimates that were truthful. When every
+public speaker was declared to be a Demosthenes or a Cicero, people
+failed to realize that we actually had, in Webster, the greatest orator
+of the century; and when every general who whipped an Indian tribe was
+likened to Napoleon, we left ourselves no words with which properly to
+characterize the really heroic deeds done from time to time in the grim
+frontier warfare. All Benton's oratory took on this lurid coloring; and
+in the present matter his final eulogy of the Texan warriors was greatly
+strained, though it would hardly have been in his power to pay too high
+a tribute to some of the deeds they had done. It was the heroic age of
+the Southwest; though, as with every other heroic age, there were plenty
+of failings, vices, and weaknesses visible, if the stand-point of
+observation was only close enough.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+THE CHILDREN'S TEETH ARE SET ON EDGE.
+
+
+In his dealings with the Bank and his disposal of the deposits Jackson
+ate sour grapes to his heart's content; and now the teeth of his adopted
+child Van Buren were to be set on edge.
+
+Van Buren was the first product of what are now called "machine
+politics" that was put into the presidential chair. He owed his
+elevation solely to his own dexterous political manipulation, and to the
+fact that, for his own selfish ends, and knowing perfectly well their
+folly, he had yet favored or connived at all the actions into which the
+administration had been led either through Jackson's ignorance and
+violence, or by the crafty unscrupulousness and limited knowledge of the
+Kitchen Cabinet. The people at large would never have thought of him for
+president of their own accord; but he had become Jackson's political
+legatee, partly because he had personally endeared himself to the
+latter, and partly because the politicians felt that he was a man whom
+they could trust. The Jacksonian Democracy was already completely ruled
+by a machine, of which the most important cogs were the countless
+office-holders, whom the spoils system had already converted into a band
+of well-drilled political mercenaries. A political machine can only be
+brought to a state of high perfection in a party containing very many
+ignorant and uneducated voters; and the Jacksonian Democracy held in its
+ranks the mass of the ignorance of the country. Besides this such an
+organization requires, in order that it may do its most effective work,
+to have as its leader and figure-head a man who really has a great hold
+on the people at large, and who yet can be managed by such politicians
+as possess the requisite adroitness; and Jackson fulfilled both these
+conditions. The famous Kitchen Cabinet was so called because its members
+held no official positions, and yet were known to have Jackson more
+under their influence than was the case with his nominal advisers. They
+stood as the first representatives of a type common enough afterwards,
+and of which Thurlow Weed was perhaps the best example. They were men
+who held no public position, and yet devoted their whole time to
+politics, and pulled the strings in obedience to which the apparent
+public leaders moved.
+
+Jackson liked Van Buren because the latter had served him both
+personally and politically--indeed Jackson was incapable of
+distinguishing between a political and a personal service. This liking,
+however, would not alone have advanced Van Buren's interests, if the
+latter, who was himself a master in the New York state machine, had not
+also succeeded in enlisting the good-will and self-interest of the
+members of the Kitchen Cabinet and the other intimate advisers of the
+president. These first got Jackson himself thoroughly committed to Van
+Buren, and then used his name and enormous influence with the masses,
+coupled with their own mastery of machine methods, to bring about the
+New Yorker's nomination. In both these moves they had been helped, and
+Van Buren's chances had been immensely improved, by an incident that had
+seemed at the time very unfortunate for the latter. When he was
+secretary of state, in carrying on negotiations with Great Britain
+relative to the West India trade, he had so far forgotten what was due
+to the dignity of the nation as to allude disparagingly, while thus
+communicating with a foreign power, to the course pursued by the
+previous administration. This extension of party lines into our
+foreign diplomacy was discreditable to the whole country. The
+anti-administration men bitterly resented it, and emphasized their
+resentment by rejecting the nomination of Van Buren when Jackson wished
+to make him minister to England. Their action was perfectly proper, and
+Van Buren, by right, should have suffered for his undignified and
+unpatriotic conduct. But instead of this, and in accordance with the
+eternal unfitness of things, what really happened was that his rejection
+by the Senate actually helped him; for Jackson promptly made the quarrel
+his own, and the masses blindly followed their idol. Benton exultingly
+and truthfully said that the president's foes had succeeded in breaking
+a minister only to make a president.
+
+Van Buren faithfully served the mammon of unrighteousness, both in his
+own state and, later on, at Washington; and he had his reward, for he
+was advanced to the highest offices in the gift of the nation. He had no
+reason to blame his own conduct for his final downfall; he got just as
+far along as he could possibly get; he succeeded because of, and not in
+spite of, his moral shortcomings; if he had always governed his actions
+by a high moral standard he would probably never have been heard of.
+Still, there is some comfort in reflecting that, exactly as he was made
+president for no virtue of his own, but simply on account of being
+Jackson's heir, so he was turned out of the office, not for personal
+failure, but because he was taken as scapegoat, and had the sins of his
+political fathers visited on his own head.
+
+The opposition to the election of Van Buren was very much disorganized,
+the Whig party not yet having solidified,--indeed it always remained a
+somewhat fluid body. The election did not have the slightest sectional
+significance, slavery not entering into it, and both Northern and
+Southern States voting without the least reference to the geographical
+belongings of the candidates. He was the last true Jacksonian
+Democrat--Union Democrat--who became president; the South Carolina
+separatists and many of their fellows refused to vote for him. The
+Democrats who came after him, on the contrary, all had leanings to the
+separatist element which so soon obtained absolute control of the party,
+to the fierce indignation of men like Benton, Houston, and the other old
+Jacksonians, whose sincere devotion to the Union will always entitle
+them to the gratitude of every true American. As far as slavery was
+concerned, however, the Southerners had hitherto had nothing whatever to
+complain of in Van Buren's attitude. He was careful to inform them in
+his inaugural address that he would not sanction any attempt to
+interfere with the institution, whether by abolishing it in the
+District of Columbia or in any other way distasteful to the South. He
+also expressed a general hope that he would be able throughout to follow
+in the footsteps of Jackson.
+
+He had hardly been elected before the ruinous financial policy to which
+he had been party, but of which the effects, it must in justice be said,
+were aggravated by many of the actions of the Whigs, began to bear fruit
+after its kind. The use made of the surplus was bad enough, but the
+withdrawal of the United States deposits from one responsible bank and
+their distribution among scores of others, many of which were in the
+most rickety condition, was a step better calculated than any other to
+bring about a financial crash. It gave a stimulus to extravagance, and
+evoked the wildest spirit of speculation that the country had yet seen.
+The local banks, to whom the custody of the public moneys had been
+intrusted, used them as funds which they and their customers could
+hazard for the chance of gain; and the gambling spirit, always existent
+in the American mercantile community, was galvanized into furious life.
+The public dues were payable in the paper of these deposit banks and of
+the countless others that were even more irresponsible. The deposit
+banks thus became filled up with a motley mass of more or less worthless
+bank paper, which thus formed the "surplus," of which the distribution
+had caused Congress so much worry. Their condition was desperate, as
+they had been managed with the most reckless disregard for the morrow.
+Many of them had hardly kept as much specie in hand as would amount to
+one fiftieth of the aggregate of their deposits and other immediate
+liabilities.
+
+The people themselves were of course primarily responsible for the then
+existing state of affairs; but the government had done all in its power
+to make matters worse. Panics were certain to occur more or less often
+in so speculative and venturesome a mercantile community, where there
+was such heedless trust in the future and such recklessness in the use
+of credit. But the government, by its actions, immensely increased the
+severity of this particular panic, and became the prime factor in
+precipitating its advent. Benton tried to throw the blame mainly on the
+bankers and politicians, who, he alleged, had formed an alliance for the
+overthrow of the administration; but he made the plea more
+half-heartedly than usual, and probably in his secret soul acknowledged
+its puerility.
+
+The mass of the people were still happy in the belief that all things
+were working well, and that their show of unexampled prosperity and
+business activity denoted a permanent and healthy condition. Yet all the
+signs pointed to a general collapse at no distant date; an era of
+general bank suspensions, of depreciated currency, and of insolvency of
+the federal treasury was at hand. No one but Benton, however, seemed
+able to read the signs aright, and his foreboding utterances were
+laughed at or treated with scorn by his fellow statesmen. He recalled
+the memory of the times of 1818-19, when the treasury reports of one
+year showed a superfluity of revenue of which there was no want, and
+those of the next showed a deficit which required to be relieved by a
+loan; and he foretold an infinitely worse result from the inflation of
+the paper system, saying:--
+
+ Are we not at this moment, and from the same cause, realizing the
+ first part--the elusive and treacherous part--of this picture? and
+ must not the other, the sad and real sequel, speedily follow? The
+ day of revulsion in its effects may be more or less disastrous; but
+ come it must. The present bloat in the paper system cannot continue;
+ violent contraction must follow enormous expansion; a scene of
+ distress and suffering must ensue--to come of itself out of the
+ present state of things, without being stimulated and helped on by
+ our unwise legislation.... _I_ am one of those who _promised_ gold,
+ not paper; _I did not join in putting down the Bank of the United_
+ _States to put up a wilderness of local banks. I did not join in
+ putting down the currency of a national bank to put up a national
+ paper currency of a thousand local banks._ I did not strike Cæsar to
+ make Antony master of Rome.
+
+These last sentences referred to the passage of the act repealing the
+specie circular and making the notes of the banks receivable in payment
+of federal dues. The act was most mischievous, and Benton's criticisms
+both of it and of the great Whig senator who pressed it were perfectly
+just; but they apply with quite as much weight to Jackson's dealings
+with the deposits, which Benton had defended.
+
+Benton foresaw the coming of the panic so clearly, and was so
+particularly uneasy about the immediate effects upon the governmental
+treasury, that he not only spoke publicly on the matter in the Senate,
+but even broached the subject in the course of a private conversation
+with the president-elect, to get him to try to make what preparations he
+could. Van Buren, cool, skillful, and far-sighted politician though he
+was, on this occasion showed that he was infected with the common
+delusion as to the solidity of the country's business prosperity. He was
+very friendly with Benton, and was trying to get him to take a position
+in his cabinet, which the latter refused, preferring service in the
+Senate; but now he listened with scant courtesy to the warning, and
+paid no heed to it. Benton, an intensely proud man, would not speak
+again; and everything went on as before. The law distributing the
+surplus among the states began to take effect; under its operations
+drafts for millions of dollars were made on the banks containing the
+deposits, and these banks, already sinking, were utterly unable to honor
+them. It would have been impossible, under any circumstances, for the
+president to ward off the blow, but he might at least, by a little
+forethought and preparation, have saved the government from some galling
+humiliations. Had Benton's advice been followed, the moneys called for
+by the appropriation acts might have been drawn from the banks, and the
+disbursing officers might have been prevented from depositing in them
+the sums which they drew from the treasury to provide for their ordinary
+expenses; thus the government would have been spared the disgrace of
+being obliged to stop the actual daily payments to the public servants;
+and the nation would not have seen such a spectacle as its rulers
+presented when they had not a dollar with which to pay even a day
+laborer, while at the same time a law was standing on the statute-book
+providing for the distribution of forty millions of nominal surplus.
+
+No effort was made to stave off even so much of the impending disaster
+as was at that late date preventable; and a few days after Van Buren's
+inauguration the country was in the throes of the worst and most
+widespread financial panic it has ever seen. The distress was fairly
+appalling both in its intensity and in its universal distribution. All
+the banks stopped payment, and bankruptcy was universal. Bank paper
+depreciated with frightful rapidity, especially in the West; specie
+increased in value so that all the coin in the country, down to the
+lowest denomination, was almost immediately taken out of circulation,
+being either hoarded, or gathered for shipment abroad as bullion. For
+small change every kind of device was made use of,--tokens, bank-bills
+for a few cents each, or brass and iron counters.
+
+Benton and others pretended to believe that the panic was the result of
+a deep-laid plot on the part of the rich classes, who controlled the
+banks, to excite popular hostility against the Jacksonian Democracy, on
+account of the caste antagonism which these same richer classes were
+supposed to feel towards the much-vaunted "party of the people;" and as
+Benton's mental vision was singularly warped in regard to some subjects,
+it is possible that the belief was not altogether a pretense. It is
+entirely unnecessary now seriously to discuss the proposition that it
+would be possible to drag the commercial classes into so widespread and
+profoundly secret a conspiracy, with such a vague end in view, and with
+the certainty that they themselves would be, from a business
+stand-point, the main sufferers.
+
+The efforts made by Benton and the other Jacksonians to stem the tide of
+public feeling and direct it through the well-worn channel of suspicious
+fear of, and anger at, the banks, as the true authors of the general
+wretchedness, were unavailing; the stream swelled into a torrent and ran
+like a mill-race in the opposite way. The popular clamor against the
+administration was deafening; and if much of it was based on good
+grounds, much of it was also unreasonable. But a very few years before
+the Jacksonians had appealed to a senseless public dislike of the
+so-called "money power," in order to help themselves to victory; and now
+they had the chagrin of seeing an only less irrational outcry raised
+against themselves in turn, and used to oust them from their places,
+with the same effectiveness which had previously attended their own
+frothy and loud-mouthed declamations. The people were more than ready to
+listen to any one who could point out, or pretend to point out, the
+authors of, and the reasons for, the calamities that had befallen them.
+Their condition was pitiable; and this was especially true in the newer
+and Western states, where in many places there was absolutely no money
+at all in circulation, even the men of means not being able to get
+enough coin or its equivalent to make the most ordinary purchases. Trade
+was at a complete stand-still; laborers were thrown out of employment
+and left almost starving; farmers, merchants, mechanics, craftsmen of
+every sort,--all alike were in the direst distress. They naturally, in
+seeking relief, turned to the government, it being almost always the
+case that the existing administration receives more credit if the
+country is prosperous, and greater blame if it is not, than in either
+case it is rightfully entitled to. The Democracy was now held to strict
+reckoning, not only for some of its numerous real sins but also for a
+good many imaginary ones; and the change in the political aspect of many
+of the commonwealths was astounding. Jackson's own home State of
+Tennessee became strongly Whig; and Van Buren had the mortification of
+seeing New York follow suit; two stinging blows to the president and the
+ex-president. The distress was a godsend to the Whig politicians. They
+fairly raved in their anger against the administration, and denounced
+all its acts, good and bad alike, with fluent and incoherent
+impartiality. Indeed, in their speeches, and in the petitions which they
+circulated and then sent to the president, they used language that was
+to the last degree absurd in its violence and exaggeration, and drew
+descriptions of the iniquities of the rulers of the country which were
+so overwrought as to be merely ridiculous. The speeches about the panic,
+and in reference to the proposed laws to alleviate it, were remarkable
+for their inflation, even in that age of windy oratory.
+
+Van Buren, Benton, and their associates stood bravely up against the
+storm of indignation which swept over the whole country, and lost
+neither head nor nerve. They needed both to extricate themselves with
+any credit from the position in which they were placed. In deference to
+the urgent wish of almost all the people an extra session of Congress
+was called especially to deal with the panic. Van Buren's message to
+this body was a really statesmanlike document, going exhaustively into
+the subject of the national finances. The Democrats still held the
+majority in both houses, but there was so large a floating vote, and the
+margins were so narrow, as to make the administration feel that its hold
+was precarious.
+
+The first thing to be done was to provide for the immediate wants of
+the government, which had not enough money to pay even its most
+necessary running expenses. To make this temporary provision two plans
+were proposed. The fourth instalment of the surplus--ten millions--was
+due to the states. As there was really no surplus, but a deficit
+instead, it was proposed to repeal the deposit law so far as it affected
+their fourth payment; and treasury notes were to be issued to provide
+for immediate and pressing needs.
+
+The Whigs frantically attacked the president's proposals, and held him
+and his party accountable for all the evils of the panic; and in truth
+it was right enough to hold them so accountable for part; but, after
+all, the harm was largely due to causes existing throughout the
+civilized world, and especially to the speculative folly rife among the
+whole American people. But it is always an easy and a comfortable thing
+to hold others responsible for what is primarily our own fault.
+
+Benton did not believe, as a matter of principle, in the issue of
+treasury notes, but supported the bill for that purpose on account of
+the sore straits the administration was in, and its dire need of
+assistance from any source. He treated it as a disagreeable but
+temporary makeshift, only allowable on the ground of the sternest and
+most grinding necessity, He stated that he supported the issue only
+because the treasury notes were made out in such a form that they could
+not become currency; they were merely loan notes. Their chief
+characteristic was that they bore interest; they were transferable only
+by indorsement; were payable at a fixed time; were not reissuable, nor
+of small denominations; and were to be canceled when paid. Such being
+the case he favored their issue, but expressly stated that he only did
+so on account of the urgency of the governmental wants; and that he
+disapproved of any such issue until the ordinary resources of taxes and
+loans had been tried to the utmost and failed. "I distrust, dislike, and
+would fain eschew this treasury-note resource; I prefer the direct loans
+of 1820-21. I could only bring myself to support this present measure
+when it was urged that there was not time to carry a loan through in its
+forms; nor even then would I consent to it until every feature of a
+currency character had been eradicated from the bill."
+
+A sharp struggle took place over the bill brought in by the friends of
+the administration and advocated by Benton, to repeal the obligation to
+deposit the fourth instalment of the surplus with the states. This
+scheme of a distribution, thinly disguised under the name of deposit to
+soothe the feelings of Calhoun and the other strict constructionist
+pundits, had worked nothing but mischief from the start; and now that
+there was no surplus to distribute, it would seem incredible that there
+should have been opposition to its partial repeal. Yet Webster, Clay,
+and their followers strenuously opposed even such repeal. It is possible
+that their motives were honest, but much more probable that they were
+actuated by partisan hostility to the administration, or that they
+believed they would increase their own popularity by favoring a plan
+that seemingly distributed money as a gift among the states. The bill
+was finally amended so as to make it imperative to pay this fourth
+instalment in a couple of years; yet it was not then paid, since on the
+date appointed the national treasury was bankrupt and the states could
+therefore never get the money,--which was the only satisfactory incident
+in the whole proceeding. The financial theories of Jackson and Benton
+were crude and vicious, it is true, but Webster, Clay, and most other
+public men of the day seem to have held ideas on the subject that were
+almost, if not quite, as mischievous.
+
+The great financial measures advocated by the administration of Van
+Buren, and championed with especial zeal by Benton, were those providing
+for an independent treasury and for hard-money payments; that is,
+providing that the government should receive nothing but gold and silver
+for its revenues, and that this gold and silver should be kept by its
+own officers in real, not constructive, treasuries,--in strong
+buildings, with special officers to hold the keys. The treasury was to
+be at Washington, with branches or sub-treasuries at the principal
+points of collection and disbursement.
+
+These measures, if successful, meant that there would be a total
+separation of the federal government from all banks; in the political
+language of the times they became known as those for the divorce of bank
+and state. Hitherto the local banks chosen by Jackson to receive the
+deposits had been actively hostile to Biddle's great bank and to its
+friends; but self-interest now united them all in violent opposition to
+the new scheme. Webster, Clay, and the Whigs generally fought it
+bitterly in the Senate; but Calhoun now left his recent allies and
+joined with Benton in securing its passage. However, it was for the time
+being defeated in the House of Representatives. Most of the opposition
+to it was characterized by sheer loud-mouthed demagogy--cries that the
+government was too aristocratic to accept the money that was thought
+good enough for the people, and similar claptrap. Benton made a very
+earnest plea for hard money, and especially denounced the doctrine that
+it was the government's duty to interfere in any way in private
+business; for, as usual in times of general distress, a good many people
+had a vague idea that in some way the government ought to step in and
+relieve them from the consequences of their own folly.
+
+Meanwhile the banks had been endeavoring to resume specie payment. Those
+of New York had taken steps in that direction but little more than three
+months after the suspension. Their weaker Western neighbors, however,
+were not yet in condition to follow suit; and the great bank at
+Philadelphia also at first refused to come in with them. But the New
+York banks persisted in their purpose, resumed payment a year after they
+had suspended, and eventually the others had to fall into line; the
+reluctance to do so being of course attributed by Benton to "the
+factious and wicked machinations" of a "powerful combined political and
+moneyed confederation"--a shadowy and spectral creation of vivid
+Jacksonian imaginations, in the existence of which he persisted in
+believing.
+
+Clay, always active as the friend of the banks, introduced a resolution,
+nominally to quicken the approach of resumption, but really to help out
+precisely those weak banks which did not deserve help, making the notes
+of the resuming banks receivable in payment of all dues to the federal
+government. This was offered after the banks of New York had resumed,
+and when all the other solvent banks were on the point of resuming also;
+so its nominal purpose was already accomplished, as Benton, in a caustic
+speech, pointed out. He then tore the resolution to shreds, showing that
+it would be of especial benefit to the insolvent and unsound banks, and
+would insure a repetition of the worst evils under which the country was
+already suffering. He made it clear that the proposition practically was
+to force the government to receive paper promises to pay from banks that
+were certain to fail, and therefore to force the government in turn to
+pay out this worthless paper to its honest creditors. Benton's speech
+was an excellent one, and Clay's resolution was defeated.
+
+All through this bank controversy, and the other controversies relating
+to it, Benton took the leading part, as mouthpiece of the
+administration. He heartily supported the suggestion of the president,
+that a stringent bankrupt law against the banks should be passed.
+Webster stood out as the principal opponent of this measure, basing his
+objections mainly upon constitutional grounds; that is, questioning the
+right, rather than the expediency, of the proposed remedy. Benton
+answered him at length in a speech showing an immense amount of careful
+and painstaking study and a wide range of historical reading and legal
+knowledge; he replied point by point, and more than held his own with
+his great antagonist. His speech was an exhaustive study of the history
+and scope of bankruptcy laws against corporations. Benton's capacity for
+work was at all times immense; he delighted in it for its own sake, and
+took a most justifiable pride in his wide reading, and especially in his
+full acquaintance with history, both ancient and modern. He was very
+fond of illustrating his speeches on American affairs with continual
+allusions and references to events in foreign countries or in old times,
+which he considered to be more or less parallel to those he was
+discussing; and indeed he often dragged in these comparisons when there
+was no particular need for such a display of his knowledge. He could
+fairly be called a learned man, for he had studied very many subjects
+deeply and thoroughly; and though he was too self-conscious and pompous
+in his utterances not to incur more than the suspicion of pedantry, yet
+the fact remains that hardly any other man has ever sat in the Senate
+whose range of information was as wide as his.
+
+He made another powerful and carefully wrought speech in favor of what
+he called the act to provide for the divorce of bank and state. This
+bill, as finally drawn, consisted of two distinct parts, one portion
+making provision for the keeping of the public moneys in an independent
+treasury, and the other for the hard-money currency, which was all that
+the government was to accept in payment of revenue dues. This last
+provision, however, was struck out, and the bill thereby lost the
+support of Calhoun, who, with Webster, Clay, and the other Whigs, voted
+against it; but, mainly through Benton's efforts, it passed the Senate,
+although by a very slender majority. Benton, in his speech, dwelt with
+especial admiration on the working of the monetary system of France, and
+held it up as well worthy to be copied by us. Most of the points he made
+were certainly good ones, although he overestimated the beneficent
+results that would spring from the adoption of the proposed system,
+believing that it would put an end for the future to all panics and
+commercial convulsions. In reality it would have removed only one of the
+many causes which go to produce the latter, leaving the others free to
+work as before; the people at large, not the government, were mainly to
+blame, and even with them it was in some respects their misfortune as
+much as their fault. Benton's error, however, was natural; like most
+other men he was unable fully to realize that hardly any phenomenon,
+even the most simple, can be said to spring from one cause only, and not
+from a complex and interwoven tissue of causation--and a panic is one of
+the least simple and most complex of mercantile phenomena. Benton's
+deep-rooted distrust of and hostility to such banking as then existed in
+the United States certainly had good grounds for existence.
+
+This distrust was shown again when the bill for the re-charter of the
+district banks came up. The specie basis of many of them had been
+allowed to become altogether too low; and Benton showed himself more
+keenly alive than any other public man to the danger of such a state of
+things, and argued strongly that a basis of specie amounting to one
+third the total of liabilities was the only safe proportion, and should
+be enforced by law. He made a most forcible argument, using numerous and
+apt illustrations to show the need of his amendment.
+
+Nor was the tireless Missouri senator satisfied even yet; for he
+introduced a resolution asking leave to bring in a bill to tax the
+circulation of banks and bankers, and of all corporations, companies, or
+individuals, issuing paper currency. One object of the bill was to raise
+revenue; but even more he aimed at the regulation of the currency by
+the suppression of small notes; and for this end the tax was proposed to
+be made heaviest on notes under twenty dollars, and to be annually
+augmented until it had accomplished its object and they had been driven
+out of circulation. In advocating his measure he used, as was perhaps
+unavoidable, some arguments that savored strongly of demagogy; but on
+the whole he made a strong appeal, using as precedents for the law he
+wished to see enacted both the then existing banking laws in England and
+those that had obtained previously in the history of the United States.
+
+Taken altogether, while the Jacksonians, during the period of Van
+Buren's presidency, rightly suffered for their previous financial
+misdeeds, yet so far as their actions at the time were concerned, they
+showed to greater advantage than the Whigs. Nor did they waver in their
+purpose even when the tide of popular feeling changed. The great
+financial measure of the administration, in which Benton was most
+interested, the independent treasury bill, he succeeded in getting
+through the Senate twice; the first time it was lost in the House of
+Representatives; but on the second occasion, towards the close of Van
+Buren's term, firmness and perseverance met their reward. The bill
+passed the Senate by an increased majority, scraped through the House
+after a bitter contest, and became a law. It developed the system known
+as that of the sub-Treasury, which has proved satisfactory to the
+present day.
+
+It was during Van Buren's term that Biddle's great bank, so long the
+pivot on which turned the fortunes of political parties, finally
+tottered to its fall. It was ruined by unwise and reckless management;
+and Benton sang a pæan over its downfall, exulting in its fate as a
+justification of all that he had said and done. Yet there can be little
+doubt that its mismanagement became gross only after all connection with
+the national government had ceased; and its end, attributable to causes
+not originally existent or likely to exist, can hardly be rightly
+considered in passing judgment upon the actions of the Jacksonians in
+reference to it.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+LAST DAYS OF THE JACKSONIAN DEMOCRACY.
+
+
+The difficulty and duration of a war with an Indian tribe depend less
+upon the numbers of the tribe itself than upon the nature of the ground
+it inhabits. The two Indian tribes that have caused the most irritating
+and prolonged struggle are the Apaches, who live in the vast, waterless,
+mountainous deserts of Arizona and New Mexico, and whom we are at this
+present moment engaged in subduing, and the Seminoles, who, from among
+the impenetrable swamps of Florida, bade the whole United States army
+defiance for seven long years; and this although neither Seminoles nor
+Apaches ever brought much force into the field, nor inflicted such
+defeats upon us as have other Indian tribes, like the Creeks and Sioux.
+
+The conflict with the Seminoles was one of the legacies left by Jackson
+to Van Buren; it lasted as long as the Revolutionary War, cost thirty
+millions of dollars, and baffled the efforts of several generals and
+numerous troops, who had previously shown themselves equal to any in
+the world. The expense, length, and ill-success of the struggle, and a
+strong feeling that the Seminoles had been wronged, made it a great
+handle for attack on the administration; and the defense was taken up by
+Benton, who always accepted completely the Western estimate of any form
+of the Indian question.
+
+As is usually the case in Indian wars there had been much wrong done by
+each side; but in this instance we were the more to blame, although the
+Indians themselves were far from being merely harmless and suffering
+innocents. The Seminoles were being deprived of their lands in pursuance
+of the general policy of removing all the Indians west of the
+Mississippi. They had agreed to go, under pressure, and influenced,
+probably, by fraudulent representations; but they declined to fulfill
+their agreement. If they had been treated wisely and firmly they might
+probably have been allowed to remain without serious injury to the
+surrounding whites. But no such treatment was attempted, and as a result
+we were plunged in one of the most harassing Indian wars we ever waged.
+In their gloomy, tangled swamps, and among the unknown and untrodden
+recesses of the everglades the Indians found a secure asylum; and they
+issued from their haunts to burn and ravage almost all the settled part
+of Florida, fairly depopulating five counties; while the soldiers could
+rarely overtake them, and when they did, were placed at such a
+disadvantage that the Indians repulsed or cut off detachment after
+detachment, generally making a merciless and complete slaughter of each.
+The great Seminole leader, Osceola, was captured only by deliberate
+treachery and breach of faith on our part, and the Indians were worn out
+rather than conquered. This was partly owing to their remarkable
+capacities as bush-fighters, but infinitely more to the nature of their
+territory.
+
+Our troops generally fought with great bravery; but there is very little
+else in the struggle, either as regards its origin or the manner in
+which it was carried on, to which an American can look back with any
+satisfaction. We usually group all our Indian wars together, in speaking
+of their justice or injustice; and thereby show flagrant ignorance. The
+Sioux and Cheyennes, for instance, have more often been sinning than
+sinned against; for example, the so-called Chivington or Sandy Creek
+Massacre, in spite of certain most objectionable details, was on the
+whole as righteous and beneficial a deed as ever took place on the
+frontier. On the other hand, the most cruel wrongs have been perpetrated
+by whites upon perfectly peaceable and unoffending tribes like those of
+California, or the Nez Perçés. Yet the emasculated professional
+humanitarians mourn as much over one set of Indians as over the
+other--and indeed, on all points connected with Indian management, are
+as untrustworthy and unsafe leaders as would be an equal number of the
+most brutal white borderers. But the Seminole War was one of those where
+the Eastern, or humanitarian view was more nearly correct than was any
+other; although even here the case was far from being entirely
+one-sided.
+
+Benton made an elaborate but not always candid defense of the
+administration, both as to the origin and as to the prosecution of the
+war. He attempted to show that the Seminoles had agreed to go West, had
+broken their treaty without any reason, had perpetrated causeless
+massacres, had followed up their successes with merciless butcheries,
+which last statement was true; and that Osceola had forfeited all claim
+or right to have a flag of truce protect him. There was a certain
+justice in his position even on these questions, and when he came to
+defend the conduct of our soldiers he had the right entirely with him.
+They were led by the same commander, and belonged to the same regiments,
+that in Canada had shown themselves equal to the famous British
+infantry; they had to contend with the country, rather than with their
+enemies, as the sweltering heat, the stagnant lagoons, the quaking
+morasses, and the dense forests of Florida made it almost impossible for
+an army to carry on a successful campaign. Moreover, the Seminoles were
+well armed; and many tribes of North American Indians show themselves,
+when with good weapons and on their own ground, more dangerous
+antagonists than would be an equal number of the best European troops.
+Indeed, under such conditions they can only be contended with on equal
+terms if the opposing white force is made up of frontiersmen who are as
+good woodsmen and riflemen as themselves, and who, moreover, have been
+drilled by some man like Jackson, who knows how to handle them to the
+best advantage, both in disciplining their lawless courage and in
+forcing them to act under orders and together,--the lack of which
+discipline and power of supporting each other has often rendered an
+assemblage of formidable individual border-fighters a mere disorderly
+mob when brought into the field.
+
+The war dragged on tediously. The troops--regulars, volunteers, and
+militia alike--fought the Indians again and again; there were pitched
+battles, surprises, ambuscades, and assaults on places of unknown
+strength; hundreds of soldiers were slain in battle or by treachery,
+hundreds of settlers were slaughtered in their homes, or as they fled
+from them; the bloody Indian forays reached even to the outskirts of
+Tallahatchee and to within sight of the walls of quaint old St.
+Augustine. Little by little, however, the power of the Seminoles was
+broken; their war bands were scattered and driven from the field,
+hundreds of their number were slain in fight, and five times as many
+surrendered and were taken west of the Mississippi. The white troops
+marched through Florida down to and into the everglades, and crossed it
+backwards and forwards, from the Gulf of Mexico to the Atlantic Ocean;
+they hunted their foes from morass to morass and from hummock to
+hummock; they mapped out the whole hitherto unknown country; they
+established numerous posts; opened hundreds of miles of wagon road; and
+built very many causeways and bridges. But they could not end the war.
+The bands of Indians broke up and entirely ceased to offer resistance to
+bodies of armed whites; but as individuals they continued as dangerous
+to the settlers as ever, prowling out at night like wild beasts from
+their fastnesses in the dark and fetid swamps, murdering, burning, and
+ravaging in all the outlying settlements, and destroying every lonely
+farm-house or homestead.
+
+There was but one way in which the war could be finally ended, and that
+was to have the territory occupied by armed settlers; in other words, to
+have it won and held exactly as almost all the land of the United States
+has been in the beginning. Benton introduced a bill to bring this about,
+giving to every such settler a good inheritance in the soil as a reward
+for his enterprise, toil, and danger; and the war was finished only by
+the adoption of this method. He supported his bill in a very effective
+speech, showing that the proposed way was the only one by which a
+permanent conquest could be effected; he himself had, when young, seen
+it put into execution in Tennessee and Kentucky, where the armed
+settlers, with their homesteads in the soil, formed the vanguard of the
+white advance: where the rifle-bearing backwoodsmen went forth to fight
+and to cultivate, living in assemblages of block-houses at first and
+separating into individual settlements afterwards. The work had to be
+done with axe, spade, and rifle alike. Benton rightly insisted that
+there was no longer need of a large army in Florida:--
+
+ Why, the men who are there now can find nobody to fight! It is two
+ years since a fight has been had. Ten men who will avoid surprises
+ and ambuscades can now go from one end of Florida to the other. As
+ warriors, these Indians no longer appear; it is only as assassins,
+ as robbers, as incendiaries, that they lurk about. What is now
+ wanted is not an army to fight, but settlers and cultivators to take
+ possession and keep possession; and the armed cultivator is the man
+ for that. The block-house is the first house to be built in an
+ Indian country; the stockade the first fence to be put up. Within
+ that block-house, or within a hollow square of block-houses, two
+ miles long on each side, two hundred yards apart, and inclosing a
+ good field, safe habitations are to be found for families.
+ Cultivation and defense then go hand in hand. The heart of the
+ Indian sickens when he hears the crowing of the cock, the barking of
+ the dog, the sound of the axe, and the crack of the rifle. These are
+ the true evidences of the dominion of the white man; these are the
+ proofs that the owner has come and means to stay, and then the
+ Indians feel it to be time for them to go. While soldiers alone are
+ in the country they feel their presence to be temporary; that they
+ are mere sojourners in the land, and sooner or later must go away.
+ It is the settler alone, the armed settler, whose presence announces
+ the dominion, the permanent dominion, of the white man.
+
+Benton's ideas were right, and were acted upon. It is impossible even to
+subdue an Indian tribe by the army alone; the latter can only pave the
+way for and partially protect the armed settlers who are to hold the
+soil.
+
+Benton continued to take a great interest in the disposal of the public
+lands, as was natural in a senator from the West, where the bulk of
+these lands lay. He was always a great advocate of a homestead law.
+During Van Buren's administration, he succeeded in getting two or three
+bills on the subject through the Senate. One of these allowed lands that
+had been five years in the market to be reduced in price to a dollar an
+acre, and if they stood five years longer to go down to seventy-five
+cents. The bill was greatly to the interest of the Western farmer in the
+newer, although not necessarily the newest, parts of the country. The
+man who went on the newest land was in turn provided for by the
+preëmption bill, which secured the privilege of first purchase to the
+actual settler on any lands to which the Indian title had been
+extinguished; to be paid for at the minimum price of public lands at the
+time. An effort was made to confine the benefits of this proposed law to
+citizens of the United States, excluding unnaturalized foreigners from
+its action. Benton, as representing the new states, who desired
+immigrants of every kind, whether foreign or native, successfully
+opposed this. He pointed out that there was no question of conferring
+political rights, which involved the management of the government, and
+which should not be conferred until the foreigner had become a
+naturalized citizen; it was merely a question of allowing the alien a
+right to maintain himself and to support his family. He especially
+opposed the amendment on account of the class of foreigners it would
+affect. Aliens who wished to take up public lands were not paupers or
+criminals, and did not belong to the shiftless and squalid foreign mob
+that drifted into the great cities of the sea-board and the interior;
+but on the contrary were among our most enterprising, hardy, and thrifty
+citizens, who had struck out for themselves into the remote parts of the
+new states and had there begun to bring the wilderness into subjection.
+Such men deserved to be encouraged in every way, and should receive from
+the preëmption laws the same benefits that would enure to native-born
+citizens. The third bill introduced, which passed the Senate but failed
+in the House, was one to permit the public lands sold to be immediately
+taxed by the states in which they lay. Originally these lands had been
+sold upon credit, the total amount not being paid, nor the title passed,
+until five years after the sale; and during this time it would have been
+unjust to tax them, as failure in paying the installments to the
+government would have let the lands revert to the latter; but when the
+cash system was substituted for credit Benton believed that there was no
+longer reason why the new lands should not bear their share of the
+state burdens.
+
+During Van Buren's administration the standard of public honesty, which
+had been lowering with frightful rapidity ever since, with Adams, the
+men of high moral tone had gone out of power, went almost as far down as
+it could go; although things certainly did not change for the better
+under Tyler and Polk. Not only was there the most impudent and
+unblushing rascality among the public servants of the nation, but the
+people themselves, through their representatives in the state
+legislatures, went to work to swindle their honest creditors. Many
+states, in the rage for public improvements, had contracted debts which
+they now refused to pay; in many cases they were unable, or at least so
+professed themselves, even to pay the annual interest. The debts of the
+states were largely held abroad; they had been converted into stock and
+held in shares, which had gone into a great number of hands, and now, of
+course, became greatly depreciated in value. It is a painful and
+shameful page in our history; and every man connected with the
+repudiation of the states' debts ought, if remembered at all, to be
+remembered only with scorn and contempt. However, time has gradually
+shrouded from our sight both the names of the leaders in the
+repudiation and the names of the victims whom they swindled. Two alone,
+one in each class, will always be kept in mind. Before Jefferson Davis
+took his place among the arch-traitors in our annals he had already long
+been known as one of the chief repudiators; it was not unnatural that to
+dishonesty towards the creditors of the public he should afterwards add
+treachery towards the public itself. The one most prominent victim was
+described by Benton himself: "The Reverend Sydney Smith, of witty
+memory, but amiable withal, was accustomed to lose all his amiability,
+but no part of his wit, when he spoke of his Pennsylvania bonds--which,
+in fact, was very often."
+
+Many of the bond-holders, however, did not manifest their grief by
+caustic wit, but looked to more substantial relief; and did their best
+to bring about the assumption of the state debts, in some form, whether
+open or disguised, by the federal government. The British capitalists
+united with many American capitalists to work for some such action; and
+there were plenty of people in the states willing enough to see it done.
+Of course it would have been criminal folly on the part of the federal
+government to take any such step; and Benton determined to meet and
+check the effort at the very beginning. The London Bankers' Circular had
+contained a proposition recommending that the Congress of the United
+States should guarantee, or otherwise provide for, the ultimate payment
+of the debts which the states had contracted for state or local
+purposes. Benton introduced a series of resolutions declaring utter
+opposition to the proposal, both on the ground of expediency and on that
+of constitutionality. The resolutions were perfectly proper in their
+purpose, but were disfigured by that cheap species of demagogy which
+consists in denouncing purely supposititious foreign interference,
+complicated by an allusion to Benton's especial pet terror, the
+inevitable money power. As he put it: "Foreign interference and
+influence are far more dangerous in the invidious intervention of the
+moneyed power than in the forcible invasions of fleets and armies."
+
+An attempt was made directly to reverse the effect of the resolutions by
+amending them so as to provide that the public land revenue should be
+divided among the states, to help them in the payment of these debts.
+Both Webster and Clay supported this amendment, but it was fortunately
+beaten by a large vote.
+
+Benton's speech, like the resolutions in support of which he spoke, was
+right in its purpose, but contained much matter that was beside the
+mark. He had worked himself into such a condition over the
+supposititious intrigues of the "money power"--an attack on which is
+almost always sure to be popular--that he was very certain to discover
+evidence of their existence on all, even the most unlikely, occasions;
+and it is difficult to think that he was not himself aware how overdrawn
+was his prophecy of the probable interference of foreign powers in our
+affairs, if the resolutions he had presented were not adopted.
+
+The tariff had once more begun to give trouble, and the South was again
+complaining of its workings, aware that she was falling always more to
+the rear in the race for prosperity, and blindly attributing her failure
+to everything but the true reason,--the existence of slavery. Even
+Benton himself showed a curiously pathetic eagerness to prove both to
+others and himself that the cause of the increasing disparity in growth,
+and incompatibility in interest between the two sections, must be due to
+some temporary and artificial cause, and endeavored to hide from all
+eyes, even from his own, the fact that the existence of slavery was
+working, slowly but surely, and with steadily increasing rapidity, to
+rend in sunder the Union which he loved and served with such heartfelt
+devotion. He tried to prove that the main cause of discontent was to be
+found in the tariff and other laws, which favored the North at the
+expense of the South. At the same time he entered an eloquent plea for a
+warmer feeling between the sections, and pointed out the absolute
+hopelessness of attempting to better the situation in any way by
+disunion. The great Missourian could look back with fond pride and
+regret to the condition of the South as it was during and immediately
+after the colonial days, when it was the seat of wealth, power, high
+living, and free-handed hospitality, and was filled to overflowing with
+the abounding life of its eager and turbulent sons. The change for the
+worse in its relative condition was real and great. He reproved his
+fellow-Southerners for attributing this change to a single cause, the
+unequal working of the federal government, "which gave all the benefits
+of the Union to the South and all its burdens to the North;" he claimed
+that it was due to many other causes as well. Yet those whom he rebuked
+were as near right as he was; for the change _was_ due in the main to
+only one cause--but that cause was slavery. It is almost pitiful to see
+the strong, stern, self-reliant statesman refusing, with nervous and
+passionate willfulness, to look the danger in the face, and, instead
+thereof, trying to persuade himself into the belief that "the remedy
+lies in the right working of the Constitution; in the cessation of
+unequal legislation; in the reduction of the inordinate expenses of the
+government; in its return to the simple, limited, and economical machine
+it was intended to be; and in the revival of fraternal feelings and
+respect for each other's rights and just complaints." Like many another
+man he thought, or tried to think, that by sweeping the dust from the
+door-sill he could somehow stave off the whirling rush of the
+sand-storm.
+
+The compromise tariff of 1833 had abolished all specific duties,
+establishing _ad valorem_ ones in their place; and the result had been
+great uncertainty and injustice in its working. Now whether a protective
+tariff is right or wrong may be open to question; but if it exists at
+all, it should work as simply and with as much certainty and exactitude
+as possible; if its interpretation varies, or if it is continually
+meddled with by Congress, great damage ensues. It is in reality of far
+less importance that a law should be ideally right than that it should
+be certain and steady in its workings. Even supposing that a high tariff
+is all wrong, it would work infinitely better for the country than would
+a series of changes between high and low duties. Benton strongly
+advocated a return to specific duties, as being simpler, surer, and
+better on every account. In commenting on the _ad valorem_ duties, he
+showed how they had been adopted blindly and without discussion by the
+frightened, silent multitude of congressmen and senators, who jumped at
+Clay's compromise bill in 1833 as giving them a loop-hole of escape from
+a situation where they would have had to face evil consequences, no
+matter what stand they took. Benton's comment on men of this stamp
+deserves chronicling, from its justice and biting severity: "It (the
+compromise act) was passed by the aid of the votes of those--always a
+considerable _per centum_ in every public body--to whom the name of
+compromise is an irresistible attraction; amiable men, who would do no
+wrong of themselves, and without whom the designing could also do but
+little wrong."
+
+He not only devoted himself to the general subject of the tariff in
+relation to specific duties, but he also took up several prominent
+abuses. One subject, on which he was never tired of harping with
+monotonous persistency, was the duty on salt. The idea of making salt
+free had become one which he was almost as fond of bringing into every
+discussion, no matter how inappropiate to the matter in hand, as he was
+of making irrelevant and abusive allusions to his much-enduring and
+long-suffering hobby, the iniquitous "money power." Benton had all the
+tenacity of a snapping turtle, and was as firm a believer in the policy
+of "continuous hammering" as Grant himself. His tenacity and his
+pertinacious refusal to abandon any contest, no matter what the odds
+were against him, and no matter how often he had to return to the
+charge, formed two of his most invaluable qualities, and when called
+into play on behalf of such an object as the preservation of the Union,
+cannot receive too high praise at our hands; for they did the country
+services so great and lasting that they should never be forgotten. It
+would have been fortunate indeed if Clay and Webster had possessed the
+fearless, aggressive courage and iron will of the rugged Missourian, who
+was so often pitted against them in the political arena. But when
+Benton's attention was firmly fixed on the accomplishment of something
+comparatively trivial, his dogged, stubborn, and unyielding earnestness
+drew him into making efforts of which the disproportion to the result
+aimed at was rather droll. Nothing could thwart him or turn him aside;
+and though slow to take up an idea, yet, if it was once in his head, to
+drive it out was a simply hopeless task. These qualities were of such
+invaluable use to the state on so many great occasions that we can well
+afford to treat them merely with a good-humored laugh, when we see them
+exercised on behalf of such a piece of foolishness as, for example, the
+expunging resolution.
+
+The repeal of the salt tax, then, was a particular favorite in Benton's
+rather numerous stable of hobbies, because it gave free scope for the
+use of sentimental as well as of economic arguments. He had the right of
+the question, and was not in the least daunted by his numerous rebuffs
+and the unvarying ill success of his efforts. Speaking in 1840, he
+stated that he had been urging the repeal for twelve years; and for the
+purpose of furnishing data with which to compare such a period of time,
+and without the least suspicion that there was anything out of the way
+in the comparison, he added, in a solemn parenthesis, that this was two
+years longer than the siege of Troy lasted. In the same speech was a
+still choicer morsel of eloquence about salt: "The Supreme Ruler of the
+Universe has done everything to supply his creatures with it; man, the
+fleeting shadow of an instant, invested with his little brief authority,
+has done much to deprive them of it." After which he went on to show a
+really extensive acquaintance with the history of salt taxes and
+monopolies, and with the uses and physical structure and surroundings of
+the mineral itself--all which might have taught his hearers that a man
+may combine much erudition with a total lack of the sense of humor. The
+salt tax is dragged, neck and heels, into many of Benton's speeches
+much as Cooper manages, on all possible occasions, throughout his
+novels, to show the unlikeness of the Bay of Naples to the Bay of New
+York--not the only point of resemblance, by the way, between the
+characters of the Missouri statesman and the New York novelist. Whether
+the subject under discussion was the taxation of bank-notes, or the
+abolition of slavery, made very little difference to Benton as to
+introducing an allusion to the salt monopoly. One of his happy arguments
+in favor of the repeal, which was addressed to an exceedingly practical
+and commonplace Congress, was that the early Christian disciples had
+been known as the salt of the earth--a biblical metaphor, which Benton
+kindly assured his hearers was very expressive; and added that a salt
+tax was morally as well as politically wrong, and in fact "was a species
+of impiety."
+
+But in attacking some of the abuses which had developed out of the
+tariff of 1833 Benton made a very shrewd and practical speech, without
+permitting himself to indulge in any such intellectual pranks as
+accompanied his salt orations. He especially aimed at reducing the
+drawbacks on sugar, molasses, and one or two other articles. In
+accordance with our whole clumsy, hap-hazard system of dealing with the
+tariff we had originally put very high duties on the articles in
+question, and then had allowed correspondingly heavy drawbacks; and yet,
+when in 1833, by Clay's famous compromise tariff bill, the duties were
+reduced to a fractional part of what they had previously been, no
+parallel reduction was made in the drawbacks, although Benton (supported
+by Webster) made a vain effort even then, while the compromise bill was
+on its passage, to have the injustice remedied. As a consequence, the
+exporters of sugar and rum, instead of drawing back the exact amounts
+paid into the treasury, drew back several times as much; and the
+ridiculous result was that certain exporters were paid a naked bounty
+out of the treasury, and received pay for doing and suffering nothing.
+In 1839 the drawback paid on the exportation of refined sugar exceeded
+the amount of revenue derived from imported sugar by over twenty
+thousand dollars. Benton showed this clearly, by unimpeachable
+statistics, and went on to prove that in that year the whole amount of
+the revenue from brown and clayed sugar, plus the above-mentioned twenty
+thousand dollars, was paid over to twenty-nine sugar refiners; and that
+these men thus "drew back" from the treasury what they had never put
+into it. Abuses equally gross existed in relation to various other
+articles. But in spite of the clear justice of his case Benton was able
+at first to make but little impression on Congress; and it was some time
+before matters were straightened out, as all the protective interests
+felt obliged to make common cause with each other, no matter what evils
+might be perpetrated by their taking such action.
+
+Towards the close of Van Buren's administration, when he was being
+assailed on every side, as well for what Jackson as for what he himself
+had done or left undone, one of the chief accusations brought against
+him was that he had squandered the public money, and that, since Adams
+had been ousted from the presidency, the expenses of running the
+government had increased out of all proportion to what was proper. There
+was good ground for their complaint, as the waste and peculation in some
+of the departments had been very great; but Benton, in an elaborate
+defense of both Jackson and Van Buren, succeeded in showing that at
+least certain of the accusations were unfounded--although he had to
+stretch a point or two in trying to make good his claim that the
+administration was really economical, being reduced to the rather lame
+expedient of ruling out about two thirds of the expenditures on the
+ground that they were "extraordinary."
+
+The charge of extravagance was one of the least of the charges urged
+against the Jacksonian Democrats during the last days of their rule.
+While they had been in power the character of the public service had
+deteriorated frightfully, both as regarded its efficiency and infinitely
+more as regarded its honesty; and under Van Buren the amount of money
+stolen by the public officers, compared to the amount handed in to the
+treasury, was greater than ever before or since. For this the
+Jacksonians were solely and absolutely responsible; they drove out the
+merit system of making appointments, and introduced the "spoils" system
+in its place; and under the latter they chose a peculiarly dishonest and
+incapable set of officers, whose sole recommendation was to be found in
+the knavish trickery and low cunning that enabled them to manage the
+ignorant voters who formed the backbone of Jackson's party. The
+statesmen of the Democracy in after days forgot the good deeds of the
+Jacksonians; they lost their attachment to the Union, and abandoned
+their championship of hard money; but they never ceased to cling to the
+worst legacy their predecessors had left them. The engrafting of the
+"spoils" system on our government was, of all the results of Jacksonian
+rule, the one which was most permanent in its effects.
+
+All these causes--the corruption of the public officials, the
+extravagance of the government, and the widespread distress, which might
+be regarded as the aftermath of its ruinous financial policy--combined
+with others that were as little to the discredit of the Jacksonians as
+they were to the credit of the Whigs, brought about the overthrow of the
+former. There was much poetic justice in the fact that the presidential
+election which decided their fate was conducted on as purely irrational
+principles, and was as merely one of sound and fury, as had been the
+case in the election twelve years previously, when they came into power.
+The Whigs, having exhausted their language in denouncing their opponents
+for nominating a man like Andrew Jackson, proceeded to look about in
+their own party to find one who should come as near him as possible in
+all the attributes that had given him so deep a hold on the people; and
+they succeeded perfectly when they pitched on the old Indian fighter,
+Harrison. "Tippecanoe" proved quite as effective a war-cry in bringing
+about the downfall of the Jacksonians as "Old Hickory" had shown itself
+to be a dozen years previously in raising them up. General Harrison had
+already shown himself to be a good soldier, and a loyal and honest
+public servant, although by no means standing in the first rank either
+as regards war-craft or state-craft; but the mass of his supporters
+apparently considered the facts, or supposed facts, that he lived in a
+log-cabin the walls of which were decorated with coon-skins, and that he
+drank hard cider from a gourd, as being more important than his capacity
+as a statesman or his past services to the nation.
+
+The Whigs having thus taken a shaft from the Jacksonians' quiver, it was
+rather amusing to see the latter, in their turn, hold up their hands in
+horror at the iniquity of what would now be called a "hurrah" canvass;
+blandly ignoring the fact that it was simply a copy of their own
+successful proceedings. Says Benton, with amusing gravity: "The class of
+inducements addressed to the passions and imaginations of the people was
+such as history blushes to record," a remark that provokes criticism,
+when it is remembered that Benton had been himself a prominent actor on
+the Jacksonian side in the campaigns of '28 and '32, when it was
+exclusively to "the passions and imaginations of the people" that all
+arguments were addressed.
+
+The Democrats did not long remain out of power; and they kept the
+control of the governmental policy in their hands pretty steadily until
+the time of the civil war; nevertheless it is true that with the defeat
+of Van Buren the Jacksonian Democracy, as such, lost forever its grip on
+the direction of national affairs. When, under Polk, the Democrats came
+back, they came under the lead of the very men whom the original
+Jacksonians had opposed and kept down. With all their faults, Jackson
+and Benton were strong Union men, and under them their party was a Union
+party. Calhoun and South Carolina, and the disunionists in the other
+Southern States were their bitter foes. But the disunion and extreme
+slavery elements within the Democratic ranks were increasing rapidly all
+the time; and they had obtained complete and final control when the
+party reappeared as victors after their defeat in 1840. Until Van
+Buren's overthrow the nationalists had held the upper hand in shaping
+Democratic policy; but after that event the leadership of the party
+passed completely into the hands of the separatists.
+
+The defeat of Van Buren marks an era in more ways than one. During his
+administration slavery played a less prominent part in politics than did
+many other matters; this was never so again. His administration was the
+last in which this question, or the question springing from it, did not
+overtop and dwarf in importance all others. Again, the presidential
+election of 1840 was the last into which slavery did not enter as a most
+important, and in fact as the vital and determining factor. In the
+contest between Van Buren and Harrison it did not have the least
+influence upon the result. Moreover, Van Buren was the last Democratic
+president who ruled over a Union of states; all his successors, up to
+the time of Lincoln's election, merely held sway over a Union of
+sections. The spirit of separation had identified itself with the
+maintenance of slavery, and the South was rapidly uniting into a compact
+array of states with interests that were hostile to the North on the
+point most vitally affecting the welfare of the whole country.
+
+No great question involving the existence of slavery was brought before
+the attention of Congress during Van Buren's term of office; nor was the
+matter mooted except in the eternal wrangles over receiving the
+abolitionist petitions. Benton kept silent in these discussions,
+although voting to receive the petitions. As he grew older he
+continually grew wiser, and better able to do good legislative work on
+all subjects; but he was not yet able to realize that the slavery
+question was one which could not be kept down, and which was bound to
+force itself into the sphere of national politics. He still insisted
+that it was only dragged before Congress by a few fanatics at the
+North, and that in the South it was made the instrument by which
+designing and unscrupulous men wished to break up the federal republic.
+His devotion to the Union, ever with him the chief and overmastering
+thought, made him regard with horror and aversion any man, at the North
+or at the South, who brought forward a question so fraught with peril to
+its continuance. He kept trying to delude himself into the belief that
+the discussion and the danger would alike gradually die away, and the
+former state of peaceful harmony between the sections, and freedom from
+disunion excitement, would return.
+
+But the time for such an ending already lay in the past; thereafter the
+outlook was to grow steadily darker year by year. Slavery lowered like a
+thunder-storm on the horizon; and though sometimes it might seem for a
+moment to break away, yet in reality it had reached that stage when,
+until the final all-engulfing outburst took place, the clouds were bound
+for evermore to return after the rain.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+THE PRESIDENT WITHOUT A PARTY.
+
+
+The Whigs in 1840 completely overthrew the Democrats, and for the first
+time elected a president and held the majority in both houses of
+Congress. Yet, as it turned out, all that they really accomplished was
+to elect a president without a party, for Harrison died when he had
+hardly more than sat in the presidential chair, and was succeeded by the
+vice-president, Tyler of Virginia.
+
+Harrison was a true Whig; he was, when nominated, a prominent member of
+the Whig party, although of course not to be compared with its great
+leader, Henry Clay, or with its most mighty intellectual chief and
+champion in the Northeast, Daniel Webster, whose mutual rivalry had done
+much to make his nomination possible. Tyler, however, could hardly be
+called a Whig at all; on the contrary, he belonged rightfully in the
+ranks of those extreme Democrats who were farthest removed from the Whig
+standard, and who were as much displeased with the Union sentiments of
+the Jacksonians as they were with the personal tyranny of Jackson
+himself. He was properly nothing but a dissatisfied Democrat, who hated
+the Jacksonians, and had been nominated only because the Whig
+politicians wished to strengthen their ticket and insure its election by
+bidding for the votes of the discontented in the ranks of their foes.
+Now a chance stroke of death put the presidency in the hands of one who
+represented this, the smallest, element in the coalition that overthrew
+Van Buren.
+
+The principles of the Whigs were hazily outlined at the best, and the
+party was never a very creditable organization; indeed, throughout its
+career, it could be most easily defined as the opposition to the
+Democracy. It was a free constructionist party, believing in giving a
+liberal interpretation to the doctrines of the Constitution; otherwise,
+its principles were purely economic, as it favored a high tariff,
+internal improvements, a bank, and kindred schemes; and its leaders,
+however they might quarrel among themselves, agreed thoroughly in their
+devout hatred of Jackson and all his works.
+
+It was on this last point only that Tyler came in. His principles had
+originally been ultra-Democratic. He had been an extreme strict
+constructionist, had belonged to that wing of the Democracy which
+inclined more and more towards separation, and had thus, on several
+grounds, found himself opposed to Jackson, Benton, and their followers.
+Indeed, he went into opposition to his original party for reasons akin
+to those that influenced Calhoun; and Seward's famous remark about the
+"ill-starred coalition between Whigs and Nullifiers" might with certain
+changes have been applied to the presidential election of 1840 quite as
+well as to the senatorial struggles to which it had reference.
+
+Tyler, however, had little else in common with Calhoun, and least of all
+his intellect. He has been called a mediocre man; but this is
+unwarranted flattery. He was a politician of monumental littleness.
+Owing to the nicely-divided condition of parties, and to the sheer
+accident which threw him into a position of such prominence that it
+allowed him to hold the balance of power between them, he was enabled to
+turn politics completely topsy-turvy; but his chief mental and moral
+attributes were peevishness, fretful obstinacy, inconsistency,
+incapacity to make up his own mind, and the ability to quibble
+indefinitely over the most microscopic and hair-splitting plays upon
+words, together with an inordinate vanity that so blinded him to all
+outside feeling as to make him really think that he stood a chance to be
+renominated for the presidency.
+
+The Whigs, especially in the Senate, under Henry Clay, prepared at once
+to push through various measures that should undo the work of the
+Jacksonians. Clay was boastfully and domineeringly sure of the necessity
+of applying to actual governmental work the economic theories that
+formed the chief stock in trade of his party. But it was precisely on
+these economic theories that Tyler split off from the Whigs. The result
+was that very shortly the real leader of the dominant party, backed by
+almost all his fellow party men in both houses of Congress, was at
+daggers drawn with the nominal Whig president, who in his turn was
+supported only by a "corporal's guard" of followers in the House of
+Representatives, by all the office-holders whom fear of removal reduced
+to obsequious subserviency, and by a knot of obscure politicians who
+used him for their own ends, and worked alternately on his vanity and on
+his fears. The Democrats, led by Benton, played out their own game, and
+were the only parties to the three-cornered fight who came out of it
+with profit. The details now offer rather dry reading, as the economic
+theories of all the contestants were more or less crude, the results of
+the conflict indecisive, and the effects upon our history ephemeral.
+
+Clay began by a heated revival of one of Jackson's worst ideas, namely,
+that when the people elect a president they thereby mark with the seal
+of their approval any and every measure with which that favored mortal
+or his advisers may consider themselves identified, and indorse all his
+and their previous actions. He at once declared that the people had
+shown, by the size of Harrison's majority, that they demanded the repeal
+of the independent treasury act, and the passage of various other laws
+in accordance with some of his own favorite hobbies, two out of three
+voters, as a matter of fact, probably never having given a second
+thought to any of them. Accordingly he proceeded to introduce a whole
+batch of bills, which he alleged that it was only yielding due respect
+to the spirit of Democracy to pass forthwith.
+
+Benton, however, even outdid Clay in paying homage to what he was
+pleased to call the "democratic idea." At this time he speaks of the
+last session of the Twenty-Sixth Congress as being "barren of measures,
+and necessarily so, as being the last of an administration superseded by
+the popular voice and soon to expire; and therefore restricted by a
+sense of propriety, during the brief remainder of its existence, to the
+details of business and the routine of service." According to this
+theory an interregnum of some sixteen weeks would intervene between the
+terms of service of every two presidents. He also speaks of Tyler as
+having, when the legislature of Virginia disapproved of a course he
+wished to follow, resigned his seat "in obedience to the democratic
+principle," which, according to his views, thus completely nullified the
+section of the Constitution providing for a six years' term of service
+in the Senate. In truth Benton, like most other Jacksonian and
+Jeffersonian leaders, became both foolish and illogical when he began to
+talk of the bundle of vague abstractions, which he knew collectively as
+the "democratic principle." Although not so bad as many of his school he
+had yet gradually worked himself up to a belief that it was almost
+impious to pay anything but servile heed to the "will of the majority;"
+and was quite unconscious that to surrender one's own manhood and
+judgment to a belief in the divine right of kings was only one degree
+more ignoble, and was not a shadow more logical, and but little more
+defensible, than it was blindly to deify a majority--not of the whole
+people, but merely of a small fraction consisting of those who happened
+to be of a certain sex, to have reached a certain age, to belong to a
+certain race, and to fulfill some other conditions. In fact there is no
+natural or divine law in the matter at all; how large a portion of the
+population should be trusted with the control of the government is a
+question of expediency merely. In any purely native American community
+manhood suffrage works infinitely better than would any other system of
+government, and throughout our country at large, in spite of the large
+number of ignorant foreign-born or colored voters, it is probably
+preferable as it stands to any modification of it; but there is no more
+"natural right" why a white man over twenty-one should vote than there
+is why a negro woman under eighteen should not. "Civil rights" and
+"personal freedom" are not terms that necessarily imply the right to
+vote. People make mistakes when governing themselves, exactly as they
+make mistakes when governing others; all that can be said is, that in
+the former case their self-interest is on the side of good government,
+whereas in the latter it always may be, and often must be, the reverse;
+so that, when any people reaches a certain stage of mental development
+and of capacity to take care of its own concerns, it is far better that
+it should itself take the reins. The distinctive features of the
+American system are its guarantees of personal independence and
+individual freedom; that is, as far as possible, it guarantees to each
+man his right to live as he chooses and to regulate his own private
+affairs as he wishes, without being interfered with or tyrannized over
+by an individual, or by an oligarchic minority, or by a democratic
+majority; while, when the interests of the whole community are at stake,
+it is found best in the long run to let them be managed in accordance
+with the wishes of the majority of those presumably concerned.
+
+Clay's flourish of trumpets foreboded trouble and disturbance to the
+Jacksonian camp. At last he stood at the head of a party controlling
+both branches of the legislative body, and devoted to his behests; and,
+if a little doubtful about the president, he still believed he could
+frighten him into doing as he was bid. He had long been in the minority,
+and had seen his foes ride roughshod over all he most believed in; and
+now he prepared to pay them back in their own coin and to leave a heavy
+balance on his side of the reckoning. Nor could any Jacksonian have
+shown himself more domineering and influenced by a more insolent
+disregard for the rights of others than Clay did in his hour of triumph.
+On the other side, Benton braced himself with dogged determination for
+the struggle; for he was one of those men who fight a losing or a
+winning battle with equal resolution.
+
+Tyler's first message to Congress read like a pretty good Whig document.
+It did not display any especial signs of his former strict construction
+theories, and gave little hope to the Democrats. The leader of the
+latter, indeed, Benton, commented upon both it and its author with
+rather grandiloquent severity, on account of its latitudinarian bias,
+and of its recommendation of a bank of some sort. However, the ink with
+which the message was written could hardly have been dry before the
+president's mind began to change. He himself probably had very little
+idea what he intended to do, and so contrived to give the Whigs the
+impression that he would act in accordance with their wishes; but the
+leaven had already begun working in his mind, and, not having much to
+work on, soon changed it so completely that he was willing practically
+to eat his own words.
+
+Shortly after Tyler had sent in his message outlining what legislation
+he deemed proper, he being by virtue of his position the nominal and
+titular leader of the Whigs, Clay, who was their real and very positive
+chief, and who was, moreover, determined to assert his chieftainship, in
+his turn laid down a programme for his party to follow, introducing a
+series of resolutions declaring it necessary to pass a bill to repeal
+the sub-treasury act, another to establish a bank, another to distribute
+the proceeds of the public land sales, and one or two more, to which was
+afterwards added a bankruptcy measure.
+
+The sub-treasury bill was first taken up and promptly passed and signed.
+Benton, of course, led the hopeless fight against it, making a long and
+elaborate speech, insisting that the finances were in excellent shape,
+as they were, showing the advantages of hard money, and denouncing the
+bill on account of the extreme suddenness with which it took effect, and
+because it made no provision for any substitute. He also alluded
+caustically to the curious and anomalous bank bill, which was then being
+patched up by the Whig leaders so as to get it into some such shape that
+the president would sign it.
+
+The other three important measures, that is, the bank, distribution, and
+bankruptcy bills, were all passed nearly together; as Benton pointed
+out, they were got through only by a species of bargain and sale, the
+chief supporters of each agreeing to support the other, so as to get
+their own pet measure through. "All must go together or fall together.
+This is the decree out of doors. When the sun dips below the horizon a
+private congress is held; the fate of the measures is decided; a bundle
+is tied together; and while one goes ahead as a bait, another is held
+back as a rod."
+
+The bankruptcy bill went through and was signed. It was urged by all the
+large debtor class, whose ranks had been filled to overflowing by the
+years of wild speculation and general bank suspension and insolvency.
+These debtors were quite numerous enough to constitute an important
+factor in politics, but Benton disregarded them nevertheless, and fought
+the bill as stoutly as he did its companions, alleging that it was a
+gross outrage on honesty and on the rights of property, and was not a
+bankrupt law at all, but practically an insolvent law for the abolition
+of debts at the will of the debtor. He pointed out grave and numerous
+defects of detail, and gave an exhaustive abstract of bankruptcy
+legislation in general; the speech gave evidence of the tireless
+industry and wide range of learning for which Benton was preëminently
+distinguished.
+
+The third bill to be taken up and passed was that providing for the
+distribution of the public lands revenue, and thus indirectly for
+assuming the debts of the states. Tyler, in his message, had
+characteristically stated that, though it would be wholly
+unconstitutional for the federal government to assume the debts of the
+states, yet it would be highly proper for it to give the latter money
+wherewith to pay them. Clay had always been an enthusiastic advocate of
+a distribution bill; and accordingly one was now passed and signed with
+the least possible delay. It was an absolutely indefensible measure. The
+treasury was empty, and loan and tax bills were pending at the very
+moment, in order to supply money for the actual running of the
+government. As Benton pointed out, Congress had been called together (a
+special session having been summoned by Harrison before his death) to
+raise revenue, and the first thing done was to squander it. The
+distribution took place when the treasury reports showed a deficit of
+sixteen millions of dollars. The bill was pushed through mainly by the
+states which had repudiated their debts in whole or in part; and as
+these debts were largely owed abroad, many prominent foreign
+banking-houses and individuals took an active part in lobbying for the
+bill. Benton was emphatically right in his opposition to the measure,
+but he was very wrong in some of the grounds he took. Thus he inveighed
+vigorously against the foreign capitalists who had come to help push the
+bill through Congress; but he did not have anything to say against the
+scoundrelly dishonesty displayed by certain states towards their
+creditors, which had forced these capitalists into the endeavor to
+protect themselves. He also incidentally condemned the original
+assumption by the national government of the debts of the states, at the
+time of the formation of the Constitution, which was an absolute
+necessity; and his constitutional views throughout seem rather strained.
+But he was right beyond cavil on the main point. It was criminal folly
+to give the states the impression that they would be allowed to create
+debts over which Congress could have no control, yet which Congress in
+the end would give them the money to pay. To reward a state for
+repudiating a debt by giving her the wherewithal to pay it was a direct
+and unequivocal encouragement of dishonesty. In every respect the bill
+was wholly improper; and Benton's attitude towards it and towards
+similar schemes was incomparably better than the position of Clay,
+Webster, and the other Whigs.
+
+Both the bankrupt bill and the distribution bill were repealed very
+shortly; the latter before it had time to take effect. This was an
+emphatic indorsement by the public of Benton's views, and a humiliating
+rebuke to the Whig authors of the measures. Indeed, the whole
+legislation of the session was almost absolutely fruitless in its
+results.
+
+One feature of the struggle was an attempt by Clay, promptly and
+successfully resisted by Benton and Calhoun, to institute the hour limit
+for speeches in the Senate. There was a good deal of excuse for Clay's
+motion. The House could cut off debate by the previous question, which
+the Senate could not, and nevertheless had found it necessary to
+establish the hour limit in addition. Of course it is highly undesirable
+that there should not be proper freedom of debate in Congress; but it is
+quite as hurtful to allow a minority to exercise their privileges
+improperly. The previous question is often abused and used tyrannically;
+but on the whole it is a most invaluable aid to legislation. Benton,
+however, waxed hot and wrathful over the proposed change in the Senate
+rules. He, with Calhoun and their followers, had been consuming an
+immense amount of time in speech-making against the Whig measures, and
+in offering amendments; not with any hopes of bettering the bills, but
+for outside effect, and to annoy their opponents. He gives an amusingly
+naive account of their course of action, and the reasons for it,
+substantially as follows:--
+
+ The Democratic senators acted upon a system, and with a thorough
+ organization and a perfect understanding. Being a minority, and able
+ to do nothing, they became assailants, and attacked incessantly;
+ not by formal orations against the whole body of a measure, but by
+ sudden, short, and pungent speeches directed against the vulnerable
+ parts, and pointed by proffered amendments. Amendments were
+ continually offered--a great number being prepared every night and
+ placed in suitable hands for use the next day--always commendably
+ calculated to expose an evil and to present a remedy. Near forty
+ propositions of amendment were offered to the first fiscal agent
+ bill alone--the yeas and nays were taken upon them seven and thirty
+ times. All the other prominent bills--distribution, bankrupt, fiscal
+ corporation, new tariff act, called revenue--were served the same
+ way; every proposed amendment made an issue. There were but
+ twenty-two of us, but every one was a speaker and effective. The
+ "Globe" newspaper was a powerful ally, setting out all we did to the
+ best advantage in strong editorials, and carrying out our speeches,
+ fresh and hot, to the people; and we felt victorious in the midst of
+ unbroken defeats.
+
+It is no wonder that such rank filibustering, coupled with the
+exasperating self-complacency of its originators, should have excited in
+Whig bosoms every desperate emotion short of homicidal mania.
+
+Clay, to cut off such useless talk, gave notice that he would move to
+have the time for debate for each individual restricted; remarking very
+truthfully that he did not believe the people at large would complain of
+the abridgment of speeches in Congress. But the Democratic senators,
+all rather fond of windy orations, fairly foamed at the mouth at what
+they affected to deem such an infringement of their liberties; and
+actually took the inexcusable resolution of bidding defiance to the rule
+if it was adopted, and refusing to obey it, no matter what degree of
+violence their conduct might bring about,--a resolution that was wholly
+unpardonable. Benton was selected to voice their views upon the matter,
+which he did in a long, and not very wise speech; while Calhoun was
+quite as emphatic in his threats of what would happen if attempt should
+be made to enforce the proposed rule. Clay was always much bolder in
+opening a campaign than in carrying it through; and when it came to
+putting his words into deeds, he wholly lacked the nerve which would
+have enabled him to contend with two such men as the senators from
+Missouri and South Carolina. Had he possessed a temperament like that of
+either of his opponents, he would have gone on and have simply forced
+acquiescence; for any legislative body can certainly enforce what rules
+it may choose to make as to the conduct of its own members in addressing
+it; but his courage failed him, and he withdrew from the contest,
+leaving the victory with Democrats.
+
+When the question of the re-charter of the district banks came up, it of
+course gave Benton another chance to attack his favorite foe. He offered
+a very proper amendment, which was voted down, to prohibit the banks
+from issuing a currency of small notes, fixing upon twenty dollars as
+being the lowest limit. This he supported in a strong speech, wherein he
+once again argued at length in favor of a gold and silver currency, and
+showed the evil effects of small bank-notes, which might not be, and
+often were not, redeemable at par. He very properly pointed out that to
+have a sound currency, especially in all the smaller denominations, was
+really of greater interest to the working men than to any one else.
+
+The great measure of the session, however, and the one that was intended
+to be the final crown and glory of the Whig triumph, was the bill to
+establish a new national bank. Among the political theories to which
+Clay clung most closely, only the belief in a bank ranked higher in his
+estimation than his devotion to a protective tariff. The establishment
+of a national bank seemed to him to be the chief object of a Whig
+success; and that it would work immediate and immense benefit to the
+country was with him an article of faith. With both houses of Congress
+under his control, he at once prepared to push his pet measure through,
+impatiently brushing aside all resistance.
+
+But at the very outset difficulty was feared from the action of the
+president. Tyler could not at first make up his mind what to do; or
+rather, he made it up in half a dozen different ways every day. His
+peevishness, vacillation, ambitious vanity, and sheer puzzle-headedness
+made him incline first to the side of his new friends and present
+supporters, the Whigs, and then to that of his old democratic allies,
+whose views on the bank, as on most other questions, he had so often
+openly expressed himself as sharing. But though his mind oscillated like
+a pendulum, yet each time it swung farther and farther over to the side
+of the Democracy, and it began to look as if he would certainly in the
+end come to a halt in the camp of the enemies of the Whigs; his approach
+to this destination was merely hastened by Clay's overbearing violence
+and injudicious taunts.
+
+However, at first Tyler did not dare to come out openly against any and
+all bank laws, but tried to search round for some compromise measure;
+and as he could not invent a compromise in fact, he came to the
+conclusion that one in words would do just as well. He said that his
+conscience would not permit him to sign a bill to establish a bank that
+was called a bank, but that he was willing to sign a bill establishing
+such an institution provided that it was called something else, though
+it should possess all the properties of a bank. Such a proposal opened a
+wide field for the endless quibbling in which his soul delighted.
+
+The secretary of the treasury, in response to a call from the Senate,
+furnished a plan for a bank, having modeled it studiously so as to
+overcome the president's scruples; and a select committee of the Senate
+at once shaped a bill in accordance with the plans. Said Benton: "Even
+the title was made ridiculous to please the president, though not so
+much so as he wished. He objected to the name of bank either in the
+title or the body of the charter, and proposed to style it 'Fiscal
+Institute;' and afterwards the 'Fiscal Agent,' and finally the 'Fiscal
+Corporation.'" Such preposterous folly on the president's part was more
+than the hot-blooded and overbearing Kentuckian could stand; and, in
+spite of his absorbing desire for the success of his measure, and of the
+vital necessity for conciliating Tyler, Clay could not bring himself to
+adopt such a ludicrous title, even though he had seen that the charter
+provided that the institution, whatever it might be styled in form,
+should in fact have all the properties of a bank. After a while,
+however, a compromise title was agreed on, but only a shadow less
+imbecile than the original one proposed by the president; and it was
+agreed to call the measure the "Fiscal Bank" bill.
+
+The president vetoed it, but stated that he was ready to approve any
+similar bill that should be free from the objections he named. Clay
+could not resist reading Tyler a lecture on his misconduct, during the
+course of a speech in the Senate; but the Whigs generally smothered
+their resentment, and set about preparing something which the president
+would sign, and this time concluded that they would humor him to the top
+of his bent, even by choosing a title as ridiculous as he wished; so
+they styled their bill one to establish a "Fiscal Corporation." Benton
+held the title up to well-deserved derision, and showed that, though
+there had been quite an elaborate effort to disguise the form of the
+measure, and to make it purport to establish a bank that should have the
+properties of a treasury, yet that in reality it was simply a revival of
+the old scheme under another name. The Whigs swallowed the sneers of
+their opponents as best they could, and passed their bill.
+
+The president again interposed his veto. An intrigue was going on among
+a few unimportant congressmen and obscure office-holders to form a new
+party with Tyler at its head; and the latter willingly entered into the
+plan, his mind, which was not robust at the best, being completely
+dazzled by his sudden elevation and his wild hopes that he could
+continue to keep the place which he had reached. He had given the Whigs
+reason to expect that he would sign the bill, and had taken none of his
+cabinet into his confidence. So, when his veto came in, it raised a
+perfect whirlwind of wrath and bitter disappointment. His cabinet all
+resigned, except Webster, who stayed to finish the treaty with Great
+Britain; and the Whigs formally read him out of the party. The Democrats
+looked on with huge enjoyment, and patted Tyler on the back, for they
+could see that he was bringing their foes to ruin; but nevertheless they
+despised him heartily, and abandoned him wholly when he had served their
+turn. Left without any support among the regulars of either side, and
+his own proposed third party turning out a still-born abortion, he
+simply played out his puny part until his term ended, and then dropped
+noiselessly out of sight. It is only the position he filled, and not in
+the least his ability, for either good or bad, in filling it, that
+prevents his name from sinking into merciful oblivion.
+
+There was yet one more brief spasm over the bank, however; the president
+sending in a plan for a "Fiscal Agent," to be called a Board of
+Exchequer. Congress contemptuously refused to pay any attention to the
+proposition, Benton showing its utter unworthiness in an excellent
+speech, one of the best that he made on the whole financial question.
+
+Largely owing to the cross purposes at which the president and his party
+were working, the condition of the treasury became very bad. It sought
+to provide for its immediate wants by the issue of treasury notes,
+differing from former notes of the kind in that they were made
+reissuable. Benton at once, and very properly, attacked this proceeding.
+He had a check drawn for a few days' compensation as senator, demanded
+payment in hard money, and when he was given treasury notes instead,
+made a most emphatic protest in the Senate, which was entirely
+effectual, the practically compulsory tender of the paper money being
+forthwith stopped.
+
+It was at this time, also, that bills to subsidize steamship lines were
+first passed, and that the enlarging and abuse of the pension system
+began, which in our own day threatens to become a really crying evil.
+Benton opposed both sets of measures; and in regard to the pension
+matter showed that he would not let himself, by any specious plea of
+exceptional suffering or need for charity, be led into vicious special
+legislation, sure in the end to bring about the breaking down of some of
+the most important principles of government.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+BOUNDARY TROUBLES WITH ENGLAND.
+
+
+Two important controversies with foreign powers became prominent during
+Tyler's presidency; but he had little to do with the settlement of
+either, beyond successively placing in his cabinet the two great
+statesmen who dealt with them. Webster, while secretary of state,
+brought certain of the negotiations with England to a close; and later
+on, Calhoun, while holding the same office, took up Webster's work and
+also grappled with--indeed partly caused--the troubles on the Mexican
+border, and turned them to the advantage of the South and slavery.
+
+Our boundaries were still very ill-defined, except where they were
+formed by the Gulf and the Ocean, the Great Lakes, and the river St.
+John. Even in the Northeast, where huge stretches of unbroken
+forest-land separated the inhabited portions of Canada from those of New
+England, it was not yet decided how much of this wilderness belonged to
+us and how much to the Canadians; and in the vast, unsettled regions of
+the far West our claims came into direct conflict with those of Mexico
+and of Great Britain. The ownership of these little known and badly
+mapped regions could with great difficulty be decided on grounds of
+absolute and abstract right; the title of each contestant to the land
+was more or less plausible, and at the same time more or less defective.
+The matter was sure to be decided in favor of the strongest; and, say
+what we will about the justice and right of the various claims, the
+honest truth is, that the comparative might of the different nations,
+and not the comparative righteousness of their several causes, was the
+determining factor in the settlement. Mexico lost her northern provinces
+by no law of right, but simply by the law of the longest sword--the same
+law that gave India to England. In both instances the result was greatly
+to the benefit of the conquered peoples and of every one else; though
+there is this wide difference between the two cases: that whereas the
+English rule in India, while it may last for decades or even for
+centuries, must eventually come to an end and leave little trace of its
+existence; on the other hand our conquests from Mexico determined for
+all time the blood, speech, and law of the men who should fill the lands
+we won.
+
+The questions between Great Britain and ourselves were compromised by
+each side accepting about half what it claimed, only because neither was
+willing to push the other to extremities. Englishmen like Palmerston
+might hector and ruffle, and Americans like Benton might swagger and
+bully; but when it came to be a question of actual fighting each people
+recognized the power of the other, and preferred to follow the more
+cautious and peaceful, not to say timid, lead of such statesmen as
+Webster and Lord Melbourne. Had we been no stronger than the Sikhs,
+Oregon and Washington would at present be British possessions; and if
+Great Britain had been as weak as Mexico, she would not now hold a foot
+of territory on the Pacific coast. Either nation might perhaps have
+refused to commit a gross and entirely unprovoked and uncalled-for act
+of aggression; but each, under altered conditions, would have readily
+found excuses for showing much less regard for the claims of the other
+than actually was shown. It would be untrue to say that nations have not
+at times proved themselves capable of acting with great
+disinterestedness and generosity towards other peoples; but such conduct
+is not very common at the best, and although it often may be desirable,
+it certainly is not always so. If the matter in dispute is of great
+importance, and if there is a doubt as to which side is right, then the
+strongest party to the controversy is pretty sure to give itself the
+benefit of that doubt; and international morality will have to take
+tremendous strides in advance before this ceases to be the case.
+
+It is difficult to exaggerate the importance of the treaties and wars by
+means of which we finally gave definite bounds to our territory beyond
+the Mississippi. Contemporary political writers and students, of the
+lesser sort, are always painfully deficient in the sense of historic
+perspective; and to such the struggles for the possession of the unknown
+and dimly outlined western wastes seemed of small consequence compared
+to similar European contests for territorial aggrandizement. Yet, in
+reality, when we look at the far-reaching nature of the results, the
+questions as to what kingdom should receive the fealty of Holstein or
+Lorraine, of Savoy or the Dobrudscha, seem of absolutely trivial
+importance compared to the infinitely more momentous ones as to the
+future race settlement and national ownership of the then lonely and
+unpeopled lands of Texas, California, and Oregon.
+
+Benton, greatly to the credit of his foresight, and largely in
+consequence of his strong nationalist feeling, thoroughly appreciated
+the importance of our geographical extensions. He was the great
+champion of the West and of western development, and a furious partisan
+of every movement in the direction of the enlargement of our western
+boundaries. Many of his expressions, when talking of the greatness of
+our country and of the magnitude of the interests which were being
+decided, not only were grandiloquent in manner, but also seem
+exaggerated and overwrought even as regards matter. But when we think of
+the interests for which he contended, as they were to become, and not as
+they at the moment were, the appearance of exaggeration is lost, and the
+intense feeling of his speeches no longer seems out of place or
+disproportionate to the importance of the subject with which he dealt.
+Without clearly formulating his opinions, even to himself, and while
+sometimes prone to attribute to his country at the moment a greatness
+she was not to possess for two or three generations to come, he,
+nevertheless, had engrained in his very marrow and fibre the knowledge
+that inevitably, and beyond all doubt, the coming years were to be hers.
+He knew that, while other nations held the past, and shared with his own
+the present, yet that to her belonged the still formless and unshaped
+future. More clearly than almost any other statesman he beheld the
+grandeur of the nation loom up, vast and shadowy, through the advancing
+years.
+
+He was keenly alive to the need of our having free chance to spread
+towards the northwest; he very early grasped the idea that in that
+direction we ought to have room for continental development. In his
+earliest years, to be sure, when the Mississippi seemed a river of the
+remote western border, when nobody, not even the hardiest trapper, had
+penetrated the boundless and treeless plains that stretch to the
+foot-hills of the Rockies, and when the boldest thinkers had not dared
+to suppose that we could ever hold together as a people, when once
+scattered over so wide a territory, he had stated in a public speech
+that he considered the mountains to be our natural frontier line to the
+west, and the barrier beyond which we ought not to pass, and had
+expressed his trust that on the Pacific coast there would grow up a
+kindred and friendly Republic. But very soon, as the seemingly
+impossible became the actual, he himself changed, and ever afterwards
+held that we should have, wherever possible, no boundaries but the two
+Oceans.
+
+Benton's violent and aggressive patriotism undoubtedly led him to assume
+positions towards foreign powers that were very repugnant to the quiet,
+peaceable, and order-loving portion of the community, especially when
+he gave vent to the spirit of jealous antagonism which he felt towards
+Great Britain, the power that held sway over the wilderness bordering us
+on the north. Yet the arrogant attitude he assumed was more than
+justified by the destiny of the great Republic; and it would have been
+well for all America if we had insisted even more than we did upon the
+extension northward of our boundaries. Not only the Columbia but also
+the Red River of the North--and the Saskatchewan and Frazer as
+well--should lie wholly within our limits, less for our own sake than
+for the sake of the men who dwell along their banks. Columbia,
+Saskatchewan, and Manitoba would, as states of the American Union, hold
+positions incomparably more important, grander, and more dignified than
+they can ever hope to reach either as independent communities or as
+provincial dependencies of a foreign power that regards them with a
+kindly tolerance somewhat akin to contemptuous indifference. Of course
+no one would wish to see these, or any other settled communities, now
+added to our domain by force; we want no unwilling citizens to enter our
+Union; the time to have taken the lands was before settlers came into
+them. European nations war for the possession of thickly settled
+districts which, if conquered, will for centuries remain alien and
+hostile to the conquerors; we, wiser in our generation, have seized the
+waste solitudes that lay near us, the limitless forests and never ending
+plains, and the valleys of the great, lonely rivers; and have thrust our
+own sons into them to take possession; and a score of years after each
+conquest we see the conquered land teeming with a people that is one
+with ourselves.
+
+Benton felt that all the unoccupied land to the northwest was by right
+our heritage, and he was willing to do battle for it if necessary. He
+was a perfect type of western American statesmanship in his way of
+looking at our foreign relations; he was always unwilling to compromise,
+being of that happy temperament which is absolutely certain that its
+claims are just and righteous in their entirety, and that it would be
+wrong to accept anything less than all that is demanded; he was willing
+to bully if our rights, as he deemed them, were not granted us; and he
+was perfectly ready to fight if the bullying was unsuccessful. True, he
+did not consistently carry through all his theories to their logical
+consequences; but it may well be questioned whether, after all, his
+original attitude towards Great Britain was not wiser, looking to its
+probable remote results, than that which was finally taken by the
+national government, whose policy was on this point largely shaped by
+the feeling among the richer and more educated classes of the Northeast.
+These classes have always been more cautious and timid than any others
+in the Union, especially in their way of looking at possible foreign
+wars, and have never felt much of the spirit which made the West stretch
+out impatiently for new lands. Fortunately they have rarely been able to
+control our territorial growth.
+
+No foot of soil to which we had any title in the Northwest should have
+been given up; we were the people who could use it best, and we ought to
+have taken it all. The prize was well worth winning, and would warrant a
+good deal of risk being run. We had even then grown to be so strong that
+we were almost sure eventually to win in any American contest for
+continental supremacy. We were near by, our foes far away--for the
+contest over the Columbia would have been settled in Canada. We should
+have had hard fighting to be sure, but sooner or later the result would
+have been in our favor. There were no better soldiers in the world than
+the men of Balaclava and Inkerman, but the victors of Buena Vista and
+Chapultepec were as good. Scott and Taylor were not great generals, but
+they were, at least, the equals of Lord Raglan; and we did not have in
+our service any such examples of abnormal military inaptitude as Lords
+Lucan and Cardigan and their kind.
+
+It was of course to be expected that men like Benton would bitterly
+oppose the famous Ashburton treaty, which was Webster's crowning work
+while secretary of state, and the only conspicuous success of Tyler's
+administration. The Ashburton treaty was essentially a compromise
+between the extreme claims of the two contestants, as was natural where
+the claims were based on very unsubstantial grounds and the contestants
+were of somewhat the same strength. It was most beneficial in its
+immediate effects; and that it was a perfectly dignified and proper
+treaty for America to make is best proved by the virulent hostility with
+which Palmerston and his followers assailed it as a "surrender" on the
+part of England, while Englishmen of the same stamp are to this day
+never tired of lamenting the fact that they have allowed our western
+boundaries to be pushed so far to the north. But there appears to be
+much excuse for Benton's attitude, when we look at the treaty as one in
+a chain of incidents, and with regard to its future results. Our
+territorial quarrels with Great Britain were not like those between most
+other powers. It was for the interest of the whole western hemisphere
+that no European nation should have extensive possessions between the
+Atlantic and the Pacific; and by right we should have given ourselves
+the benefit of every doubt in all territorial questions, and have shown
+ourselves ready to make prompt appeal to the sword whenever it became
+necessary as a last resort.
+
+Still, as regards the Ashburton treaty itself, it must be admitted that
+much of Benton's opposition was merely factious and partisan, on account
+of its being a Whig measure; and his speeches on the subject contain a
+number of arguments that are not very creditable to him.
+
+Some of his remarks referred to a matter which had been already a cause
+of great excitement during Van Buren's administration, and on which he
+had spoken more than once. This was the destruction of the steamer
+Caroline by the British during the abortive Canadian insurrection of
+1837. Much sympathy had been felt for the rebels by the Americans along
+the border, and some of them had employed the Caroline in conveying
+stores to the insurgents; and in revenge a party of British troops
+surprised and destroyed her one night while she was lying in an American
+port. This was a gross and flagrant violation of our rights, and was
+promptly resented by Van Buren, who had done what he could to maintain
+order along the border, and had been successful in his efforts. Benton
+had supported the president in preventing a breach of neutrality on our
+part, and was fiercely indignant when the breach was committed by the
+other side. Reparation was demanded forthwith. The British government at
+first made evasive replies. After a while a very foolish personage named
+McLeod, a British subject, who boasted that he had taken part in the
+affair, ventured into New York and was promptly imprisoned by the state
+authorities. His boastings, fortunately for him, proved to be totally
+unfounded, and he was acquitted by the jury before whom he was taken,
+after a detention of several months in prison. But meanwhile the British
+government demanded his release--adopting a very different tone with
+Tyler and the Whigs from that which they had been using towards Van
+Buren, who still could conjure with Jackson's terrible name. The United
+States agreed to release McLeod, but New York refused to deliver him up;
+and before the question was decided he was acquitted, as said above. It
+was clearly wrong for a state to interfere in a disagreement between the
+nation and a foreign power; and on the other hand the federal
+authorities did not show as much firmness in their dealings with
+England as they should have shown. Benton, true to certain of his
+states-rights theories and in pursuance of his policy of antagonism to
+Great Britain, warmly supported the attitude of New York, alleging that
+the United States had no right to interfere with her disposal of McLeod;
+and asserting that while if the citizens of one country committed an
+outrage upon another it was necessary to apply to the sovereign for
+redress, yet that if the wrong-doers came into the country which had
+been aggrieved they might be seized and punished; and he exultingly
+referred to Jackson's conduct at the time of the first Seminole War,
+when he hung off-hand two British subjects whom he accused of inciting
+the Indians against us, Great Britain not making any protest. The
+Caroline matter was finally settled in the Ashburton treaty, the British
+making a formal but very guarded apology for her destruction,--an
+apology which did not satisfy Benton in the least.
+
+It is little to Benton's credit, however, that, while thus courting
+foreign wars, he yet opposed the efforts of the Whigs to give us a
+better navy. Our navy was then good of its kind, but altogether too
+small. Benton's opposition to its increase seems to have proceeded
+partly from mere bitter partisanship, partly from sheer ignorance, and
+partly from the doctrinaire dread of any kind of standing military or
+naval force, which he had inherited, with a good many similar ideas,
+from the Jeffersonians.
+
+He attacked the whole treaty, article by article, when it came up for
+ratification in the Senate, making an extremely lengthy and elaborate
+speech, or rather set of speeches, against it. Much of his objection,
+especially to the part compromising the territorial claims of the two
+governments, was well founded; but much was also factious and
+groundless. The most important point of all that was in controversy, the
+ownership of Oregon, was left unsettled; but, as will be shown farther
+on, this was wise. He made this omission a base or pretext for the
+charge that the treaty was gotten up in the interests of the
+East,--although with frank lack of logic he also opposed it because it
+sacrificed the interests of Maine,--and that it was detrimental to the
+South and West; and he did his best to excite sectional feeling against
+it. He also protested against the omission of all reference to the
+impressment of American sailors by British vessels; and this was a valid
+ground of opposition,--although Webster had really settled the matter by
+writing a formal note to the British government, in which he practically
+gave official notice that any attempt to revive the practice would be
+repelled by force of arms.
+
+Benton occupied a much less tenable position when he came to the
+question of slavery, and inveighed against the treaty because it did not
+provide for the return of fugitive slaves, or of slaves taken from
+American coasting vessels when the latter happened to be obliged to put
+into West Indian ports, and because it did contain a provision that we
+ourselves should keep in commission a squadron on the coast of Africa to
+coöperate with the British in the suppression of the slave-trade.
+Benton's object in attacking the treaty on this point was to excite the
+South to a degree that would make the senators from that section refuse
+to join in ratifying it; but the attempt was a flat failure. It is
+hardly to be supposed that he himself was as indignant over this
+question as he pretended to be. He must have realized that, so long as
+we had among ourselves an institution so wholly barbarous and out of
+date as slavery, just so long we should have to expect foreign powers to
+treat us rather cavalierly on that one point. Whatever we might say
+among ourselves as to the rights of property or the necessity of
+preserving the Union by refraining from the disturbance of slavery, it
+was certain that foreign nations would place the manhood and liberty of
+the slave above the vested interest of the master--all the more readily
+because they were jealous of the Union and anxious to see it break up,
+and were naturally delighted to take the side of abstract justice and
+humanity, when to do so was at the expense of outsiders and redounded to
+their own credit, without causing them the least pecuniary loss or
+personal inconvenience. The attitude of slave-holders towards freedom in
+the abstract was grotesque in its lack of logic; but the attitude of
+many other classes of men, both abroad and at home, towards it was
+equally full of a grimly unconscious humor. The southern planters, who
+loudly sympathized with Kossuth and the Hungarians, were entirely
+unconscious that their tyranny over their own black bondsmen made their
+attacks upon Austria's despotism absurd; and Germans, who were shocked
+at our holding the blacks in slavery, could not think of freedom in
+their own country without a shudder. On one night the Democrats of the
+Northern States would hold a mass meeting to further the cause of Irish
+freedom, on the next night the same men would break up another meeting
+held to help along the freeing of the negroes; while the English
+aristocracy held up its hands in horror at American slavery and set its
+face like a flint against all efforts to do Ireland tardy and incomplete
+justice.
+
+Again, in his opposition to the extradition clause of the treaty,
+Benton was certainly wrong. Nothing is clearer than that nations ought
+to combine to prevent criminals from escaping punishment merely by
+fleeing over an imaginary line; the crime is against all society, and
+society should unite to punish it. Especially is there need of the most
+stringent extradition laws between countries whose people have the same
+speech and legal system, as with the United States and Great Britain.
+Indeed, it is a pity that our extradition laws are not more stringent.
+But Benton saw, or affected to see, in the extradition clause, a menace
+to political refugees, and based his opposition to it mainly on this
+ground. He also quoted on his side the inevitable Jefferson; for
+Jefferson, or rather the highly idealized conception of what Jefferson
+had been, shared with the "demos krateo principle" the honor of being
+one of the twin fetiches to which Benton, in common with most of his
+fellow-Democrats, especially delighted to bow down.
+
+But when he came to the parts of the treaty that defined our
+northeastern boundary and so much of our northwestern boundary as lay
+near the Great Lakes, Benton occupied far more defensible ground; and
+the parts of his speech referring to these questions were very strong
+indeed. He attempted to show that in the matter of the Maine frontier
+we had surrendered very much more than there was any need of our doing,
+and that the British claim was unfounded; and there seems now to be good
+reason for thinking him right, although it must be admitted that in
+agreeing to the original line in earlier treaties the British had acted
+entirely under a misapprehension as to where it would go. Benton was
+also able to make a good point against Webster for finally agreeing to
+surrender so much of Maine's claim by showing the opposition the latter
+had made, while in the Senate, to a similar but less objectionable
+clause in a treaty which Jackson's administration had then been trying
+to get through. Again Webster had, in defending the surrender of certain
+of our claims along the boundary west of Lake Superior, stated that the
+country was not very valuable, as it was useless for agricultural
+purposes; and Benton had taken him up sharply on this point, saying that
+we wanted the land anyhow, whether it produced corn and potatoes or only
+furs and lumber. The amounts of territory as to which our claims were
+compromised were not very large compared to the extent of the Pacific
+coast lands which were still left in dispute; and it was perhaps well
+that the treaty was ratified; but certainly there is much to be said on
+Benton's side so far as his opposition to the proposed frontier was
+concerned.
+
+However, he was only able to rally eight other senators to his support,
+and the treaty went through the Senate triumphantly. It encountered an
+even more bitter opposition in Parliament, where Palmerston headed a
+series of furious attacks upon it, for reasons the precise opposite of
+those which Benton alleged, arguing that England received much less,
+instead of much more, than her due, and thereby showing Webster's
+position in a very much better light than that in which it would
+otherwise have appeared. Eventually the British government ratified the
+treaty.
+
+The Ashburton treaty did not touch on the Oregon matter at all; nor was
+this dealt with by Webster while he was secretary of state. But it came
+before the Senate at that time, and later on Calhoun took it up, when
+filling Webster's place in the cabinet, although a final decision was
+not reached until during Polk's presidency. Webster did not appreciate
+the importance of Oregon in the least, and moreover came from a section
+of the country that was not inclined to insist on territorial expansion
+at the hazard of a war, in which the merchants of the sea-board would be
+the chief sufferers. Calhoun, it is true, came from a peculiarly
+militant and bellicose state, but on the other hand from a section that
+was not very anxious to see the free North acquire new territory. So it
+happened that neither of Tyler's two great secretaries felt called upon
+to insist too vehemently upon going to extremes in defense of our
+rights, or supposed rights, along the Pacific coast; and though in the
+end the balance was struck pretty evenly between our claims and those of
+our neighbor, yet it is to be regretted that we did not stand out
+stiffly for the whole of our demand. Our title was certainly not
+perfect, but it was to the full as good as, or better than, Great
+Britain's; and it would have been better in the end had we insisted upon
+the whole territory being given to us, no matter what price we had to
+pay.
+
+The politico-social line of division between the East and the West had
+been gradually growing fainter as that between the North and South grew
+deeper; but on the Oregon question it again became prominent.
+Southeastern Democrats, like the Carolinian McDuffie, spoke as
+slightingly of the value of Oregon, and were as little inclined to risk
+a war for its possession, as the most peace-loving Whigs of New England;
+while the intense western feeling against giving up any of our rights on
+the Pacific coast was best expressed by the two senators from the slave
+state of Missouri. Benton was not restrained in his desire to add to
+the might of the Union by any fear of the possible future effect upon
+the political power of the Slave States. Although a slave-holder and the
+representative of slave-holders, he was fully alive to the evils of
+slavery, though as yet not seeing clearly how all-important a question
+it had become. The preservation and extension of the Union and obedience
+to the spirit of Democracy were the chief articles of his political
+creed, and to these he always subordinated all others. When, in speaking
+of slavery, he made use, as he sometimes did, of expressions that were
+not far removed from those of men really devoted to the slave interests,
+it was almost always because he had some ulterior object in view, or for
+factional ends; for unfortunately his standard of political propriety
+was not sufficiently high to prevent his trying to make use of any
+weapon, good or bad, with which to overturn his political foes. In
+protesting against the Ashburton treaty, he outdid even such slavery
+champions as Calhoun in the extravagance of his ideas as to what we
+should demand of foreign powers in reference to their treatment of our
+"peculiar institution"; but he seems to have done this merely because
+thereby he got an additional handle of attack against the Whig measures.
+The same thing was true earlier of his fulmination against Clay's
+proposed Panama Congress; and even before that, in attacking Adams for
+his supposed part in the treaty whereby we established the line of our
+Spanish frontier, he dragged slavery into the question, not, apparently,
+because he really particularly wished to see our slave territory
+extended, but because he thought that he might use the slavery cry to
+excite in one other section of the country a feeling as strong as that
+which the West already felt in regard to territorial expansion
+generally. Indeed, his whole conduct throughout the Oregon controversy,
+especially when taken in connection with the fact that he stood out for
+Maine's frontier rights more stoutly than the Maine representatives
+themselves, shows how free from sectional bias was his way of looking at
+our geographical growth.
+
+The territory along the Pacific coast lying between California on the
+south and Alaska on the north--"Oregon," as it was comprehensively
+called--had been a source of dispute for some time between the United
+States and Great Britain. After some negotiations both had agreed with
+Russia to recognize the line of 54° 40' as the southern boundary of the
+latter's possessions; and Mexico's undisputed possession of California
+gave an equally well marked southern limit, at the forty-second
+parallel. All between was in dispute. The British had trading posts at
+the mouth of the Columbia, which they emphatically asserted to be
+theirs; we, on the other hand, claimed an absolutely clear title up to
+the forty-ninth parallel, a couple of hundred miles north of the mouth
+of the Columbia, and asserted that for all the balance of the territory
+up to the Russian possessions our title was at any rate better than that
+of the British. In 1818 a treaty had been made providing for the joint
+occupation of the territory by the two powers, as neither was willing to
+give up its claim to the whole, or at the time at all understood the
+value of the possession, then entirely unpeopled. This treaty of joint
+occupancy had remained in force ever since. Under it the British had
+built great trading stations, and used the whole country in the
+interests of certain fur companies. The Americans, in spite of some vain
+efforts, were unable to compete with them in this line; but, what was
+infinitely more important, had begun, even prior to 1840, to establish
+actual settlers along the banks of the rivers, some missionaries being
+the first to come in. As long, however, as the territory remained
+sparsely settled, and the communication with it chiefly by sea, the hold
+of Great Britain gave promise of being the stronger. But the aspect of
+affairs was totally changed when in 1842 a huge caravan of over a
+thousand Americans made the journey overland from the frontiers of
+Missouri, taking with them their wives and their children, their flocks
+and herds, carrying their long rifles on their shoulders, and their axes
+and spades in the great canvas-topped wagons. The next year, two
+thousand more settlers of the same sort in their turn crossed the vast
+plains, wound their way among the Rocky Mountains through the pass
+explored by Fremont, Benton's son-in-law, and after suffering every kind
+of hardship and danger, and warding off the attacks of hostile Indians,
+descended the western slope of the great water-shed to join their
+fellows by the banks of the Columbia. When American settlers were once
+in actual possession of the disputed territory, it became evident that
+the period of Great Britain's undisputed sway was over.
+
+The government of the United States, meanwhile, was so far from helping
+these settlers that it on the contrary rather threw obstacles in their
+way. As usual with us, the individual activity of the citizens
+themselves, who all acted independently and with that peculiar
+self-reliance that is the chief American characteristic, outstripped the
+activity of their representatives, who were obliged all to act together,
+and who were therefore held back by each other,--our Constitution,
+while giving free scope for individual freedom, wisely providing such
+checks as to make our governmental system eminently conservative in its
+workings. Tyler's administration did not wish to embroil itself with
+England; so it refused any aid to the settlers, and declined to give
+them grants of land, as under the joint occupancy treaty that would have
+given England offense and cause for complaint. But Benton and the other
+Westerners were perfectly willing to offend England, if by so doing they
+could help America to obtain Oregon, and were too rash and headstrong to
+count the cost of their actions. Accordingly, a bill was introduced
+providing for the settlement of Oregon, and giving each settler six
+hundred and forty acres, and additional land if he had a family; so that
+every inducement was held out to the emigrants, the West wanting to
+protect and encourage them by all the means in its power. The laws and
+jurisdiction of the Territory of Iowa were to be extended to all the
+settlers on the Pacific coast, who hitherto had governed themselves
+merely by a system of mutual agreements.
+
+The bill was, of course, strongly opposed, especially on account of the
+clause giving land to the settlers. It passed the Senate by a close
+vote, but failed in the House. Naturally Benton was one of its chief
+supporters, and spoke at length in its favor. He seized the kernel of
+the matter when, in advocating the granting of land, he spoke of
+immigration as "the only thing which can save the country from the
+British, acting through their powerful agent, the Hudson's Bay Company."
+He then blew a lusty note of defiance to Great Britain herself:--
+
+ I think she will take offense, do what we may in relation to this
+ territory. She wants it herself, and means to quarrel for it, if she
+ does not fight for it.... I grant that she will take offense, but
+ that is not the question with me. Has she a _right_ to take offense?
+ That is my question! And this being decided in the negative, I
+ neither fear nor calculate consequences.... Courage will keep her
+ off, fear will bring her upon us. The assertion of our rights will
+ command her respect; the fear to assert them will bring us her
+ contempt.... Neither nations nor individuals ever escaped danger by
+ fearing it. They must face it and defy it. An abandonment of a right
+ for fear of bringing on an attack, instead of keeping it off, will
+ inevitably bring on the outrage that is dreaded.
+
+He was right enough in his disposition to resent the hectoring spirit
+which, at that time, characterized Great Britain's foreign policy; but
+he was all wrong in condemning delay, and stating that if things were
+left as they were time would work against us, and not for us.
+
+In this respect Calhoun, who opposed the bill, was much wiser. He
+advocated a policy of "masterly inactivity," foreseeing that time was
+everything to us, inasmuch as the land was sure in the end to belong to
+that nation whose people had settled in it, and we alone were able to
+furnish a constantly increasing stream of immigrants. Later on, however,
+Calhoun abandoned this policy, probably mainly influenced by fear of the
+extension of free territory, and consented to a compromise with Great
+Britain. The true course to have pursued would have been to have
+combined the ideas of both Benton and Calhoun, and to have gone farther
+than either; that is, we should have allowed the question to remain
+unsettled as long as was possible, because every year saw an increasing
+American population in the coveted lands, and rendered the ultimate
+decision surer to be for us. When it was impossible to postpone the
+question longer, we should have insisted upon its being settled entirely
+in our favor, no matter at what cost. The unsuccessful attempts, made by
+Benton and his supporters, to persuade the Senate to pass a resolution,
+requiring that notice of the termination of the joint occupancy treaty
+should forthwith be given, were certainly ill-advised.
+
+However, even Benton was not willing to go to the length to which
+certain Western men went, who insisted upon all or nothing. He had
+become alarmed and angry over the intrigue for the admission of Texas
+and the proposed forcible taking away of Mexican territory. The
+Northwestern Democrats wanted all Texas and all Oregon; the Southeastern
+ones wished all the former and part of the latter. Benton then concluded
+that it would be best to take part of each; for, although no friend to
+compromises, yet he was unwilling to jeopardize the safety of the Union
+as it was by seeking to make it still larger. Accordingly, he
+sympathized with the effort made by Calhoun while secretary of state to
+get the British to accept the line of 49° as the frontier; but the
+British government then rejected this proposition. In 1844 the Democrats
+made their campaign upon the issue of "fifty-four forty or fight;" and
+Polk, when elected, felt obliged to insist upon this campaign boundary.
+To this, however, Great Britain naturally would not consent; it was,
+indeed, idle to expect her to do so, unless things should be kept as
+they were until a fairly large American population had grown up along
+the Pacific coast, and had thus put her in a position where she could
+hardly do anything else. Polk's administration was neither capable nor
+warlike, however well disposed to bluster; and the secretary of state,
+the timid, shifty, and selfish politician, Buchanan, naturally fond of
+facing both ways, was the last man to wish to force a quarrel on a
+high-spirited and determined antagonist like England. Accordingly, he
+made up his mind to back down and try for the line of 49°, as proposed
+by Calhoun, when in Tyler's cabinet; and the English, for all their
+affected indifference, had been so much impressed by the warlike
+demonstrations in the United States, that they in turn were delighted,
+singing in a much lower key than before the "fifty-four forty" cry had
+been raised; accordingly they withdrew their former pretensions to the
+Columbia River and accepted the offered compromise. Now, however, came
+the question of getting the treaty through the Senate; and Buchanan
+sounded Benton, to see if he would undertake this task.
+
+Benton, worried over the Texas matter, was willing to recede somewhat
+from the very high ground he had taken,--although, of course, he
+insisted that he had been perfectly consistent throughout, and that the
+49th parallel was the line he had all along been striving for. Under his
+lead the proposal for a treaty on the basis indicated was carried
+through the Senate, and the line in consequence ultimately became our
+frontier, in spite of the frantic opposition of the Northwestern
+Democrats, the latter hurling every sort of charge of bad faith and
+treachery at their Southern associates, who had joined with the Whigs
+in defeating them. Benton's speech in support of the proposal was
+pitched much lower than had been his previous ones; and, a little
+forgetful of some of his own remarks, he was especially severe upon
+those members who denounced England and held up a picture of her real or
+supposed designs to excite and frighten the people into needless
+opposition to her.
+
+In its immediate effects the adoption of the 49th parallel as the
+dividing line between the two countries was excellent, and entailed no
+loss of dignity on either. Yet, as there was no particular reason why we
+should show any generosity in our diplomatic dealings with England, it
+may well be questioned whether it would not have been better to have
+left things as they were until we could have taken all. Wars are, of
+course, as a rule to be avoided; but they are far better than certain
+kinds of peace. Every war in which we have been engaged, except the one
+with Mexico, has been justifiable in its origin; and each one, without
+any exception whatever, has left us better off, taking both moral and
+material considerations into account, than we should have been if we had
+not waged it.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+
+THE ABOLITIONISTS DANCE TO THE SLAVE BARONS' PIPING.
+
+
+In 1844 the Whig candidate for the Presidency, Henry Clay, was defeated
+by a Mr. Polk, the nominee of the Democracy. The majorities in several
+of the states were very small; this was the case, for example in New
+York, the change in whose electoral vote would have also changed the
+entire result.
+
+Up to 1860 there were very few political contests in which the dividing
+lines between right and wrong so nearly coincided with those drawn
+between the two opposing parties as in that of 1844. The Democrats
+favored the annexation of Texas, and the addition of new slave territory
+to the Union; the Whigs did not. Almost every good element in the
+country stood behind Clay; the vast majority of intelligent,
+high-minded, upright men supported him. Polk was backed by rabid
+Southern fire-eaters and slavery extensionists, who had deified negro
+bondage and exalted it beyond the Union, the Constitution, and
+everything else; by the almost solid foreign vote, still unfit for the
+duties of American citizenship; by the vicious and criminal classes in
+all the great cities of the North and in New Orleans; by the corrupt
+politicians, who found ignorance and viciousness tools ready forged to
+their hands, wherewith to perpetrate the gigantic frauds without which
+the election would have been lost; and, lastly, he was also backed
+indirectly but most powerfully by the political Abolitionists.
+
+These Abolitionists had formed themselves into the Liberty party, and
+ran Birney for president; and though they polled but little over sixty
+thousand votes, yet as these were drawn almost entirely from the ranks
+of Clay's supporters, they were primarily responsible for his defeat;
+for the defections were sufficiently large to turn the scale in certain
+pivotal and closely contested states, notably New York. Their action in
+this case was wholly evil, alike in its immediate and its remote
+results; they simply played into the hands of the extreme slavery men
+like Calhoun, and became, for the time being, the willing accomplices of
+the latter. Yet they would have accomplished nothing had it not been for
+the frauds and outrages perpetrated by the gangs of native and
+foreign-born ruffians in the great cities, under the leadership of such
+brutal rowdies as Isaiah Rynders.
+
+These three men, Calhoun, Birney, and Isaiah Rynders, may be taken as
+types of the classes that were chiefly instrumental in the election of
+Polk, and that must, therefore, bear the responsibility for all the
+evils attendant thereon, including among them the bloody and unrighteous
+war with Mexico. With the purpose of advancing the cause of abstract
+right, but with the result of sacrificing all that was best, most
+honest, and most high-principled in national politics, the Abolitionists
+joined hands with Northern roughs and Southern slavocrats to elect the
+man who was, excepting Tyler, the very smallest of the line of small
+presidents who came in between Jackson and Lincoln.
+
+Owing to a variety of causes, the Abolitionists have received an immense
+amount of hysterical praise, which they do not deserve, and have been
+credited with deeds done by other men, whom they in reality hampered and
+opposed rather than aided. After 1840 the professed Abolitionists formed
+but a small and comparatively unimportant portion of the forces that
+were working towards the restriction and ultimate destruction of
+slavery; and much of what they did was positively harmful to the cause
+for which they were fighting. Those of their number who considered the
+Constitution as a league with death and hell, and who therefore
+advocated a dissolution of the Union, acted as rationally as would
+anti-polygamists nowadays if, to show their disapproval of Mormonism,
+they should advocate that Utah should be allowed to form a separate
+nation. The only hope of ultimately suppressing slavery lay in the
+preservation of the Union, and every Abolitionist who argued or signed a
+petition for its dissolution was doing as much to perpetuate the evil he
+complained of as if he had been a slave-holder. The Liberty party, in
+running Birney, simply committed a political crime, evil in almost all
+its consequences; they in no sense paved the way for the Republican
+party, or helped forward the anti-slavery cause, or hurt the existing
+organizations. Their effect on the Democracy was _nil_; and all they
+were able to accomplish with the Whigs was to make them put forward for
+the ensuing campaign a slave-holder from Louisiana, with whom they were
+successful. Such were the remote results of their conduct; the immediate
+evils they produced have already been alluded to. They bore considerable
+resemblance--except that, after all, they really did have a principle to
+contend for--to the political prohibitionists of the present day, who go
+into the third party organizations, and are, not even excepting the
+saloon-keepers themselves, the most efficient allies on whom
+intemperance and the liquor traffic can count.
+
+Anti-slavery men like Giddings, who supported Clay, were doing a
+thousand-fold more effective work for the cause they had at heart than
+all the voters who supported Birney; or, to speak more accurately, they
+were doing all they could to advance the cause, and the others were
+doing all they could to hold it back. Lincoln in 1860 occupied more
+nearly the ground held by Clay than that held by Birney; and the men who
+supported the latter in 1844 were the prototypes of those who wished to
+oppose Lincoln in 1860, and only worked less hard because they had less
+chance. The ultra Abolitionists discarded expediency, and claimed to act
+for abstract right, on principle, no matter what the results might be;
+in consequence they accomplished very little, and that as much for harm
+as for good, until they ate their words, went counter to their previous
+course, thereby acknowledging it to be bad, and supported in the
+Republican party the men and principles they had so fiercely condemned.
+The Liberty party was not in any sense the precursor of the Republican
+party, which was based as much on expediency as on abstract right, and
+was therefore able to accomplish good instead of harm. To say that the
+extreme Abolitionists triumphed in Republican success and were causes of
+it, is as absurd as it would be to call prohibitionists successful if,
+after countless futile efforts totally to prohibit the liquor traffic,
+and after savage denunciation of those who try to regulate it, they
+should then turn round and form a comparatively insignificant portion of
+a victorious high-license party.
+
+Many people in speaking of the Abolitionists apparently forget that the
+national government, even under Republican rule, would never have
+meddled with slavery in the various states unless as a war measure, made
+necessary by the rebellion into which the South was led by a variety of
+causes, of which slavery was chief, but among which there were others
+that were also prominent; such as the separatist spirit of certain of
+the communities and the unscrupulous, treacherous ambition of such men
+as Davis, Floyd, and the rest. The Abolitionists' political
+organizations, such as the Liberty party, generally produced very little
+effect either way, and were scarcely thought of during the contests
+waged for freedom in Congress. The men who took a great and effective
+part in the fight against slavery were the men who remained within their
+respective parties; like the Democrats Benton and Wilmot, or the Whigs
+Seward and Stevens. When a new party with more clearly defined
+principles was formed, they, for the most part, went into it; but, like
+all other men who have ever had a really great influence, whether for
+good or bad, on American politics, they did not act independently of
+parties, but on the contrary kept within party lines,--although, of
+course, none of them were mere blind and unreasoning partisans.
+
+The plea that slavery was a question of principle, on which no
+compromise could be accepted, might have been made and could still be
+made on twenty other points,--woman suffrage, for instance. Of course,
+to give women their just rights does not by any means imply that they
+should necessarily be allowed to vote, any more than the bestowal of the
+rights of citizenship upon blacks and aliens must of necessity carry
+with it the same privilege. But there were until lately, and in some
+states there are now, laws on the statute-book in reference to women
+that are in principle as unjust, and that are quite as much the remnants
+of archaic barbarism as was the old slave code; and though it is true
+that they do not work anything like the evil of the latter, they yet
+certainly work evil enough. The same laws that in one Southern state
+gave a master a right to whip a slave also allowed him to whip his wife,
+provided he used a stick no thicker than his little finger; the legal
+permission to do the latter was even more outrageous than that to do the
+former, yet no one considered it a ground for wishing a dissolution of
+the Union or for declaring against the existing parties. The folly of
+voting the Liberty ticket in 1844 differed in degree, but not at all in
+kind, from the folly of voting the Woman Suffrage ticket in 1884.
+
+The intrigue for the annexation of Texas, and for thereby extending the
+slave territory of the Union, had taken shape towards the close of
+Tyler's term of office, while Calhoun was secretary of state. Benton, as
+an aggressive Western man, desirous of seeing our territorial
+possessions extended in any direction, north or south, always hoped that
+in the end Texas might be admitted into the Union; but he disliked
+seeing any premature steps taken, and was no party to the scheme of
+forcing an immediate annexation in the interests of slavery. Such
+immediate annexation was certain, among other things, to bring us into
+grave difficulties not only with Mexico, but also with England, which
+was strongly inclined to take much interest of a practical sort in the
+fate of Texas, and would, of course, have done all it could to bring
+about the abolition of slavery in that state. The Southerners, desirous
+of increasing the slave domain, and always in a state of fierce alarm
+over the proximity of any free state that might excite a servile
+insurrection, were impatient to add the Lone Star Republic of the Rio
+Grande to the number of their states; the Southwesterners fell in with
+them, influenced, though less strongly, by the same motives, and also by
+the lust for new lands and by race hatred towards the Mexicans and
+traditional jealousy of Great Britain; and these latter motives induced
+many Northwesterners to follow suit. By a judicious harping on all these
+strings Jackson himself, whose name was still a mighty power among the
+masses, was induced to write a letter favoring instant and prompt
+annexation.
+
+This letter was really procured for political purposes. Tyler had
+completely identified himself with the Democracy, and especially with
+its extreme separatist wing, to which Calhoun also belonged, and which
+had grown so as to be already almost able to take the reins. The
+separatist chiefs were intriguing for the presidency, and were using
+annexation as a cry that would help them; and, failing in this attempt,
+many of the leaders were willing to break up the Union, and turn the
+Southern States, together with Texas, into a slave-holding confederacy.
+After Benton, the great champion of the old-style Union Democrats was
+Van Buren, who was opposed to immediate annexation, sharing the feeling
+that prevailed throughout the Northeast generally; although in certain
+circles all through the country there were men at work in its favor,
+largely as a mere matter of jobbery and from base motives, on account of
+speculations in Texan land and scrip, into which various capitalists and
+adventurers had gone rather extensively. Jackson, though a Southerner,
+warmly favored Van Buren, and was bitterly opposed to separatists; but
+the latter, by cunningly working on his feelings, without showing their
+own hands, persuaded him to write the letter mentioned, and promptly
+used it to destroy the chances of Van Buren, who was the man they
+chiefly feared; and though Jackson, at last roused to what was going on,
+immediately announced himself as in favor of Van Buren's candidacy, it
+was too late to undo the mischief.
+
+Benton showed on this, as on many other occasions, much keener political
+ideas than his great political chief. He was approached by a politician,
+who himself was either one of those concerned in the presidential
+intrigues, or else one of their dupes, and who tried to win him over to
+take the lead on their side, complimenting him upon his former services
+to the cause of territorial expansion towards the southwest. Ordinarily
+the great Missourian was susceptible enough to such flattery; but on
+this occasion, preoccupied with the idea of an intrigue for the
+presidency, and indignant that there should be an effort made to
+implicate him in it, especially as it was mixed up with schemes of
+stock-jobbing and of disloyalty to the Union, he took fire at once, and
+answered with hot indignation, in words afterwards highly resented by
+his questioner, "that it was on the part of some an intrigue for the
+presidency, and a plot to dissolve the Union; on the part of others, a
+Texas scrip and land speculation; and that he was against it." The
+answer was published in the papers, and brought about a total break
+between Benton and the annexation party.
+
+He was now thoroughly on the alert, and actively opposed at all points
+the schemes of those whom he regarded as concerned in or instigating the
+intrigue. He commented harshly on Tyler's annual message, which made a
+strong plea for annexation, even at the cost of a war both with Great
+Britain and Mexico; also on Calhoun's letter to Lord Aberdeen, which was
+certainly a remarkable diplomatic document,--being a thesis on slavery
+and the benefits resulting from it. Tyler's object was to prepare the
+way for a secret treaty, which should secure the desired object. Benton,
+in the course of some severe strictures on his acts, said, very truly,
+that it was evidently the intention to keep the whole matter as secret
+as possible until the treaty was concluded, "and then to force its
+adoption for the purpose of increasing the area of slave territory, or
+to make its rejection a cause for the secession of the Southern States;
+and in either event and in all cases to make the question of annexation
+a controlling one in the nomination of presidential candidates, and also
+in the election itself."
+
+When the treaty proposed by the administration was rejected, and when it
+became evident that neither Tyler nor Calhoun, the two most prominent
+champions of the extreme separatists, had any chance for the Democratic
+nomination, the disunion side of the intrigue was brought to the front
+in many of the Southern States, beginning of course with South Carolina.
+A movement was made for a convention of the Southern States, to be held
+in the interest of the scheme; the key-note being struck in the cry of
+"Texas or disunion!" But this convention was given up, on account of the
+strong opposition it excited in the so-called "Border States,"--an
+opposition largely stirred up and led by Benton. Once more the haughty
+slave leaders of the Southeast had found that in the Missouri Senator
+they had an opponent whose fearlessness quite equaled their own, and
+whose stubborn temper and strength of purpose made him at least a match
+for themselves, in spite of all their dash and fiery impetuosity. It
+must have sounded strange, indeed, to Northern ears, accustomed to the
+harsh railings and insolent threats of the South Carolina senators, to
+hear one of the latter complaining that Benton's tone in the debate was
+arrogant, overbearing, and dictatorial towards those who were opposed to
+him. This same Senator, McDuffie, had been speaking of the proposed
+Southern meeting at Nashville; and Benton warned him that such a meeting
+would never take place, and that he had mistaken the temper of the
+Tennesseans; and also reminded him that General Jackson was still alive,
+and that the South Carolinians in particular must needs be careful if
+they hoped to agree with his followers, whose name was still legion,
+because he would certainly take the same position towards a disunion
+movement in the interests of slavery that he had already taken towards a
+nullification movement in the interests of free trade. "Preservation of
+the federal Union is as strong in the old Roman's heart now as ever; and
+while, as a Christian, he forgives all that is past (if it were past),
+yet no old tricks under new names! Texas disunion will be to him the
+same as tariff disunion; and if he detects a Texas disunionist nestling
+into his bed, I say again: Woe unto the luckless wight!" Boldly and
+forcibly he went on to paint the real motives of the promoters of the
+scheme, and the real character of the scheme itself; stating that,
+though mixed up with various speculative enterprises and with other
+intrigues, yet disunion was at the bottom of it all, and that already
+the cry had become, "Texas without the Union, rather than the Union
+without Texas!" "Under the pretext of getting Texas into the Union the
+scheme is to get the South out of it. A Southern Confederacy stretching
+from the Atlantic to the Californias ... is the cherished vision of
+disappointed ambition." He bitterly condemned secession, as simply
+disunion begat by nullification, and went on to speak of his own
+attitude in apparently opposing the admission of Texas, which he had
+always desired to see become a part of the Union, and which he had
+always insisted rightfully belonged to us, and to have been given away
+by Monroe's treaty with Spain. "All that is intended and foreseen. The
+intrigue for the presidency was the first act in the drama; the
+dissolution of the Union the second. And I, who hate intrigue and love
+the Union, can only speak of the intriguers and disunionists with warmth
+and indignation. The oldest advocate for the recovery of Texas, I must
+be allowed to speak in just terms of the criminal politicians who
+prostituted the question of its recovery to their own base purposes, and
+delayed its success by degrading and disgracing it. A Western man, and
+coming from a state more than any other interested in the recovery of
+this country, so unaccountably thrown away by the treaty of 1819, I must
+be allowed to feel indignant at seeing Atlantic politicians seizing upon
+it, and making it a sectional question for the purposes of ambition and
+disunion. I have spoken warmly of these plotters and intriguers; but I
+have not permitted their conduct to alter my own, or to relax my zeal
+for the recovery of the sacrificed country. I have helped to reject the
+disunion treaty; and that obstacle being removed, I have brought in the
+bill which will insure the recovery of Texas, with peace and honor, and
+with the Union."
+
+It is important to remember, in speaking of his afterwards voting to
+admit Texas, that this was what he had all along favored, and that he
+now opposed it only on account of special circumstances. In both cases
+he was right; for, slavery or no slavery, it would have been a most
+unfortunate thing for us, and still worse for the Texans, if the latter
+had been allowed to develop into an independent nation. Benton deserves
+the greatest credit for the way in which he withstood the ignorant
+popular feeling of his own section in regard to Tyler's proposed treaty;
+and not only did he show himself able to withstand pressure from behind
+him, but also prompt in resenting threats made by outsiders. When
+McDuffie told him that the remembrance of his attitude on the bill
+would, to his harm, meet him on some future day, like the ghost that
+appeared to Brutus at Philippi, he answered:--
+
+ I can promise the ghost and his backers that if the fight goes
+ against me at this new Philippi, with which I am threatened, and the
+ enemies of the American Union triumph over me as the enemies of
+ Roman liberty triumphed over Brutus and Cassius, I shall not fall
+ upon my sword, as Brutus did, though Cassius be killed, and run it
+ through my own body; but I shall save it and save myself for another
+ day and another use,--for the day when the battle of the disunion of
+ these states is to be fought, not with words but with iron, and for
+ the hearts of the traitors who appear in arms against their country.
+
+Such a stern, defiant, almost prophetic warning did more to help the
+Union cause than volumes of elaborate constitutional argument, and it
+would have been well for the Northern States had they possessed men as
+capable of uttering it as was the iron Westerner. Benton always showed
+at his best when the honor or integrity of the nation was menaced,
+whether by foes from without or by foes from within. On such occasions
+his metal always rang true. When there was any question of breaking
+faith with the Union, or of treachery towards it, his figure always
+loomed up as one of the chief in the ranks of its defenders; and his
+follies and weaknesses sink out of sight when we think of the tremendous
+debt which the country owes him for his sorely tried and unswerving
+loyalty.
+
+The treaty alluded to by Benton in his speech against the abortive
+secession movement was the one made with Texas while Calhoun was
+secretary of state, and submitted to the Senate by Tyler, with a message
+as extraordinary as some of his secretary's utterances. The treaty was
+preposterously unjust and iniquitous. It provided for the annexation of
+Texas, and also of a very large portion of Mexico, to which Texas had no
+possible title, and this without consulting Mexico in any way whatever;
+Calhoun advancing the plea that it was necessary to act immediately on
+account of the danger that Texas was in of falling under the control of
+England, and therefore having slavery abolished within its borders;
+while Tyler blandly announced that we had acquired title to the ceded
+territory--which belonged to one power and was ceded to us by
+another--through his signature to the treaty, and that, pending its
+ratification by the Senate, he had dispatched troops to the scene of
+action to protect the ceded land "from invasion,"--the territory to be
+thus protected from Mexican invasion being then and always having been
+part and parcel of Mexico.
+
+Benton opposed the ratification of the treaty in a very strong speech,
+during which he mercilessly assailed both Tyler and Calhoun. The conduct
+of the former he dismissed with the contemptuous remark that he had
+committed "a caper about equal to the mad freaks with which the
+unfortunate Emperor Paul, of Russia, was accustomed to astonish Europe;"
+and roughly warned him to be careful how he tried to imitate Jackson's
+methods, because in heroic imitations there was no middle ground, and if
+he failed to fill the rôle of hero he would then perforce find himself
+playing that of harlequin. Calhoun received more attention, for he was
+far more worthy of a foeman's steel than was his nominal superior, and
+Benton exposed at length the willful exaggeration and the perversion of
+the truth of which the Carolinian had been guilty in trying to raise the
+alarm of English interference in Texas, for the purpose of excusing the
+haste with which the treaty was carried through.
+
+He showed at length the outrage we should inflict upon Mexico by seizing
+"two thousand miles of her territory, without a word of explanation with
+her, and by virtue of a treaty with Texas to which she was no party;"
+and he conclusively proved, making use of his own extensive acquaintance
+with history, especially American history, that the old Texas, the only
+territory that the Texans themselves or we could claim with any shadow
+of right, made but a fraction of the territory now "ceded" to us. He
+laughed at the idea of calling the territory Texas, and speaking of its
+forcible cutting off as re-annexation, "Humboldt calls it New Mexico,
+Chihuahua, Coahuila and Nuevo Santander; and the civilized world may
+qualify this _re_-annexation by some odious and terrible epithet ...
+robbery;" then he went on to draw a biting contrast between our
+treatment of Mexico and our treatment of England. "Would we take two
+thousand miles of Canada in the same way? I presume not. And why not?
+Why not treat Great Britain and Mexico alike? Why not march up to
+'fifty-four forty' as courageously as we march upon the Rio Grande?
+Because Great Britain is powerful and Mexico weak,--a reason which may
+fail in policy as much as in morals." Also he ridiculed the flurry of
+fear into which the Southern slave-holders affected to be cast by the
+dread of England's hostility to slavery, when they had just acquiesced
+in making a treaty with her by which we bound ourselves to help to put
+down the slave-trade. He then stated his own position, showing why he
+wished us to have the original Texan lands, if we could get them
+honorably, and without robbing Mexico of new territory; and at the same
+time sneered at Calhoun and Tyler because they had formerly favored the
+Monroe treaty, by which we abandoned our claims to them:--
+
+ We want Texas, that is to say, the Texas of La Salle; and we want it
+ for great natural reasons, obvious as day, and permanent as nature.
+ We want it because it is geographically appurtenant to our division
+ of North America, essential to our political, commercial, and social
+ system, and because it would be detrimental and injurious to us to
+ have it fall into the hands or sink under the domination of any
+ foreign power. For these reasons I was against sacrificing the
+ country when it was thrown away,--and thrown away by those who are
+ now so suddenly possessed of a fury to get it back. For these
+ reasons I am for getting it back whenever it can be done with peace
+ and honor, or even at the price of just war against any intrusive
+ European power; but I am against all disguise and artifice,--against
+ all pretexts,--and especially against weak and groundless pretexts,
+ discreditable to ourselves and offensive to others, too thin and
+ shallow not to be seen through by every beholder, and merely
+ invented to cover unworthy purposes.
+
+The treaty was rejected by an overwhelming vote, although Buchanan led a
+few of his timeserving comrades from the North to the support of the
+extreme Southern element. Benton then tried, but failed, to get through
+a bill providing for a joint agreement between Mexico, Texas, and the
+United States to settle definitely all boundary questions. Meanwhile the
+presidential election occurred, with the result already mentioned. The
+separatist and annexationist Democrats, the extreme slavery wing of the
+party, defeated Van Buren and nominated Polk, who was their man; the
+Whigs nominated Clay, who was heartily opposed to all the schemes of the
+disunion and extreme slavery men, and who, if elected, while he might
+very properly have consented to the admission of Texas with its old
+boundaries, would never have brought on a war nor have attempted to add
+a vast extent of new slave territory to the Union. Clay would have been
+elected, and the slavery disunionists defeated, if in the very nick of
+time the Abolitionists had not stepped in to support the latter, and by
+their blindness in supporting Birney given the triumph to their own most
+bitter opponents. Then the Abolitionists, having played their only
+card, and played it badly, had to sit still and see what evil their acts
+had produced; they had accomplished just as much as men generally do
+accomplish when they dance to the tune that their worst foes play.
+
+Polk's election gave an enormous impulse to the annexation movement, and
+made it doubly and trebly difficult for any one to withstand it. The
+extreme disunion and slavery men, of course, hated Benton, himself a
+Southwesterner from a slave-holding state, with peculiar venom, on
+account of his attitude, very justly regarding him as the main obstacle
+in their path; and the din and outcry raised against all who opposed the
+schemes of the intriguers was directed with especial fury against the
+Missourian. He was accused of being allied to the Whigs, of wishing to
+break up the Democracy, and of many other things. Indeed, Benton's own
+people were very largely against him, and it must always be remembered
+that whereas Northeastern statesmen were certain to be on the popular
+side in taking a stand against the extreme pro-slavery men, Benton's
+position was often just the reverse. With them it was politic to do
+right; with him it was not; and for this reason the praise awarded the
+latter should be beyond measure greater than that awarded to the former.
+
+Still, there can be little question that he was somewhat, even although
+only slightly, influenced by the storm of which he had to bear the
+brunt; indeed, he would have been more than human if he had not been;
+and probably this outside pressure was one among the causes that induced
+him to accept a compromise in the matter, which took effect just before
+Polk was inaugurated. The House of Representatives had passed a
+resolution giving the consent of Congress to the admission of Texas as a
+state, and allowing it the privilege of forming four additional states
+out of its territory, whenever it should see fit. The line of the
+Missouri Compromise, 36° 30', was run through this new territory,
+slavery being prohibited in the lands lying north of it, and permissible
+or not, according to the will of the state seeking admission, in those
+lying south of it. Benton meanwhile had introduced a bill merely
+providing that negotiations should be entered into with Texas for its
+admission, the proposed treaty or articles of agreement to be submitted
+to the Senate or to Congress. He thereby kept the control in the hands
+of the legislature, which the joint resolution did not; and moreover, as
+he said in his speech, he wished to provide for due consideration being
+shown Mexico in the arrangement of the boundary, and for the matter
+being settled by commissioners.
+
+Neither resolution nor bill could get through by itself; and
+accordingly it was proposed to combine both into one measure, leaving
+the president free to choose either plan. To this proposition Benton
+finally consented, it being understood that, as only three days of
+Tyler's term remained, the execution of the act would be left to the
+incoming president, and that the latter would adopt Benton's plans. The
+friends of the admission of Texas assured the doubtful voters that such
+would be the case. Polk himself gave full assurance that he would
+appoint a commission, as provided by Benton's bill, if passed, with the
+House resolution as an alternative; and McDuffie, Calhoun's friend, and
+the senator from South Carolina, announced without reserve that
+Calhoun--for Tyler need not be considered in the matter, after it had
+been committed to the great nullifier--would not have the "audacity" to
+try to take the settlement of the question away from the president, who
+was to be inaugurated on the fourth of March. On the strength of these
+assurances, which, if made good, would, of course, have rendered the
+"alternative" a merely nominal one, Benton supported the measure, which
+was then passed. Contrary to all expectation, Calhoun promptly acted
+upon the legislative clause, and Polk made no effort to undo what the
+former had done. This caused intense chagrin and anger to the
+Bentonians; but they should certainly have taken such a contingency into
+account, and though they might with much show of reason say that they
+had been tricked into acting as they had done, yet it is probable that
+the immense pressure from behind had made Benton too eager to follow any
+way he could find that would take him out of the position into which his
+conscience had led him. No amount of pressure would have made him
+deliberately sanction a wrong; but it did render him a little less wary
+in watching to see that the right was not infringed upon. It was most
+natural that he should be anxious to find a common ground for himself
+and his constituents to stand on; but it is to be regretted that this
+anxiety to find a common ground should have made him willing to trust
+blindly to vague pledges and promises, which he ought to have known
+would not be held in the least binding by those on whose behalf they
+were supposed to be made.
+
+Acting under this compromise measure Texas was admitted, and the
+foundation for our war with Mexico was laid. Calhoun, under whom this
+was done, nevertheless sincerely regretted the war itself, and freely
+condemned Polk's administration for bringing it on; his own position
+being that he desired to obtain without a war what it was impossible we
+should get except at the cost of one. Benton, who had all along
+consistently opposed doing a wrong to Mexico, attacked the whole war
+party, and in a strong and bitter speech accused Calhoun of being the
+cause of the contest; showing plainly that, whatever the ex-secretary of
+state might say in regard to the acts immediately precipitating the
+conflict, he himself was responsible as being in truth their original
+cause. While stating his conviction, however, that Calhoun was the real
+author of the war, Benton added that he did not believe that war was his
+object, although an inevitable incident of the course he had pursued.
+
+Although heartily opposed to the war in its origin, Benton very properly
+believed in prosecuting it with the utmost vigor when once we were
+fairly in; and it was mainly owing to him that the proposed policy of a
+"masterly inactivity" was abandoned, and the scheme of pushing straight
+for the city of Mexico adopted in its stead. Indeed, it was actually
+proposed to make him lieutenant-general, and therefore the
+commander-in-chief of our forces in Mexico; but this was defeated in the
+Senate, very fortunately, as it would have been a great outrage upon
+Scott, Taylor, and every other soldier with real military training. It
+seems extraordinary that Benton himself should not have seen the
+absurdity and wrong of such a proposition.
+
+The wonderful hardihood and daring shown in the various expeditions
+against Mexico, especially in those whereby her northwest territory was
+wrested from her, naturally called forth all Benton's sympathy; and one
+of his best speeches was that made to welcome Doniphan's victorious
+volunteers after their return home from their famous march to
+Chihuahua.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+
+SLAVERY IN THE NEW TERRITORIES.
+
+
+Hardly was Polk elected before it became evident to Benton and the other
+Jacksonians that the days of the old Union or Nationalist Democracy were
+over, and that the separatist and disunion elements within the party had
+obtained the upper hand. The first sign of the new order of things was
+the displacement of Blair, editor of the "Globe," the Democratic
+newspaper organ. Blair was a strong Unionist, and had been bitterly
+hostile to Calhoun and the Nullifiers. He had also opposed Tyler, the
+representative of those states-rights and separatist Democrats, who by
+their hostility to Jackson had been temporarily driven into the Whig
+camp, and who, finding themselves in very uncongenial society, and
+seeing, moreover, that their own principles were gradually coming to the
+front in the old party, had begun drifting back again into it. Polk's
+chances of election were so precarious that he was most anxious to
+conciliate the Separatists; besides which he at heart sympathized with
+their views, and had himself been brought forward in the Democratic
+convention to beat the National candidate, Van Buren. Moreover, Tyler
+withdrew from the contest in his favor; in part payment for which help,
+soon after the election, Blair was turned out, and Ritchie of Virginia,
+a man whose views suited the new Democratic leaders, was put in his
+place; to the indignation not only of Benton, but also of Jackson
+himself, then almost on his death-bed. Of course the break between the
+two wings was as yet by no means complete. Polk needed the Union
+Democrats, and the latter were still in good party standing. Benton
+himself, as has been seen, was offered the command of all the forces in
+Mexico, but the governmental policy, and the attitude of the party in
+Congress after 1844, were widely different from what they had been while
+Jackson's influence was supreme, or while the power he left behind him
+was wielded by a knot of Union men.
+
+From this time the slavery question dwarfed all others, and was the one
+with which Benton, as well as other statesmen, had mainly to deal. He
+had been very loath to acknowledge that it was ever to become of such
+overshadowing importance; until late in his life he had not realized
+that, interwoven with the disunionist movement, it had grown so as to
+become in reality the one and only question before the people; but, this
+once thoroughly understood, he henceforth devoted his tremendous
+energies to the struggle with it. He possessed such phenomenal power of
+application and of study, and his capacity for and his delight in work
+were so extraordinary, that he was able at the same time to grapple with
+many other subjects of importance, and to present them in a way that
+showed he had thoroughly mastered them both in principle and detail,--as
+witness his speech in favor of giving the control of the coast survey to
+the navy; but henceforth the importance of his actions lay in their
+relation to the slavery extension movements.
+
+He had now entered on what may fairly be called the heroic part of his
+career; for it would be difficult to choose any other word to express
+our admiration for the unflinching and defiant courage with which,
+supported only by conscience and by his loving loyalty to the Union, he
+battled for the losing side, although by so doing he jeopardized and
+eventually ruined his political prospects, being finally, as punishment
+for his boldness in opposing the dominant faction of the Missouri
+Democracy, turned out of the Senate, wherein he had passed nearly half
+his life. Indeed, his was one of those natures that show better in
+defeat than in victory. In his career there were many actions that must
+command our unqualified admiration; such were his hostility to the
+Nullifiers, wherein, taking into account his geographical location and
+his refusal to compromise, he did better than any other public man, not
+even excepting Jackson and Webster; his belief in honest money; and his
+attitude towards all questions involving the honor or the maintenance
+and extension of the Union. But in all these matters he was backed more
+or less heartily by his state, and he had served four terms in the
+federal Senate as the leading champion and representative, not alone of
+Missouri, but also of the entire West. When, however, the slavery
+question began to enter upon its final stage, Benton soon found himself
+opposed to a large and growing faction of the Missouri Democracy, which
+increased so rapidly that it soon became dominant. But he never for an
+instant yielded his convictions, even when he saw the ground being thus
+cut from under his feet, fighting for the right as sturdily as ever,
+facing his fate fearlessly, and going down without a murmur. The
+contrast between the conduct towards the slavery disunionists of this
+Democrat from a slave-holding state, with a hostile majority at home
+against him, and the conduct of Webster, a Whig, enthusiastically
+backed by his own free state, in the same issue, is a painful one for
+the latter. Indeed, on any moral point, Benton need have no cause to
+fear comparison with any of his great rivals in the political arena.
+During his career, the United States Senate was perhaps the most
+influential, and certainly the ablest legislative body in the world; and
+after Jackson's presidency came to an end the really great statesmen and
+political leaders of the country were to be found in it, and not in the
+executive chair. The period during which the great Missourian was so
+prominent a figure in our politics, and which lasted up to the time of
+the Civil War, might very appropriately be known in our history as the
+time of the supremacy of the Senate. Such senators as Benton, Webster,
+Clay, and Calhoun, and later on Douglas, Seward, and Sumner, fairly
+towered above presidents like the obscure Southerners, Tyler and Polk,
+or the truckling, timeserving Northern politicians, Pierce and Buchanan.
+During the long interval coming between the two heroic ages of American
+history,--the age of Washington and Franklin, and the age of Lincoln and
+Grant,--it was but rarely that the nation gave its greatest gift to its
+best or its greatest son.
+
+Benton had come into the Senate at the same time that Missouri was
+admitted into the Union, with thanks, therefore, to the same measure,
+the Missouri Compromise bill. This shut out slavery from all territory
+north of the line of 36° 30', and did not make it obligatory even where
+it was permissible; and the immediate cause of Benton's downfall was his
+courage and persistency in defending the terms of this compromise from
+the attacks of the Southern slavery extensionists and disunionists. The
+pro-slavery feeling was running ever higher and higher throughout the
+South; and his stand on this question aroused the most furious anger
+among a constantly increasing number of his constituents, and made him
+the target for bitter and savage assaults on the part of his foes, the
+spirit of hostility against him being carried to such length as finally
+almost to involve him in an open brawl on the floor of the Senate with
+one of his colleagues, Foote, who, like his fellow fire-eaters, found
+that Benton was not a man who could be bullied. Indeed, his iron will
+and magnificent physique both fitted him admirably for such a contest
+against odds, and he seems to have entered into it with a positive zest.
+
+The political Abolitionists having put Polk in power, their action bore
+fruit after its kind, and very soon the question had to be faced, as to
+what should be done with the immense tracts of territory conquered from
+Mexico. Benton opposed, as being needless and harmful, the Wilmot
+Proviso, which forbade the introduction of slavery into any part of the
+territory so acquired. He argued, and produced in evidence the laws and
+Constitution of Mexico, that the soil of California and Mexico was
+already free, and that as slavery would certainly never be, and indeed
+could never be, introduced into either territory, the agitation of the
+question could only result in harm. Calhoun and the other extreme
+slavery leaders welcomed the discussion over this proviso, which led
+Benton to remark that the Abolitionists and the Nullifiers were
+necessary to each other,--the two blades of a pair of shears, neither of
+which could cut until they were joined together.
+
+When Calhoun introduced his famous resolutions declaring that Congress
+had no power to interfere with slavery in the territories, and therefore
+no power to prevent the admission of new states except on the condition
+of their prohibiting slavery within their limits, Benton promptly and
+strongly opposed them as being firebrands needlessly thrown to inflame
+the passions of the extremists, and, moreover, as being disunionist in
+tendency. The following is his own account of what then took place: "Mr.
+Calhoun said he had expected the support of Mr. Benton 'as the
+representative of a slave-holding state.' Mr. Benton answered that it
+was impossible that he could have expected such a thing. 'Then,' said
+Mr. Calhoun, 'I shall know where to find that gentleman.' To which Mr.
+Benton said: 'I shall be found in the right place,--on the side of my
+country and the Union.' This answer, given on that day and on the spot,
+is one of the incidents of his life which Mr. Benton will wish posterity
+to remember." We can easily pardon the vanity which wishes and hopes
+that such an answer, given under such conditions, may be remembered.
+Indeed, Benton's attitude throughout all this period should never be
+forgotten; and the words he spoke in answer to Calhoun marked him as the
+leader among those Southerners who held the nation above any section
+thereof, even their own, and whose courage and self-sacrifice in the
+cause of the Union entitled them to more praise than by right belongs to
+any equal number of Northerners; those Southerners who in the civil war
+furnished Farragut, Thomas, Bristow, and countless others as loyal as
+they were brave. The effect of Benton's teachings and the still
+remaining influence of his intense personality did more than aught else
+to keep Missouri within the Union, when her sister states went out of
+it.
+
+Benton always regarded much of the slavery agitation in the South as
+being political in character, and the result of the schemes of ambitious
+and unscrupulous leaders. He believed that Calhoun had introduced a set
+of resolutions that were totally uncalled for, simply for the purpose of
+carrying a question to the Slave States on which they could be formed
+into a unit against the Free States; and there is much to be said in
+support of his view. Certainly the resolutions mark the beginning of the
+first great slavery agitation throughout the Southern States, which was
+engineered and guided for their own ends by politicians like Jefferson
+Davis. These resolutions were absolutely inconsistent with many of
+Calhoun's previous declarations; and that fact was also sharply
+commented on by Benton in his speeches and writings. He also criticised
+with caustic severity Calhoun's statements that he wished to save the
+Union by forcing the North to take a position so agreeable to the South
+as to make the latter willing not to separate. He showed that Calhoun's
+proposed "constitutional" and "peaceable" methods of bringing this about
+by prohibiting commercial intercourse between the two sections would
+themselves be flagrant breaches of the Constitution and acts of
+disunion,--all the more so as it was proposed to discriminate in favor
+of the Northwest as against the Northeast. Calhoun wished to bring
+about a convention of the Southern States, in order to secure the
+necessary unity of action; and one of the main obstacles to the success
+of the plan was Missouri's refusal to take part in it. Great efforts
+were made to win her over, and to beat down Benton; the extreme
+pro-slavery men honoring him with a hatred more intense than that they
+harbored towards any Northerner. Some of Calhoun's recent biographers
+have credited him with being really a Union man at heart. It seems
+absolutely impossible that this could have been the case; and the
+supposition is certainly not compatible with the belief that he retained
+his right senses. Benton characterizes his system of slavery agitation,
+very truthfully, as being one "to force issues upon the North under the
+pretext of self-defense, and to sectionalize the South, preparatory to
+disunion, through the instrumentality of sectional conventions, composed
+wholly of delegates from the slave-holding states."
+
+When the question of the admission of Oregon came up, Calhoun attempted
+to apply to it a dogma wholly at variance with all his former positions
+on the subject. This was the theory of the self-extension of the slavery
+part of the Constitution to the territories; that is, he held that the
+exclusion of slavery from any part of the new territory was itself a
+subversion of the Constitution. Such a dogma was so monstrous in
+character, so illogical, so inconsistent with all his former theories,
+and so absolutely incompatible with the preservation of the Union, that
+it renders it impossible to believe that his asseverations of devotion
+to the latter were uttered honestly or in good faith. Most modern
+readers will agree with Benton that he deliberately worked to bring
+about secession.
+
+Meanwhile the Missourian had gained an ally of his own stamp in the
+Senate. This was Houston, from the new State of Texas, who represented
+in that state, like Andrew Jackson in Tennessee, and Benton himself in
+Missouri, the old Nationalist Democracy, which held the preservation of
+the Union dear above all other things. Houston was a man after Benton's
+own heart, and was thoroughly Jacksonian in type. He was rough, honest,
+and fearless, a devoted friend and a vengeful enemy, and he promised
+that combination of stubborn courage and capacity of devotion to an
+ideal that renders a man an invaluable ally in a fight against odds for
+principle.
+
+After much discussion and amendment, the Oregon bill, containing a
+radical anti-slavery clause, passed both houses and became a law in
+spite of the violent opposition of some of the Southerners, headed by
+Calhoun, who announced that the great strife between the North and the
+South was ended, and that the time had come for the South to show that,
+though she prized the Union, yet there were matters which she regarded
+as of greater importance than its preservation. His ire was most
+fiercely excited by the action of Benton and Houston in supporting the
+bill, and after his return to South Carolina he denounced them by name
+as traitors to the South,--"a denunciation," says Benton, "which they
+took for a distinction; as what he called treason to the South they knew
+to be allegiance to the Union." When it was proposed to extend by bill
+the Constitution of the United States into the territories, with a view
+to carrying slavery into California, Utah, and New Mexico, Benton was
+again opposed to Calhoun. As a matter of course, too, he was the
+stoutest opponent of the Southern convention and other similar disunion
+movements that were beginning to take shape throughout the South,
+instigated by the two rank secession states of South Carolina and
+Mississippi.
+
+Most of the momentous questions springing out of the war with Mexico
+were left by Polk as legacies to his successor, when the former went out
+of office, after an administration that Benton criticised with extreme
+sharpness, although he tried to shield the president by casting the
+blame for his actions upon his cabinet advisers; characterizing the
+Mexican War as one of "speculation and intrigue," and as the "great
+blot" of his four years' term of office, and ridiculing the theory that
+we were acting in self-defense, or that our soil had been invaded. In
+1848 the Democrats nominated Cass, a Northern pro-slavery politician of
+moderate abilities, and the Whigs put up and elected old Zachary Taylor,
+the rough frontier soldier and Louisiana slave-holder. The political
+Abolitionists again took a hand in the contest, but this time abandoned
+their abolition theories, substituting instead thereof the prohibition
+of slavery in the new territories. They derived much additional
+importance from their alliance with a disappointed politician in the
+pivotal State of New York; and in this case, in sharp contrast to the
+result in 1844, their actions worked good, and not evil. Van Buren,
+chagrined and angered by the way he was treated by the regular
+Democrats, organized a revolt against them, and used the banner of the
+new Free Soil party as one under which to rally his adherents. This
+movement was of consequence mainly in New York, and there it soon became
+little more than a mere fight between the two sections of the Democracy.
+Benton himself visited this all-important state to try to patch up
+matters, but he fortunately failed. The factions proved very nearly
+equal in strength; and as a consequence the Whigs carried the state and
+the election, and once more held the reins of government.
+
+When a Louisiana slave-holder was thus installed in the White House, the
+extreme Southern men may have thought that they were sure of him as an
+ally in their fight against freedom. But, if so, they soon found they
+had reckoned without their host, for the election of Taylor affords a
+curious, though not solitary, instance in which the American people
+builded better than they knew in choosing a chief executive. Nothing
+whatever was known of his political theories, and the Whigs nominated
+him simply because he was a successful soldier, likely to take the
+popular fancy. But once elected he turned out to have the very qualities
+we then most needed in a president,--a stout heart, shrewd common sense,
+and thorough-going devotion to the Union. Although with widely different
+training from Benton, and nominally differing from him in politics, he
+was yet of the same stamp both in character and principles; both were
+Union Southerners, not in the least afraid of openly asserting their
+opinions, and, if necessary, of making them good by their acts. In his
+first and only annual message, Taylor expressed, upon all the important
+questions of the day, views that were exactly similar to those advanced
+before or after by Benton himself in the Senate; and he used similar
+emphasis and plainness of speech. He declared the Union to be the
+greatest of blessings, which he would maintain in every way against
+whatever dangers might threaten it; he advised the admission of
+California, which wished to come in as a free state; he thought that the
+territories of Utah and New Mexico should be left as they were; and he
+warned the Texans, who were blustering about certain alleged rights to
+New Mexican soil, and threatening to take them by force of arms, that
+this could not be permitted, and that the matter would have to be
+settled by the judicial authority of the United States. Benton heartily
+indorsed the message. Naturally, it was bitterly assailed by the
+disunionists under Calhoun; and even Clay, who entirely lacked Taylor's
+backbone, was dissatisfied with it as being too extreme in tone, and
+conflicting with his proposed compromise measures. These same compromise
+measures brought the Kentucky leader into conflict with Benton also,
+especially on the point of their interfering with the immediate
+admission of California into the Union.
+
+This is not the place to discuss Clay's proposed compromise, which was
+not satisfactory to the extreme Southerners, and still less so to the
+Unionists and anti-slavery men. It consisted of five different parts,
+relating to the recovery of fugitive slaves, the suppression of the
+slave-trade in the District of Columbia, the admission of California as
+a state, and the territorial condition of Utah and New Mexico. Benton
+opposed it as mixing up incongruous measures; as being unjust to
+California, inasmuch as it confounded the question of her admission with
+the general slavery agitation in the United States; and above all as
+being a concession or capitulation to the spirit of disunion and
+secession, and therefore a repetition of the error of 1833. Benton
+always desired to meet and check any disunion movement at the very
+outset, and, if he had had his way, would have carried matters with a
+high hand whenever it came to dealing with threats of such a proceeding;
+and therein he was perfectly right. In regard to the proposed compromise
+he believed in dealing with each question as it arose, beginning with
+the admission of California, and refusing to have any compromise at all
+with those who threatened secession.
+
+The slavery extensionists endeavored to have the Missouri compromise
+line stretched on to the Pacific. Benton, avowing his belief that
+slavery was an evil, opposed this, and gave his reasons why he did not
+wish to see the line which had been used to divide free and slave soil
+in the French or Louisiana purchase extended into the lands won from
+Mexico. Slavery had always existed in Louisiana, while it had been long
+abolished in Mexico. "The Missouri compromise line, extending to New
+Mexico and California, though astronomically the same as that in
+Louisiana, would be politically directly the opposite. One went through
+a territory all slave, and made one half free; the other would go
+through territory all free, and make one half slave." In fact Benton, as
+he grew older, unlike most of his compatriots, gained a clearer insight
+into the effects of slavery. This was shown in his comments upon
+Calhoun's statement, made in the latter's last speech, in reference to
+the unequal development of the North and South; which, Benton said, was
+partly owing to the existence of "slavery itself, which he (Calhoun) was
+so anxious to extend." It was in this same speech that Calhoun hinted at
+his plan for a dual executive,--one president from the Free and one from
+the Slave States,--a childish proposition, that Benton properly treated
+as a simple absurdity.
+
+In his speech against the compromise, Benton discussed it, section by
+section, with great force, and with his usual blunt truthfulness. His
+main count was the injustice done to California by delaying her
+admittance, and making it dependent upon other issues; but he made
+almost as strong a point against the effort to settle the claims of
+Texas to New Mexican territory. The Texan threats to use force he
+treated with cavalier indifference, remarking that as long as New Mexico
+was a territory, and therefore belonged to the United States, any
+controversy with her was a controversy with the federal government,
+which would know how to play her part by "defending her territory from
+invasion, and her people from violence,"--a hint that had a salutary
+effect upon the Texans; in fact the disunionists, generally, were not
+apt to do much more than threaten while a Whig like Taylor was backed up
+by a Democrat like Benton. He also pointed out that it was not
+necessary, however desirable, to make a compact with Texas about the
+boundaries, as they could always be settled, whether she wished it or
+not, by a suit before the Supreme Court; and again intimated that a
+little show of firmness would remove all danger of a collision. "As to
+anything that Texas or New Mexico may do in taking or relinquishing
+possession, that is all moonshine. New Mexico is the property of the
+United States, and she cannot dispose of herself or any part of
+herself, nor can Texas take her or any part of her." He showed a
+thorough acquaintance with New Mexican geography and history, and
+alluded to the bills he had already brought in, in 1844 and 1850, to
+establish a divisional line between the territory and Texas, on the
+longitude first of one hundred and then of one hundred and two degrees.
+He recalled the fact that before the annexation of Texas, and in a bill
+proposing to settle all questions with her, he had inserted a provision
+forever prohibiting slavery in all parts of the annexed territory lying
+west of the hundredth degree of longitude. He also took the opportunity
+of formally stating his opposition to any form of slavery extension,
+remarking that it was no new idea with him, but dated from the time when
+in 1804, while a law student in Tennessee, he had studied Blackstone as
+edited by the learned Virginian, Judge Tucker, who, in an appendix,
+treated of, and totally condemned, black slavery in the United States.
+The very difficulty, or, as he deemed it, the impossibility, of getting
+rid of the evil, made Benton all the more determined in opposing its
+extension. "The incurability of the evil is the greatest objection to
+the extension of slavery. If it is wrong for the legislator to inflict
+an evil which can be cured, how much more to inflict one that is
+incurable, and against the will of the people who are to endure it
+forever! I quarrel with no one for deeming slavery a blessing; I deem it
+an evil, and would neither adopt it nor impose it on others." The
+solution of the problem of disposing of existent slavery, he confessed,
+seemed beyond human wisdom; but "there is a wisdom above human, and to
+that we must look. In the mean time, do not extend the evil." In
+justification of his position he quoted previous actions of Congress,
+done under the lead of Southern men, in refusing again and again, down
+to 1807, to allow slavery to be introduced into Indiana, when that
+community petitioned for it. He also repudiated strongly the whole
+spirit in which Clay had gotten up his compromise bill, stating that he
+did not believe in geographical parties; that he knew no North and no
+South, and utterly rejected any slavery compromises except those to be
+found in the Constitution. Altogether it was a great speech, and his
+opposition was one of the main causes of the defeat of Clay's measure.
+
+Benton's position on the Wilmot Proviso is worth giving in his own
+words: "That measure was rejected again as heretofore, and by the votes
+of those who were opposed to extending slavery into the territories,
+because it was unnecessary and inoperative,--irritating to the Slave
+States, without benefit to the Free States, a mere work of
+supererogation, of which the fruit was discontent. It was rejected, not
+on the principle of non-intervention; not on the principle of leaving to
+the territories to do as they pleased on the question, but because there
+had been intervention; because Mexican law and constitution had
+intervened, had abolished slavery by law in those dominions; which law
+would remain in force until repealed by Congress. All that the opponents
+to the extension of slavery had to do, then, was to do nothing. And they
+did nothing."
+
+Before California was admitted into the Union old Zachary Taylor had
+died, leaving behind him a name that will always be remembered among our
+people. He was neither a great statesman nor yet a great commander; but
+he was an able and gallant soldier, a loyal and upright public servant,
+and a most kindly, honest, and truthful man. His death was a greater
+loss to the country than perhaps the people ever knew.
+
+The bill for the admission of California as a free state, heartily
+sustained by Benton, was made a test question by the Southern
+disunionists; but on this occasion they were thoroughly beaten. The
+great struggle was made over a proposition to limit the southern
+boundary of the state to the line of 36° 30', and to extend the Missouri
+line through to the Pacific, so as to authorize the existence of slavery
+in all the territory south of that latitude. This was defeated by a vote
+of thirty-two to twenty-four. Not only Benton, but also Spruance and
+Wales of Delaware, and Underwood of Kentucky, joined with the
+representatives from the Free States in opposing it. Had it not been for
+the action of these four slave-state senators in leaving their
+associates, the vote would have been a tie; and their courage and
+patriotism should be remembered. The bill was then passed by a vote of
+thirty-four to eighteen, two other Southern senators, Houston of Texas,
+and Bell of Tennessee, voting for it, in addition to the four already
+mentioned. After its passage, ten of the senators who had voted against
+it, including, of course, Jefferson Davis, and also Benton's own
+colleague from Missouri, Atchison, joined in a protest against what had
+been done, ending with a thinly veiled threat of disunion,--"dissolution
+of the confederacy," as they styled it. Benton stoutly and successfully
+opposed allowing this protest to be received or entered upon the
+journal, condemning it, with a frankness that very few of his
+fellow-senators would have dared to copy, as being sectional and
+disunion in form, and therefore unfit even for preservation on the
+records.
+
+When the Fugitive Slave Act of 1850 was passed, through the help of some
+Northern votes, Benton refused to support it; and this was the last act
+of importance that he performed as United States Senator. He had risen
+and grown steadily all through his long term of service; and during its
+last period he did greater service to the nation than any of his
+fellow-senators. Compare his stand against the slavery extremists and
+disunionists, such as Calhoun, with the position of Webster at the time
+of his famous seventh of March speech, or with that of Clay when he
+brought in his compromise bill! In fact, as the times grew more
+troublesome, he grew steadily better able to do good work in them.
+
+It is this fact of growth that especially marks his career. No other
+American statesman, except John Quincy Adams,--certainly neither of his
+great contemporaries, Webster and Clay,--kept doing continually better
+work throughout his term of public service, or showed himself able to
+rise to a higher level at the very end than at the beginning. Yet such
+was the case with Benton. He always rose to meet a really great
+emergency; and his services to the nation grew steadily in importance
+to the very close of his life. Whereas Webster and Clay passed their
+zenith and fell, he kept rising all the time.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV.
+
+THE LOSING FIGHT.
+
+
+Benton had now finished his fifth and last term in the United States
+Senate. He had been chosen senator from Missouri before she was admitted
+into the Union, and had remained such for thirty years. During all that
+time the state had been steadily Democratic, the large Whig minority
+never being able to get control; but on the question of the extension of
+slavery the dominant party itself began at this time to break into two
+factions. Hitherto Benton had been the undisputed leader of the
+Democracy, but now the pro-slavery and disunionist Democrats organized a
+very powerful opposition to him; while he still received the
+enthusiastic support of an almost equally numerous body of followers.
+Although the extension of slavery and the preservation of the Union were
+the two chief and vital points on which the factions differed, yet the
+names by which they designated each other were adopted in consequence of
+their differing also on a third and only less important one. Benton was
+such a firm believer in hard money, and a currency of gold and silver,
+as to have received the nickname of "Old Bullion," and his followers
+were called "hards;" his opponents were soft money men, in addition to
+being secessionists and pro-slavery fanatics, and took the name of
+"softs." The principles of the Bentonians were right, and those of their
+opponents wrong; but for all that the latter gradually gained upon the
+former. Finally, in the midst of Benton's fight against the extension of
+slavery into the territories, the "softs" carried the Missouri
+legislature, and passed a series of resolutions based upon those of
+Calhoun. These were most truculent and disloyal in tone, demanding that
+slavery be permitted to exist in all the new states to be admitted, and
+instructing their senators to vote accordingly. These resolutions were
+presented in the senate by Benton's colleague from Missouri, Atchison,
+who was rather hostile to him and to every other friend of the Union,
+and later on achieved disreputable notoriety as a leader of the "border
+ruffians" in the affrays on the soil of Kansas. Benton at once picked up
+the glove that had been flung down. He utterly refused to obey the
+resolutions, denounced them savagely as being treasonable and offensive
+in the highest degree, asserted that they did not express the true
+opinions of the voters of the state, and appealed from the Missouri
+legislature to the Missouri people.
+
+The issue between the two sides was now sharply brought out, and, as
+this took place towards the end of Benton's fifth term, the struggle to
+command the legislature which should reëlect him or give him a successor
+was most exciting. Benton himself took an active part in the preliminary
+canvass. Neither faction was able to get a majority of the members, and
+the deadlock was finally broken by the "softs" coming to the support of
+the Whigs, and helping them to elect Benton's rival. Thus, after serving
+his state faithfully and ably for thirty years, he was finally turned
+out of the position which he so worthily filled, because he had
+committed the crime of standing loyally by the Union.
+
+But the stout old Nationalist was not in the least cast down or even
+shaken by his defeat. He kept up the fight as bitterly as ever, though
+now an old man, and in 1852 went to Congress as a representative Union
+Democrat. For thirty years he had been the autocrat of Missouri
+politics, and had at one time wielded throughout his own state a power
+as great as Calhoun possessed in South Carolina; greater than Webster
+held in Massachusetts, or Clay in Kentucky. But the tide which had so
+long flowed in his favor now turned, and for the few remaining years of
+his life set as steadily against him; yet at no time of his long public
+career did he stand forth as honorably and prominently as during his
+last days, when he was showing so stern a front to his victorious foes.
+His love for work was so great that, when out of the Senate, he did not
+find even his incessant political occupations enough for him. During his
+contest for the senatorship his hands had been full, for he had spoken
+again and again throughout the entire state, his carefully prepared
+speeches showing remarkable power, and filled with scathing denunciation
+and invective and biting and caustic sarcasm. But so soon as his defeat
+was assured he turned his attention immediately to literature, setting
+to work on his great "Thirty Years' View," of which the first volume was
+printed during his congressional term, and was quoted on the floor of
+the House, both by his friends and foes, during the debates in which he
+was taking part.
+
+In 1852, when he was elected to Congress as a member of the House, he
+had supported Pierce for the presidency against Scott, a good general,
+but otherwise a wholly absurd and flatulent personage, who was the Whig
+nominee. But it soon became evident that Pierce was completely under
+the control of the secession wing of the party, and Benton
+thereafterwards treated him with contemptuous hostility, despising him,
+and seeing him exactly as he was,--a small politician, of low capacity
+and mean surroundings, proud to act as the servile tool of men worse
+than himself but also stronger and abler. He was ever ready to do any
+work the slavery leaders set him, and to act as their attorney in
+arguing in its favor,--to quote Benton's phrase, with "undaunted
+mendacity, moral callosity [and] mental obliquity." His last message to
+Congress in the slavery interest Benton spoke of as characteristic, and
+exemplifying "all the modes of conveying untruths which long ages have
+invented,--direct assertion, fallacious inference, equivocal phrase, and
+false innuendo." As he entertained such views of the head of the
+Democratic party, and as this same head was in hearty accord with, and a
+good representative of the mass of the rank and file politicians of the
+organization, it is small wonder that Benton found himself, on every
+important question that came up while he was in Congress, opposed to the
+mass of his fellow-Democrats.
+
+Although the great questions to which he devoted himself, while a
+representative in Congress, were those relating to the extension of
+slavery, yet he also found time to give to certain other subjects,
+working as usual with indomitable energy, and retaining his marvelous
+memory to the last. The idea of desponding or giving up, for any cause
+whatever, simply never entered his head. When his house, containing all
+the manuscript and papers of the nearly completed second volume of his
+"Thirty Years' View," was burned up, he did not delay a minute in
+recommencing his work, and the very next day spoke in Congress as usual.
+
+His speeches were showing a steady improvement; they were not
+masterpieces, even at the last, but in every way, especially in style,
+they were infinitely superior to those that he had made on his first
+entrance into public life. Of course, a man with his intense pride in
+his country, and characterized by such a desire to see her become
+greater and more united in every way, would naturally support the
+proposal to build a Pacific Railroad, and accordingly he argued for it
+at great length and with force and justness, at the same time opposing
+the propositions to build northern and southern trans-continental roads
+as substitutes for the proposed central route. He showed the character
+of the land through which the road would run, and the easiness of the
+passes across the Rockies, and prophesied a rapid increase of states as
+one of the results attendant upon its building. At the end of his speech
+he made an elaborate comparison of the courses of trade and commerce at
+different periods of the world's history, and showed that, as we had
+reached the Pacific coast, we had finally taken a position where our
+trade with the Oriental kingdoms, backed up by our own enormous internal
+development, rendered us more than ever independent of Europe.
+
+In another speech he discussed very intelligently, and with his usual
+complete command of the facts of the case, some of the contemporary
+Indian uprisings in the far West. He attacked our whole Indian policy,
+showing that the corruption of the Indian agents, coupled with astute
+aggressions, were the usual causes of our wars. Further, he criticised
+our regular troops as being unfit to cope with the savages, and
+advocated the formation of companies of frontier rangers, who should
+also be settlers, and should receive from the government a bounty in
+land as part reward for their service. Many of his remarks on our Indian
+policy apply quite as well now as they did then, and our regular
+soldiers are certainly not the proper opponents for the Indians; but
+Benton's military views were, as a rule, the reverse of sensible, and we
+cannot accept his denunciations of the army, and especially of West
+Point, as being worth serious consideration. His belief in the marvelous
+efficacy of a raw militia, especially as regards war with European
+powers, was childish, and much of his feeling against the regular army
+officer was dictated by jealousy. He was, by all the peculiarities of
+his habits and education, utterly unfitted for military command; and it
+would have been an evil day for his good fame if Polk had succeeded in
+having him made lieutenant-general of our forces in Mexico.
+
+His remarks upon our Indian policy were not the only ones he made that
+would bear study even yet. Certain of his speeches upon the different
+land-bounty and pension bills, passed nominally in the interests of
+veterans, but really through demagogy and the machination of
+speculators, could be read with profit by not a few Congressmen at the
+present time. One of his utterances was: "I am a friend to old soldiers
+... but not to old speculators;" and while favoring proper pension bills
+he showed the foolishness and criminality of certain others very
+clearly, together with the fact that, when passed long after the
+services have been rendered, they always fail to relieve the real
+sufferers, and work in the interests of unworthy outsiders.
+
+But his great speech, and one of the best and greatest that he ever
+made, was the one in opposition to the Kansas-Nebraska bill, which was
+being pushed through Congress by the fire-eaters and their Northern
+pro-slavery followers. His own position upon the measure was best
+expressed by the words he used in commenting on the remarks of a
+Georgian member: "He votes as a Southern man, and votes sectionally; I
+also am a Southern man, but vote nationally on national questions."
+
+The Missouri Compromise of 1820 had expressly abolished slavery in the
+territory out of which Kansas and Nebraska were carved. By the proposed
+bill this compromise was to be repealed, and the famous doctrine of
+non-intervention, or "squatter sovereignty," was to take its place, the
+people of each territory being allowed to choose for themselves whether
+they did or did not wish slavery. Benton attacked the proposal with all
+the strength of his frank, open nature as "a bungling attempt to smuggle
+slavery into the territory, and throughout all the country, up to the
+Canada line and out to the Rocky Mountains." He showed exhaustively the
+real nature of the original Missouri Compromise, which, as he said, was
+forced by the South upon the North, and which the South now proposed to
+repeal, that it might humiliate the North still further. The compromise
+of 1820 was, he justly contended, right; it was like the original
+compromises of the Constitution, by which the Slave States were admitted
+to the formation of the Union; no greater concession of principle was
+involved in the one case than in the other; and, had either compromise
+failed, the Union would not now be in existence. But the day when
+compromises had been necessary, or even harmless, had passed. The time
+had come when the extension of slavery was to be opposed in every
+constitutional way; and it was an outrage to propose to extend its
+domain by repealing all that part of a compromise measure which worked
+against it, when the South had already long taken advantage of such
+parts of the law as worked in its favor. Said Benton: "The South divided
+and took half, and now it will not do to claim the other half." Exactly
+as a proposition to destroy the slavery compromises of the Constitution
+would be an open attempt to destroy the Union, so, he said, the attempt
+to abrogate the compromise of 1820 would be a preparation for the same
+ending. "I have stood upon the Missouri Compromise for about thirty
+years, and mean to stand upon it to the end of my life ... [it is] a
+binding covenant upon both parties, and the more so upon the South, as
+she imposed it."
+
+The squatter sovereignty theories of Douglas he treated with deserved
+ridicule, laughing at the idea that the territories were not the actual
+property of the nation, to be treated as the latter wished, and having
+none of the rights of sovereign states; and he condemned even more
+severely the theory advanced to the effect that Congress had no power to
+legislate on slavery in the territories. Thus, he pointed out that to
+admit any such theories was directly to reverse the principles upon
+which we had acted for seventy years in regard to the various
+territories that from time to time grew to such size as entitled them to
+come into the Union as states. After showing that there was no excuse
+for bringing in the bill on the plea of settling the slavery question,
+since there was not a foot of territory in the United States where the
+subject of slavery was not already settled by law, he closed with an
+earnest appeal against such an attempt to break up the Union and outrage
+the North by forcing slavery into a land where its existence was already
+forbidden by law. His speech exceeded the hour allotted to it, and he
+was allowed to go on only by the courtesy of a member from Illinois,
+who, when some of the Southerners protested against his being heard
+farther, gave up part of his own time to the grand old Missourian, and
+asked the House to hear him, if only "as the oldest living man in
+Congress, the only man in Congress who was present at the passage of
+the Missouri Compromise bill." Many a man at the North, ashamed and
+indignant at seeing the politicians of his own section cower at the
+crack of the Southern whip, felt a glow of sincere gratitude and
+admiration for the rugged Westerner, who so boldly bade defiance to the
+ruling slave party that held the reins not only in his own section, but
+also in his own state, and to oppose which was almost certain political
+death.
+
+The Gadsden treaty was also strongly opposed and condemned by Benton,
+who considered it to be part of a great scheme or movement in the
+interests of the slavery disunionists, of which he also believed the
+Kansas-Nebraska bill to be the first development,--the "thin end of the
+wedge." He opposed the acquirement even of the small piece of territory
+we were actually able to purchase from Mexico; and showed good grounds
+for his belief that the administration, acting as usual only in the
+interest of the secessionists, had tried to get enough North-Mexican
+territory to form several new states, and had also attempted to purchase
+Cuba, both efforts being for the purpose of enabling the South either to
+become again dominant in the Union or else to set up a separate
+confederacy of her own. For it must be kept in mind that Benton always
+believed that the Southern disunion movements were largely due to
+conspiracies among ambitious politicians, who used the slavery question
+as a handle by which to influence the mass of the people. This view has
+certainly more truth in it than it is now the fashion to admit. His
+objection to the actual treaty was mainly based on its having been done
+by the executive without the consent of the legislature, and he also
+criticised it for the secrecy with which it had been put through. In
+bringing forward the first objection, however, he was confronted with
+Jefferson's conduct in acquiring Louisiana, which he endeavored, not
+very successfully, to show had nothing in common with the actions of
+Pierce, who, he said, simply demanded a check from the House with which
+to complete a purchase undertaken on his own responsibility.
+
+Throughout his congressional term of service, Benton acted so as to
+deserve well of the Union as a whole, and most well of Missouri in
+particular. But he could not stem the tide of folly and madness in this
+state, and was defeated when he was a candidate for reëlection. The
+Whigs had now disappeared from the political arena, and the
+Know-nothings were running through their short and crooked lease of
+life; they foolishly nominated a third candidate in Benton's district,
+who drew off enough votes from him to enable his pro-slavery Democratic
+competitor to win.
+
+No sooner had he lost his seat in Congress than Benton, indefatigable as
+ever, set to work to finish his "Thirty Years' View," and produced the
+second volume in 1856, the year when he made his last attempt to regain
+his hold in politics, and to win Missouri back to the old Union
+standard. Although his own son-in-law, Fremont, the daring western
+explorer, was running as the first presidential candidate ever nominated
+by the Republicans, the old partisan voted for the Democrat, Buchanan.
+He did not like Buchanan, considering him weak and unsuitable, but the
+Republican party he believed to be entirely too sectional in character
+for him to give it his support. For governor there was a triangular
+fight, the Know-nothings having nominated one candidate, the
+secessionist Democrats a second, while Benton himself ran as the choice
+of the Union Democracy. He was now seventy-four years old, but his mind
+was as vigorous as ever, and his iron will kept up a frame that had
+hardly even yet begun to give way. During the course of the campaign he
+traveled throughout the state, going in all twelve hundred miles, and
+making forty speeches, each one of two or three hours' length. This was
+a remarkable feat for so old a man; indeed, it has very rarely been
+paralleled, except by Gladstone's recent performances. The vote was
+quite evenly divided between the three candidates; but Benton came in
+third, and the extreme pro-slavery men carried the day. After this,
+during the few months of life he yet had left, he did not again mingle
+in the politics of Missouri.
+
+But in the days of his defeat at home, the regard and respect in which
+he was held in the other states, especially at the North, increased
+steadily; and in the fall of 1856 he made by request a lecturing tour in
+New England, speaking on the danger of the political situation and the
+imperative necessity of preserving the Union, which he now clearly saw
+to be gravely threatened. He was well received, for the North was
+learning to respect him, and he had gotten over his early hostility to
+New England,--a hostility originally shared by the whole West. The New
+Englanders were not yet aware, however, of the importance of the
+secession movements, and paid little heed to the warnings that were to
+be so fully justified by the events of the next few years. But Benton,
+in spite of his great age, saw distinctly the changes that were taking
+place, and the dangers that were impending,--an unusual thing for a man
+whose active life has already been lived out under widely different
+conditions.
+
+He again turned his attention to literature, and produced another great
+work, the "Abridgment of the Debates of Congress from 1787 to 1856," in
+sixteen volumes, besides writing a valuable pamphlet on the Dred Scott
+decision, which he severely criticised. The amount of labor all this
+required was immense, and his health completely gave way; yet he
+continued working to the very end, dictating the closing portion of the
+"Abridgment" in a whisper as he lay on his death-bed. When he once began
+to fail his advanced years made him succumb rapidly; and on April 10,
+1858, he died, in the city of Washington. As soon as the news reached
+Missouri, a great revulsion of feeling took place, and all classes of
+the people united to do honor to the memory of the dead statesman,
+realizing that they had lost a man who towered head and shoulders above
+both friends and foes. The body was taken to St. Louis, and after lying
+in state was buried in Bellefontaine Cemetery, more than forty thousand
+people witnessing the funeral. All the public buildings were draped in
+mourning; all places of business were closed, and the flags everywhere
+were at half-mast. Thus at the very end the great city of the West at
+last again paid fit homage to the West's mightiest son.
+
+Benton's most important writings are those mentioned above. The "Thirty
+Years' View" ("a history of the working of the American government for
+thirty years, from 1820 to 1850") will always be indispensable to every
+student of American history. It deals with the deeds of both houses of
+Congress, and of some of the higher federal officials during his thirty
+years' term of service in the Senate, and is valuable alike for the
+original data it contains, and because it is so complete a record of our
+public life at that time. The book is also remarkable for its courteous
+and equable tone, even towards bitter personal and political enemies. It
+shows a vanity on the part of the author that is too frank and free from
+malice to be anything but amusing; the style is rather ponderous, and
+the English not always good, for Benton began life, and, in fact,
+largely passed it, in an age of ornate periods, when grandiloquence was
+considered more essential than grammar. In much of the Mississippi
+valley the people had their own canons of literary taste; indeed, in a
+recent book by one of Benton's admirers, there is a fond allusion to his
+statement, anent the expunging resolution, that "solitary and alone" he
+had set the ball in motion,--the pleonasm being evidently looked upon in
+the light of a rather fine oratorical outburst.
+
+"The Abridgment of the Debates of Congress from 1789 to 1856" he was
+only able to bring down to 1850. Sixteen volumes were published. It was
+a compilation needing infinite labor, and is invaluable to the
+historian. While in the midst of the vast work he also found time to
+write his "Examination of the Dred Scott case," in so far as it decided
+the Missouri Compromise law to be unconstitutional, and asserted the
+self-extension of the Constitution into the territories, carrying
+slavery with it,--the decision in this case promulgated by Judge Taney,
+of unhappy fame, having been the last step taken in the interests of
+slavery and for the overthrow of freedom. The pamphlet contained nearly
+two hundred pages, and showed, as was invariably the case with anything
+Benton did, the effects of laborious research and wide historical and
+legal learning. His summing up was, "that the decision conflicts with
+the uniform action of all the departments of the federal government from
+its foundation to the present time, and cannot be accepted as a rule to
+govern Congress and the people, without severing that act and admitting
+the political supremacy of the court and accepting an altered
+constitution from its hands, and taking a new and portentous point of
+departure in the working of the government." He denounced the new party
+theories of the Democracy, which had abandoned the old belief of the
+founders of the Republic, that Congress had power to legislate upon
+slavery in territories, and which had gone on "from the abrogation of
+the Missouri Compromise, which saved the Union, to squatter sovereignty,
+which killed the compromise, and thence to the decisions of the supreme
+court, which kill both." In closing he touched briefly on the history of
+the pro-slavery agitation. "Up to Mr. Pierce's administration the plan
+had been defensive, that is to say, to make the secession of the South a
+measure of self-defense against the abolition encroachments and crusades
+of the North. In the time of Mr. Pierce the plan became offensive, that
+is to say, to commence the expansion of slavery, and the acquisition of
+territory to spread it over, so as to overpower the North with new Slave
+States, and drive them out of the Union.... The rising in the Free
+States, in consequence of the abrogation of the Missouri Compromise,
+checked these schemes, and limited the success of the disunionists to
+the revival of the agitation which enables them to wield the South
+against the North in all the federal elections and all federal
+legislation. Accidents and events have given the party a strange
+preëminence,--under Jackson's administration proclaimed for treason;
+since at the head of the government and of the Democratic party. The
+death of Harrison, and the accession of Tyler, was their first great
+lift; the election of Mr. Pierce was their culminating point." This was
+the last protest of the last of the old Jacksonian leaders against that
+new generation of Democrats, whose delight it had become to bow down to
+strange gods.
+
+In his private life Benton's relations were of the pleasantest. He was a
+religious man, although, like his great political chief, he could on
+occasions swear roundly. He was rigidly moral, and he was too fond of
+work ever to make social life a business. But he liked small dinners,
+with just a few intimate friends or noted and brilliant public men, and
+always shone at such an entertainment. Although he had not traveled
+much, he gave the impression of having done so, by reason of his wide
+reading, and because he always made a point of knowing all explorers,
+especially those who had penetrated our great western wilds. His
+geographical knowledge was wonderful; and his good nature, as well as
+his delight in work for work's sake, made him of more use than any
+library of reference, if his friends needed information upon some
+abstruse matter,--Webster himself acknowledging his indebtedness to him
+on one occasion, and being the authority for the statement that Benton
+knew more political facts than any other man he had ever met, even than
+John Quincy Adams, and possessed a wonderful fund of general knowledge.
+Although very gentle in his dealings with those for whom he cared,
+Benton originally was rather quarrelsome and revengeful in character.
+His personal and political prejudices were bitter, and he denounced his
+enemies freely in public and from the stump; yet he always declined to
+take part in joint political debates, on account of the personal
+discourtesy with which they were usually conducted. He gave his whole
+time to public life, rarely or never attending to his law practice after
+he had fairly entered the political field.
+
+Benton was one of those who were present and escaped death at the time
+of the terrible accident on board the Princeton, during Tyler's
+administration, when the bursting of her great gun killed so many
+prominent men. Benton was saved owing to the fact that,
+characteristically enough, he had stepped to one side the better to note
+the marksmanship of the gunner. Ex-Governor Gilmer, of Virginia, who had
+taken his place, was instantly killed. Tyler, who was also on board, was
+likewise saved in consequence of the exhibition of a characteristic
+trait; for, just as the gun was about to be fired, something occurred in
+another part of the ship which distracted the attention of the fussy,
+fidgety president, who accordingly ran off to see what it was, and thus
+escaped the fatal explosion. The tragic nature of the accident and his
+own narrow escape made a deep impression upon Benton; and it was noticed
+that ever afterwards he was far more forbearing and forgiving than of
+old. He became good friends with Webster and other political opponents,
+with whom he had formerly hardly been on speaking terms. Calhoun alone
+he would never forgive. It was not in his nature to do anything by
+halves; and accordingly, when he once forgave an opponent, he could not
+do enough to show him that the forgiveness was real. A Missourian named
+Wilson, who had been his bitter and malignant political foe for years,
+finally becoming broken in fortune and desirous of bettering himself by
+going to California, where Benton's influence, through his son-in-law,
+Fremont, was supreme, was persuaded by Webster to throw himself on the
+generosity of his old enemy. The latter not only met him half-way, but
+helped him with a lavish kindness that would hardly have been warranted
+by less than a life-long friendship. Webster has left on record the
+fact that, when once they had come to be on good terms with each other,
+there was no man in the whole Senate of whom he would more freely have
+asked any favor that could properly be granted.
+
+He was a most loving father. At his death he left four surviving
+daughters,--Mrs. William Carey Jones, Mrs. Sarah Benton Jacobs, Madame
+Susan Benton Boilleau, and Mrs. Jessie Ann Benton Fremont, the wife of
+the great explorer, whose wonderful feats and adventures, ending with
+the conquest of California, where he became a sort of viceroy in point
+of power, made him an especial favorite with his father-in-law, who
+loved daring and hardihood. Benton took the keenest delight in Fremont's
+remarkable successes, and was never tired of talking of them, both
+within and without the Senate. He records with very natural pride the
+fact that it was only the courage and judgment displayed in a trying
+crisis by his own gifted daughter, Fremont's wife, which enabled the
+adventurous young explorer to prosecute one of the most important of his
+expeditions, when threatened with fatal interference from jealous
+governmental superiors.
+
+He was an exceptionally devoted husband. His wife was Miss Elizabeth
+McDowell, of Virginia, whom he married after he had entered the Senate.
+Their life was most happy until 1844, when she was struck by paralysis.
+From that time till her death in 1854, he never went out to a public
+place of amusement, spending all his time not occupied with public
+duties in writing by her bedside. It is scant praise to say that, while
+mere acquiescence on his part would have enabled him to become rich
+through government influence, he nevertheless died a poor man. In
+public, as in private life, he was a man of sensitive purity of
+character; he would never permit any person connected with him by blood
+or marriage to accept office under the government, nor would he ever
+favor any applicant for a government contract on political grounds.
+
+During his last years, when his sturdy independence and devotion to the
+Union had caused him the loss of his political influence in his own
+state and with his own party, he nevertheless stood higher with the
+country at large than ever before. He was a faithful friend and a bitter
+foe; he was vain, proud, utterly fearless, and quite unable to
+comprehend such emotions as are expressed by the terms despondency and
+yielding. Without being a great orator or writer, or even an original
+thinker, he yet possessed marked ability; and his abounding vitality and
+marvelous memory, his indomitable energy and industry, and his
+tenacious persistency and personal courage, all combined to give him a
+position and influence such as few American statesmen have ever held.
+His character grew steadily to the very last; he made better speeches
+and was better able to face new problems when past three score and ten
+than in his early youth or middle age. He possessed a rich fund of
+political, legal, and historical learning, and every subject that he
+ever handled showed the traces of careful and thorough study. He was
+very courteous, except when provoked; his courage was proof against all
+fear, and he shrank from no contest, personal or political. He was
+sometimes narrow-minded, and always wilful and passionate; but he was
+honest and truthful. At all times and in all places he held every good
+gift he had completely at the service of the American Federal Union.
+
+
+
+
+INDEX.
+
+
+ Adams, John Quincy:
+ In presidential election of 1824-5, 59-61;
+ makes Clay secretary of state, 61;
+ and is assailed therefor, 62;
+ outlines Whig policy in his inaugural, 63;
+ on the Panama mission, 64;
+ in election of 1828, 69;
+ preserves purity of civil service, 81;
+ on recognition of Texas, 180.
+
+ "Albany Regency," the, adopts "spoils system," 81.
+
+ Arnold, Benedict:
+ compared with Burr and J. Davis, 163.
+
+ Atchison, protests against admission of California, 338.
+
+
+ Benton, town of, founded, 25.
+
+ Benton, Thomas Hart:--
+ local character of his statesmanship, 13;
+ birth, 23;
+ boyhood and education, 24 _et seq._;
+ religious training, 26;
+ fights a duel, 27;
+ affray with Jackson, 28;
+ admitted to the bar, 29;
+ in legislature of Tennessee, 29;
+ on the Hartford Convention, 31;
+ a slave-holder, 31;
+ favors war of 1812, 32, in service, 32; befriends Jackson, 32;
+ associations in Tennessee, 33 _et seq._;
+ some traits of character, 34;
+ settles in Missouri, 35;
+ surroundings and influences there, 40;
+ speech on treaty with Spain concerning Florida, 41;
+ first position concerning slavery, 43;
+ enters U. S. Senate, 44;
+ honorable financial sacrifice, 45;
+ position on the Oregon question, 50-53, 65, 263-270, 273-279,
+ 281-289;
+ bill to establish a trading road through Missouri, 53;
+ on the removal of the Indians, 55;
+ votes for Clay's protective tariff bill, 58;
+ opposes internal improvements and Cumberland Road bill, 58;
+ condemns election of John Q. Adams to Presidency, 60;
+ supports Clay, then Jackson, 61;
+ will not join outcry against Adams and Clay, 61;
+ a leader of the opposition to Adams in the Senate, 63;
+ represents ultra-Southern feeling concerning revolted
+ Spanish colonies, 65;
+ vote on the protective tariff of 1828, 66, 91, 102;
+ efforts concerning disposal of public land, 68, 77, 149, 154, 217;
+ hostility to the Northeastern States, 76;
+ in the Webster-Hayne debate, 78;
+ opposes Jackson's "spoils system," 79-85;
+ leader of the Jacksonians in the Senate, 85, 86;
+ shows that protective tariff has not helped the West, 91;
+ urges repeal of the tax on salt, 92, 227;
+ vigorously sustains Jackson in the nullification troubles, 100-105;
+ sustains the Force bill, 105;
+ opposes Clay's compromise measure, 107-109;
+ remarks on his position at this period, 112;
+ campaign against the Bank of the United States, 114, 130, 136, 143;
+ speech on the currency, 122, 136-138, 253;
+ conflict with Clay, 129;
+ on the removal of the deposits, 131;
+ opposes the resolution of censure against Jackson, 133;
+ and pushes through his own expunging resolution, 134-136, 139-142;
+ advocates establishment of mints at the South, 144;
+ opposes distribution of surplus, 145, 149;
+ wishes it used for fortifications, 146, 150-153;
+ advocates insisting on our claims against France, 147;
+ but opposes paying claims of American citizens, 148;
+ opposes the so-called specie circulars, 154;
+ views concerning Southern slavery politicians, 162;
+ opposed to the Abolitionists, 165;
+ criticises Calhoun, 167, 168;
+ aids to defeat bill prohibiting circulation of abolition
+ documents through U. S. mails, 169;
+ carries bill extending boundaries of Missouri, 170;
+ urges admission of Michigan, 171;
+ carries through treaty with Cherokees, 171;
+ defends governmental treatment of Indians, 172;
+ condemns treaty establishing Southwestern boundary, 175;
+ position concerning annexation of Texas, 180-183;
+ hostility to separatist doctrines, 188;
+ blames bankers and politicians for financial crisis of 1837, 190,
+ 194;
+ his forebodings of this trouble, 191-193;
+ demeanor in the crisis, 197;
+ supports issue of Treasury notes, 198;
+ opposes payment of further installment of surplus, 199;
+ supports scheme for independent Treasury, 200, 207;
+ action concerning resumption by bonds, 203;
+ a supporter of the administration in these times, 263;
+ his knowledge, 204;
+ hostile to paper currency, 206;
+ defends administration in matters of Seminole war, 212;
+ theory for conducting this war, 215;
+ advocates; homestead law, 217;
+ opposes assumption of State debts by national government, 220;
+ explains greater rapidity of progress at North than at South, 222;
+ on the tariff of 1833, 224-230;
+ defends Jackson and Van Buren against charges of squandering
+ public moneys, 230;
+ in the Harrison campaign, 233;
+ holds the Democrats for the Union, 234;
+ feeling concerning slavery about Van Buren's time, 235;
+ leads the Democrats in struggle between President Tyler and Clay,
+ 240-244;
+ exalts the "Democratic idea," 241;
+ comments on Tyler's first message to Congress, 245;
+ opposes sub-Treasury bill, 246;
+ also the bank, distribution and bankruptcy bills, 246-249;
+ opposes the hour limit for speeches in the Senate, 250-252;
+ speech concerning the district banks and the currency, 253;
+ opposes effort to establish a national bank during Tyler's
+ administration, 255-258;
+ opposes new form of Treasury notes, 258;
+ opposes subsidizing steamship lines, 258;
+ also the abuse of the pension system, 258;
+ always an advocate of extending the national boundaries, 263, 267;
+ opposes the Ashburton treaty, 269, 273-279;
+ remarks concerning the Caroline imbroglio, 270;
+ opposes making an efficient navy, 272;
+ references to slavery in speeches on the Ashburton treaty, 274, 280;
+ on the Oregon question, 281-289;
+ position concerning annexation of Texas in time of Polk, 299-317;
+ opposes the South, 301;
+ opposes Calhoun's treaty, 306-310;
+ hoodwinked by the annexationists, 313;
+ attacks Calhoun and opposes the Mexican war, 315;
+ offered the command of the army, 318;
+ awakes to importance of slavery question, 318;
+ his later position concerning it, 320, 333-336;
+ contests with pro-slavery Senators, 322, 323;
+ opposes Calhoun as to power of Congress over slavery in territories,
+ 323-327;
+ and as to admission of Oregon, 328;
+ criticises Polk's administration, 328;
+ visits New York in presidential campaign in 1848, 329;
+ defends Taylor's message, 331;
+ opposes Clay's compromise, 332, 333-336;
+ more antagonism towards Calhoun, 333;
+ position on the Wilmot Proviso, 336;
+ advocates admission of California as a Free State, 337;
+ refuses to support Fugitive Slave Act, 339;
+ nickname of "Old Bullion," 342;
+ opposition to him in Missouri, 342;
+ defeated, 343;
+ goes to House of Representatives, 343;
+ begins work on the "Thirty Years' View," 344;
+ supports Pierce for Presidency, 344;
+ but later goes into opposition, 345;
+ supports scheme for Pacific Railroad, 346;
+ discusses the Indian policy, 347;
+ speeches on land-bounty and pension bills, 348;
+ opposes Kansas-Nebraska bill, 349-352;
+ discusses historically the Missouri Compromise, 349;
+ ridicules squatter sovereignty, 350;
+ opposes the Gladstone treaty, 352;
+ view of Southern disunion scheme, 352;
+ again defeated in Missouri elections, 353;
+ returns to labor on "Thirty Years' View," 354;
+ votes for Buchanan, 354;
+ candidate for governorship, 354;
+ stumps the State, 354;
+ respected at the North, 355;
+ prepares his "Abridgment of the Debates of Congress," 356;
+ death, 356;
+ value of his works 357;
+ criticism of the Dred Scott case, 358;
+ and of the new Democratic theories, 358;
+ domestic relations, 360;
+ extensive knowledge, 360;
+ on board the Princeton at time of explosion of great gun, 361;
+ generous temper, 362.
+
+ Biddle, Nicholas:
+ president of Bank of United States, 116;
+ his errors, 124;
+ his bank goes to pieces, 208.
+
+ Birney, James G.:
+ abolitionist candidate for Presidency, 291, 292;
+ folly of nominating him, 293, 294, 310.
+
+ Blair, Francis C., displaced, 317.
+
+ Buchanan, James:
+ on annexation of Texas, 310;
+ Benton votes for him, 354.
+
+ Burr, Aaron:
+ introduces "spoils system" in New York, 81;
+ compared with Benedict Arnold, 163.
+
+
+ Calhoun, John C.:
+ rupture with Jackson, resignation from Vice-Presidency, 86;
+ position concerning tariff in 1816, 89;
+ position as a nullifier, 96;
+ introduces nullification resolutions, 103;
+ threatened with hanging, 104;
+ arranges compromise with Clay, 106;
+ subsequent quarrel with Clay concerning this, 110;
+ his purposes at this time, 111;
+ assails Jackson, 132;
+ opposes Webster's bill for rechartering bank, 133;
+ on the expunging resolution, 141;
+ proposes constitutional amendment for distribution of Treasury
+ surplus, 144;
+ opposes appropriating Treasury surplus for fortifications, 146;
+ attack on President Pierce, 166;
+ his honesty, 168;
+ on admission of Texas 180;
+ in connection with trouble with Mexico, 260;
+ on the Oregon question, 285;
+ instrumental in election of Polk, 292;
+ letter to Lord Aberdeen, 300;
+ assailed by Benton as to annexation of Texas, 307, 309;
+ action as to legislation about Texas, 313;
+ relations as to Mexican war, 314;
+ and the Wilmot Proviso, 323;
+ resolution as to power of Congress over slavery in the territories,
+ 323-326;
+ not a "Union man," 326;
+ on the admission of Oregon, 326, 327, 328;
+ dislikes Taylor's message to Congress, 331.
+
+ California, admission of, 337.
+
+ Caroline, affair of the, 270.
+
+ Cartwright, Peter, 33.
+
+ Cass, Lewis: nominated for Presidency, 329.
+
+ Cherokees, treaty for their removal, 171.
+
+ Clay, Henry:
+ introduces his first tariff bill, 58;
+ secretary of state under Adams, 61;
+ assailed therefor, and fights Randolph, 62;
+ devises the Panama mission, 63;
+ leader of National Republican or Whig party, 86;
+ defies "the South, the President, and the devil," 90;
+ erroneous statement as to effect of tariff in the West, 91;
+ angers the nullifiers, 99;
+ defeated in presidential election in 1832, 100;
+ alarmed at position of Calhoun, 106;
+ and prepares compromise, 106;
+ afterward quarrels about it with Calhoun, 110;
+ befriends Bank of the United States, 124, 127, 129;
+ effect on his political fortunes, 125;
+ introduces resolution for return of deposits, 131;
+ also for censuring President Jackson, 132;
+ opposes Webster's bill for rechartering Bank, 136;
+ on the expunging resolution, 141;
+ opposes establishment of mints at the South, 144;
+ also appropriating surplus for fortifications, 146;
+ in financial crisis of 1837, 200;
+ on the sub-Treasury bill, 201, 205;
+ on resumption, 202, 203;
+ opposes payment of state debts by national government, 221;
+ prepares financial measures upon Tyler's accession, 240, 244;
+ construction of a presidential election, 241;
+ programme for legislation under Tyler, 245;
+ attempts to introduce hour-limits for speeches in Senate, 250-252;
+ lectures Tyler in the Bank debate, 256;
+ defeated by Polk, 290;
+ causes thereof, 310;
+ attacks Taylor's message to Congress, 331;
+ proposes compromise of slavery controversy, 331;
+ defeated by Benton, 336;
+ compared with Benton, 339.
+
+ Crawford, William H.:
+ adopts the "spoils system," 80.
+
+ Crockett, David, 27, 33;
+ berates Jackson, 113.
+
+ Cumberland Road, Benton votes against bill for, 58.
+
+
+ Davis, Jefferson:
+ compared with Benedict Arnold, 163;
+ a repudiator, 220;
+ and Calhoun's resolution as to slavery in the territories, 325;
+ protests against admission of California, 338.
+
+ Drayton, family, loyalty of the family in South Carolina, 96.
+
+
+ Florida, the treaty securing it to the United States, 41.
+
+ Foote, Senator from Mississippi, opposition to his public land scheme
+ by Benton and Webster, 77.
+
+ Fremont, John C.:
+ explores Rocky Mountains, 283;
+ Benton will not vote for, 354;
+ Benton's interest in his explorations, 363.
+
+
+ Giddings, Joshua R., sound policy of, 294.
+
+
+ Harrison, Wm. Henry:
+ election not affected by slavery question, 235;
+ death and character, 237.
+
+ Hartford Convention, criticised by Benton, 31, 78;
+ causes of, 49.
+
+ Houston, Samuel, 34:
+ wins victory of San Jacinto, 180;
+ hates Van Buren, 188; description of, 327;
+ votes to admit California, 338.
+
+
+ Indian tribes, Benton on the removal of, 55;
+ criticism on treatment of, 57, 172, 347;
+ removal of Cherokees in 1836, 171.
+
+
+ Jackson, Andrew:
+ affray with Benton, 28;
+ befriended by Benton at Washington, 32;
+ in presidential election of 1824, 29, 60;
+ incensed against Adams and Clay, 61;
+ success in election of 1828, 59;
+ character of his following, 71, 74, 75;
+ his opponents, 72;
+ his victory compared with Jefferson's, 73;
+ compared with Wellington, 73;
+ foster-father of the "spoils system," 79, 82;
+ inferior character of his cabinet, 86;
+ relations of his followers with those of Clay and Calhoun, 86;
+ struggles with the Bank and the nullifiers, 88;
+ expected to support nullification, 96;
+ but does not, 97;
+ repudiates Calhoun and adopts Van Buren, 97;
+ at the Jefferson birthday banquet, 98;
+ again defines his position, 99;
+ signs new tariff bill, 99;
+ reelected in 1832, 100;
+ issues proclamation against nullification, 101;
+ special message on nullification, 102;
+ opinion on tariff, 102;
+ threatens to hang Calhoun, 104;
+ signs "Force Bill," also Clay's compromise bill, 108;
+ behaves badly in case of Georgia, 112;
+ attack on U. S. Bank, 114 _et seq._;
+ reasons of his political success, 116;
+ opposes re-charter
+ of Bank in message of 1829, 117;
+ vetoes bill for re-charter, 127;
+ reelected, 130;
+ removes the deposits, 130;
+ protests against Clay's resolution of censure, 133;
+ continued
+ assaults on the Bank, 139;
+ gives a dinner to the expungers, 141;
+ signs bill for distributing Treasury surplus, 153;
+ issues Treasury order concerning payments for public lands, 155;
+ Kitchen Cabinet and "machine politics," 184, 185;
+ liking for Van Buren, 186;
+ his nationalism, 234;
+ praised by Benton for hanging Arbuthnot and Ambrister, 272;
+ favors annexation of Texas, 298;
+ and Van Buren, 299.
+
+ Jefferson, Thomas:
+ character of his following, 70, 71;
+ his victory compared with Jackson's, 73;
+ his pseudo-classicism, 92;
+ quoted as authority for nullification, 95;
+ celebration of birthday of, 97.
+
+
+ Lee, Robert E.:
+ military standing of, 38.
+
+ Lincoln, Abraham:
+ services in anti-slavery cause, 159.
+
+ Livingston, Edward:
+ aids in preparing proclamation against nullification, 101.
+
+ Lucas, Benton's duel with, 28.
+
+
+ Madison, James, quoted, 163.
+
+ Marcy, Wm. L., adopts "spoils system," 81;
+ cringes to the South, 108.
+
+ McDuffie, passage at arms with Benton, 304, 305;
+ deceives Benton as to taxes, 313.
+
+ McLeod, Alexander, case of, 271.
+
+ Missouri, character of its population, 39;
+ admission to the Union, 43, 47;
+ land titles in, 45.
+
+ Missouri Compromise bill, 43;
+ not the beginning of the slavery and anti-slavery divisions in the
+ Union, 48;
+ Benton concerning repeal of, 349.
+
+ Monroe, James, remarks, 47, 58, 59;
+ signs bill for trading road, 53.
+
+
+ New Orleans, Benton's astonishing description of, 93.
+
+
+ Oregon, disputed between Great Britain and the United States, 50;
+ Benton's remarks concerning, 51;
+ comes into notice again in J. Q. Adams's term, 65;
+ final settlement of the matter, 260-273;
+ neglected in Ashburton treaty, 278,
+ and by Calhoun, 278,
+ and others, 279;
+ Benton's feeling about, 281, 284;
+ bill for settlement of, 284;
+ Calhoun on the admission of, 326-328.
+
+
+ Panama mission, disputes concerning, 63-65.
+
+ Phillips, Wendell, estimate of, 160.
+
+ Pierce, Franklin, assailed by Calhoun, 166;
+ relations with Benton, 344, 345;
+ a valuation of, 345;
+ Benton upon pro-slavery tendencies of, 359.
+
+ Polk, James K., character of his following, 234;
+ and the Southwestern boundary, 287;
+ elected President, 290, 310;
+ estimate of, 292;
+ deceives Benton as to Texas, 313;
+ displaces Blair, 317;
+ relations with various portions of Democratic party, 317, 318.
+
+
+ Randolph, John:
+ duel with Clay, 62.
+
+ Rynders, Isaiah, a type, 291, 292.
+
+
+ Seminoles, war with, 209-216.
+
+
+ Taney, Roger B., removes the deposits, 130;
+ afterward made chief justice, 131;
+ criticised by Benton for his opinion in Dred Scott case, 358.
+
+ Taylor, Zachary, elected President, 329;
+ character, 330, 337;
+ message to Congress, 331;
+ dies, 337.
+
+ Tyler, John, opposes "Force Bill," 105;
+ estimate of, on his accession, 237;
+ his political affiliations, 238-240;
+ first message to Congress, 245;
+ conduct concerning bill for establishing a bank, 254-257;
+ his cabinet resigns, 257;
+ identifies himself with the separatist Democrats, 298;
+ schemes for annexation of Texas, 300, 306;
+ assailed by Benton, 307, 309;
+ behavior at time of explosion of gun on board the Princeton, 361.
+
+
+ Van Buren, Martin, supports Crawford for Presidency in 1824, 61;
+ adopts "spoils system," 81;
+ adopted by Jackson as his heir, 97;
+ Vice-President, 100;
+ product of "machine politics," 184;
+ befriended by Jackson, 186;
+ sketch of, and causes of his elevation, 186-188;
+ his inaugural, 188;
+ financial crisis and his doings therein, 189 _et seq._,
+ 194, 196, 197;
+ financial measures, 200;
+ has to deal with the Seminoles, 209;
+ public dishonesty under, 219;
+ charged with squandering the public money, 230;
+ significance of his defeat, 234;
+ slavery question did not arise in his administration, 235;
+ champion of old-style Union Democrats, and opposed to annexation
+ of Texas, 298;
+ candidate for Presidency, 299, 310;
+ and the Free Soil party, 329.
+
+
+ War of 1812, a cause of the, 7;
+ political influence on Benton, 30.
+
+ Warsaw, social habits of the town, 36.
+
+ Webster, Daniel, position of, concerning Clay's first tariff bill, 58;
+ position on the tariff question in 1828, 67;
+ in the debate on Foote's resolution concerning sales of public land,
+ 77, 97;
+ leader of National Republican, or Whig, party, 86;
+ aids Jackson in nullification troubles, 103, 104;
+ advocates the "Force Bill," 105;
+ resolute in opposition to the South, 106, 107, 108;
+ remarks as to his services, 111;
+ befriends Bank of United States, 124, 126, 127, 129;
+ personal relations with the Jacksonians, 131;
+ introduces bill for re-charter of Bank, 136;
+ on the expunging resolution, 142;
+ supports establishment of mints at the South, 144;
+ opposes appropriating Treasury surplus for fortifications, 146;
+ in financial crisis of 1837, 200;
+ on sub-Treasury scheme, 201, 205;
+ opposes payment of state debt by national government, 221;
+ remains in Tyler's cabinet, 257;
+ negotiates treaty with England, settling boundaries between United
+ States and British possessions, 260, 262, 268;
+ criticised by Benton, 273-277, 280;
+ neglects Oregon controversy, 278;
+ compared with Benton on the slavery question, 320, 339;
+ compliments Benton's knowledge, 360;
+ on friendly terms with Benton, 362.
+
+ Wellington, Duke of, compared with Washington and Jackson, 73.
+
+ Wilmot Proviso, Benton's remarks upon, 323, 336.
+
+ Wright, Silas, adopts "spoils system," 81;
+ expresses the "dough face" sentiment at time of nullification
+ troubles, 107.
+
+
+
+
+American Statesmen
+
+Edited by John T. Morse, Jr.
+
+Each, 16mo, cloth, gilt top, $1.25; half morocco, $2.50.
+
+The set, 31 volumes, half levant, $77.50.
+
+
+ BENJAMIN FRANKLIN. By John T. Morse, Jr.
+ SAMUEL ADAMS. By James K. Hosmer.
+ PATRICK HENRY. By Moses Coit Tyler.
+ GEORGE WASHINGTON. By Henry Cabot Lodge. 2 vols.
+ JOHN ADAMS. By John T. Morse, Jr.
+ ALEXANDER HAMILTON. By Henry Cabot Lodge.
+ GOUVERNEUR MORRIS. By Theodore Roosevelt.
+ JOHN JAY. By George Pellew.
+ JOHN MARSHALL. By Allan B. Magruder.
+ THOMAS JEFFERSON. By John T. Morse, Jr.
+ JAMES MADISON. By Sydney Howard Gay.
+ ALBERT GALLATIN. By John Austin Stevens.
+ JAMES MONROE. By President D. C. Gilman.
+ JOHN QUINCY ADAMS. By John T. Morse, Jr.
+ JOHN RANDOLPH. By Henry Adams.
+ ANDREW JACKSON. By Prof. William G. Sumner.
+ MARTIN VAN BUREN. By Edward M. Shepard.
+ HENRY CLAY. By Carl Schurz. 2 vols.
+ DANIEL WEBSTER. By Henry Cabot Lodge.
+ JOHN C. CALHOUN. By Dr. H. Von Holst.
+ THOMAS HART BENTON. By Theodore Roosevelt.
+ LEWIS CASS. By Prof. Andrew C. McLaughlin.
+ ABRAHAM LINCOLN. By John T. Morse, Jr. With Portrait and Map. 2 vols.
+ WILLIAM H. SEWARD. By Thornton K. Lothrop.
+ SALMON P. CHASE. By Prof. A. B. Hart.
+ CHARLES FRANCIS ADAMS. By C. F. Adams.
+ CHARLES SUMNER. By Moorfield Storey.
+ THADDEUS STEVENS. By Samuel W. McCall.
+
+
+_CRITICAL NOTICES._
+
+_FRANKLIN._ He has managed to condense the whole mass of matter gleaned
+from all sources into his volume without losing in a single sentence the
+freedom or lightness of his style or giving his book in any part the
+crowded look of an epitome.--_The Independent_ (New York).
+
+_SAMUEL ADAMS._ Thoroughly appreciative and sympathetic, yet fair and
+critical.... This biography is a piece of good work--a clear and simple
+presentation of a noble man and pure patriot; it is written in a spirit
+of candor and humanity.--_Worcester Spy._
+
+_HENRY._ Professor Tyler has not only made one of the best and most
+readable of American biographies; he may fairly be said to have
+reconstructed the life of Patrick Henry, and to have vindicated the
+memory of that great man from the unappreciative and injurious estimate
+which has been placed upon it.--_New York Evening Post._
+
+_WASHINGTON._ Mr. Lodge has written an admirable biography, and one
+which cannot but confirm the American people in the prevailing estimate
+concerning the Father of his Country.--_New York Tribune._
+
+_JOHN ADAMS._ A good piece of literary work.... It covers the ground
+thoroughly, and gives just the sort of simple and succinct account that
+is wanted.--_New York Evening Post._
+
+_HAMILTON._ Mr. Lodge has done his work with conscientious care, and the
+biography of Hamilton is a book which cannot have too many readers. It
+is more than a biography; it is a study in the science of
+government.--_St. Paul Pioneer Press._
+
+_MORRIS._ Mr. Roosevelt has produced an animated and intensely
+interesting biographical volume.... Mr. Roosevelt never loses sight of
+the picturesque background of politics, war-governments, and
+diplomacy.--_Magazine of American History_ (New York).
+
+_JAY._ It is an important addition to the admirable series of "American
+Statesmen," and elevates yet higher the character of a man whom all
+American patriots most delight to honor.--_New York Tribune._
+
+_MARSHALL._ Well done, with simplicity, clearness, precision, and
+judgment, and in a spirit of moderation and equity. A valuable addition
+to the series.--_New York Tribune._
+
+_JEFFERSON._ A singularly just, well-proportioned, and interesting
+sketch of the personal and political career of the author of the
+Declaration of Independence.--_Boston Journal._
+
+_MADISON._ The execution of the work deserves the highest praise. It is
+very readable, in a bright and vigorous style, and is marked by unity
+and consecutiveness of plan.--_The Nation_ (New York).
+
+_GALLATIN._ It is one of the most carefully prepared of these very
+valuable volumes, ... abounding in information not so readily
+accessible as is that pertaining to men more often treated by the
+biographer.--_Boston Correspondent Hartford Courant._
+
+_MONROE._ President Gilman has made the most of his hero, without the
+least hero-worship, and has done full justice to Mr. Monroe's "relations
+to the public service during half a century." ... The appendix is
+peculiarly valuable for its synopsis of Monroe's Presidential Messages,
+and its extensive Bibliography of Monroe and the Monroe Doctrine.--_N.
+Y. Christian Intelligencer._
+
+_JOHN QUINCY ADAMS._ That Mr. Morse's conclusions will in the main be
+those of posterity we have very little doubt, and he has set an
+admirable example to his coadjutors in respect of interesting narrative,
+just proportion, and judicial candor.--_New York Evening Post._
+
+_RANDOLPH._ The book has been to me intensely interesting.... It is rich
+in new facts and side lights, and is worthy of its place in the already
+brilliant series of monographs on American Statesmen.--Prof. MOSES COIT
+TYLER.
+
+_JACKSON._ Professor Sumner has ... all in all, made the justest long
+estimate of Jackson that has had itself put between the covers of a
+book.--_New York Times._
+
+_VAN BUREN._ This absorbing book.... To give any adequate idea of the
+personal interest of the book, or its intimate bearing on nearly the
+whole course of our political history, would be equivalent to quoting
+the larger part of it.--_Brooklyn Eagle._
+
+_CLAY._ We have in this life of Henry Clay a biography of one of the
+most distinguished of American statesmen, and a political history of the
+United States for the first half of the nineteenth century. Indeed, it
+is not too much to say that, for the period covered, we have no other
+book which equals or begins to equal this life of Henry Clay as an
+introduction to the study of American politics.--_Political Science
+Quarterly_ (New York).
+
+_WEBSTER._ It will be read by students of history; it will be invaluable
+as a work of reference; it will be an authority as regards matters of
+fact and criticism; it hits the key-note of Webster's durable and
+ever-growing fame; it is adequate, calm, impartial; it is
+admirable.--_Philadelphia Press._
+
+_CALHOUN._ Nothing can exceed the skill with which the political career
+of the great South Carolinian is portrayed in these pages.... The whole
+discussion in relation to Calhoun's position is eminently philosophical
+and just.--_The Dial_ (Chicago).
+
+_BENTON._ An interesting addition to our political literature, and will
+be of great service if it spread an admiration for that austere public
+morality which was one of the marked characteristics of its chief
+figure.--_The Epoch_ (New York).
+
+_CASS._ Professor McLaughlin has given us one of the most satisfactory
+volumes in this able and important series.... The early life of Cass was
+devoted to the Northwest, and in the transformation which overtook it
+the work of Cass was the work of a national statesman.--_New York
+Times._
+
+_LINCOLN._ As a life of Lincoln it has no competitors; as a political
+history of the Union side during the Civil War, it is the most
+comprehensive, and, in proportion to its range, the most
+compact.--_Harvard Graduates' Magazine._
+
+_SEWARD._ The public will be grateful for his conscientious efforts to
+write a popular vindication of one of the ablest, most brilliant,
+fascinating, energetic, ambitious, and patriotic men in American
+history.--_New York Evening Post._
+
+_CHASE._ His great career as anti-slavery leader, United States Senator,
+Governor of Ohio, Secretary of the Treasury, and Chief Justice of the
+United States, is described in an adequate and effective manner by
+Professor Hart.
+
+_CHARLES FRANCIS ADAMS._ His wise statesmanship before the Civil War,
+and the masterly ability and consummate diplomatic skill displayed by
+him while Minister to Great Britain, are judiciously set forth by his
+eminent son.
+
+_SUMNER._ The majestic devotion of Sumner to the highest political
+ideals before and during his long term of lofty service to freedom in
+the United States Senate is fittingly delineated by Mr. Storey.
+
+_STEVENS._ Thaddeus Stevens was unquestionably one of the most
+conspicuous figures of his time.... The book shows him the eccentric,
+fiery, and masterful congressional leader that he was.--_City and State_
+(Philadelphia).
+
+ HOUGHTON, MIFFLIN & CO.
+ 4 PARK ST., BOSTON; 85 FIFTH AVENUE, NEW YORK
+ 378-388 WABASH AVE., CHICAGO
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+Transcriber's Notes: Minor typographical errors and inconsistencies
+have been silently normalized.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's Thomas Hart Benton, by Theodore Roosevelt
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THOMAS HART BENTON ***
+
+***** This file should be named 37656-8.txt or 37656-8.zip *****
+This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
+ http://www.gutenberg.org/3/7/6/5/37656/
+
+Produced by Julia Neufeld, Curtis Weyant and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
+file was produced from images generously made available
+by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
+
+
+Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions
+will be renamed.
+
+Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no
+one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation
+(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without
+permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules,
+set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to
+copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to
+protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. Project
+Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you
+charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission. If you
+do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the
+rules is very easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose
+such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and
+research. They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do
+practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks. Redistribution is
+subject to the trademark license, especially commercial
+redistribution.
+
+
+
+*** START: FULL LICENSE ***
+
+THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
+PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
+
+To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
+distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
+(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License (available with this file or online at
+http://gutenberg.org/license).
+
+
+Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic works
+
+1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
+and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
+(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
+the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy
+all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession.
+If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the
+terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or
+entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.
+
+1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
+used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
+agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
+things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
+even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
+paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement
+and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works. See paragraph 1.E below.
+
+1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the Foundation"
+or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual works in the
+collection are in the public domain in the United States. If an
+individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are
+located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from
+copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative
+works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg
+are removed. Of course, we hope that you will support the Project
+Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by
+freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of
+this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with
+the work. You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by
+keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others.
+
+1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
+what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in
+a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, check
+the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement
+before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or
+creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project
+Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no representations concerning
+the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United
+States.
+
+1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
+
+1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate
+access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently
+whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the
+phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed,
+copied or distributed:
+
+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
+
+1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived
+from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is
+posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied
+and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees
+or charges. If you are redistributing or providing access to a work
+with the phrase "Project Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the
+work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1
+through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the
+Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or
+1.E.9.
+
+1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
+with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
+must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional
+terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms will be linked
+to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the
+permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work.
+
+1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
+work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
+
+1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
+electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
+prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
+active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm License.
+
+1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
+compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any
+word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or
+distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than
+"Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official version
+posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org),
+you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a
+copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon
+request, of the work in its original "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other
+form. Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
+
+1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
+performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
+unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
+
+1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
+access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided
+that
+
+- You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
+ the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
+ you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is
+ owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he
+ has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the
+ Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments
+ must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you
+ prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax
+ returns. Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and
+ sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the
+ address specified in Section 4, "Information about donations to
+ the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."
+
+- You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
+ you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
+ does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+ License. You must require such a user to return or
+ destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium
+ and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of
+ Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+- You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any
+ money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
+ electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days
+ of receipt of the work.
+
+- You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
+ distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set
+forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from
+both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael
+Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the
+Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
+
+1.F.
+
+1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
+effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
+public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm
+collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain
+"Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or
+corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual
+property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a
+computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by
+your equipment.
+
+1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
+of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
+liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
+fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
+LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
+PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
+TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
+LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
+INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
+DAMAGE.
+
+1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
+defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
+receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
+written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
+received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with
+your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you with
+the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a
+refund. If you received the work electronically, the person or entity
+providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to
+receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If the second copy
+is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further
+opportunities to fix the problem.
+
+1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
+in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS' WITH NO OTHER
+WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO
+WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
+
+1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
+warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages.
+If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the
+law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be
+interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by
+the applicable state law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any
+provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions.
+
+1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
+trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
+providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance
+with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production,
+promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works,
+harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees,
+that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do
+or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm
+work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any
+Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause.
+
+
+Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
+electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers
+including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It exists
+because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from
+people in all walks of life.
+
+Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
+assistance they need, are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
+goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
+remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
+and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations.
+To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
+and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4
+and the Foundation web page at http://www.pglaf.org.
+
+
+Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive
+Foundation
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
+501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
+state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
+Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
+number is 64-6221541. Its 501(c)(3) letter is posted at
+http://pglaf.org/fundraising. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent
+permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
+
+The Foundation's principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S.
+Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered
+throughout numerous locations. Its business office is located at
+809 North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887, email
+business@pglaf.org. Email contact links and up to date contact
+information can be found at the Foundation's web site and official
+page at http://pglaf.org
+
+For additional contact information:
+ Dr. Gregory B. Newby
+ Chief Executive and Director
+ gbnewby@pglaf.org
+
+
+Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
+spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
+increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
+freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
+array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
+($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
+status with the IRS.
+
+The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
+charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
+States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
+considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
+with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
+where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To
+SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any
+particular state visit http://pglaf.org
+
+While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
+have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
+against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
+approach us with offers to donate.
+
+International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
+any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
+outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
+
+Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
+methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
+ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations.
+To donate, please visit: http://pglaf.org/donate
+
+
+Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works.
+
+Professor Michael S. Hart is the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm
+concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared
+with anyone. For thirty years, he produced and distributed Project
+Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support.
+
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
+editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S.
+unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily
+keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.
+
+
+Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility:
+
+ http://www.gutenberg.org
+
+This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
+including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
+subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
diff --git a/37656-8.zip b/37656-8.zip
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..efc79a3
--- /dev/null
+++ b/37656-8.zip
Binary files differ
diff --git a/37656-h.zip b/37656-h.zip
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..93888bc
--- /dev/null
+++ b/37656-h.zip
Binary files differ
diff --git a/37656-h/37656-h.htm b/37656-h/37656-h.htm
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..d00e74c
--- /dev/null
+++ b/37656-h/37656-h.htm
@@ -0,0 +1,12152 @@
+<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN"
+ "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd">
+
+<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" xml:lang="en" lang="en">
+ <head>
+ <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html;charset=iso-8859-1" />
+ <meta http-equiv="Content-Style-Type" content="text/css" />
+ <title>
+ The Project Gutenberg eBook of Thomas Hart Benton, American Statesmen Series, by Theodore Roosevelt.
+ </title>
+ <style type="text/css">
+
+body {
+ margin-left: 10%;
+ margin-right: 10%;
+}
+
+ h1,h2,h3 {
+ text-align: center; /* all headings centered */
+ clear: both;
+}
+
+p {
+ margin-top: .75em;
+ text-align: justify;
+ margin-bottom: .75em;
+}
+
+hr {
+ margin: 3em auto 3em auto;
+ height: 0px;
+ border-width: 1px 0 0 0;
+ border-style: solid;
+ border-color: #dcdcdc;
+ width: 500px;
+ clear: both;
+}
+
+
+ .pgnum-contents {
+ position: absolute;
+ left: 70%;
+ text-align: right;
+}
+
+td { padding: 0em 1em; }
+th { padding: 0em 1em; }
+
+ .pagenum { /* uncomment the next line for invisible page numbers */
+ /* visibility: hidden; */
+ position: absolute;
+ left: 92%;
+ font-size: smaller;
+ text-align: right;
+ color: #999;
+} /* page numbers */
+
+ .blockquot {
+ margin-left: 5%;
+ margin-right: 10%;
+}
+
+ .bb {border-bottom: solid 2px;}
+
+ .bl {border-left: solid 2px;}
+
+ .bt {border-top: solid 2px;}
+
+ .br {border-right: solid 2px;}
+
+ .bbox {border: solid 2px;}
+
+ .center {text-align: center;}
+
+ .smcap {font-variant: small-caps;}
+
+ .u {text-decoration: underline;}
+
+ .caption {font-weight: bold;}
+
+ .gap { margin-top: 1em; }
+
+/* Transcriber Notes */
+div.tn {
+ background-color: #EEE;
+ border: dashed 1px;
+ color: #000;
+ margin-left: 20%;
+ margin-right: 20%;
+ margin-top: 5em;
+ margin-bottom: 5em;
+ padding: 1em;
+}
+
+
+/* Footnotes */
+div.fn {
+ background-color: #EEE;
+ border: dashed 1px;
+ color: #000;
+ margin-left: 20%;
+ margin-right: 20%;
+ margin-top: 5em;
+ margin-bottom: 5em;
+ padding: 1em;
+}
+
+ .footnote {
+ margin-left: 10%;
+ margin-right: 10%;
+ font-size: 0.9em;
+}
+
+ .footnote .label {
+ position: absolute;
+ right: 84%;
+ text-align: right;
+}
+
+ .fnanchor {
+ vertical-align: super;
+ font-size: .8em;
+ text-decoration: none;
+}
+
+/* INDEX */
+ul.index { list-style-type: none;
+ width: 20em;
+ margin: 2em auto;
+}
+
+ul.index2 { list-style-type: none; }
+
+li.pad { padding-top: 2.0%; }
+
+ </style>
+ </head>
+<body>
+
+
+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Thomas Hart Benton, by Theodore Roosevelt
+
+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: Thomas Hart Benton
+
+Author: Theodore Roosevelt
+
+Release Date: October 7, 2011 [EBook #37656]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THOMAS HART BENTON ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Julia Neufeld, Curtis Weyant and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
+file was produced from images generously made available
+by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+<h3>American Statesmen</h3>
+
+<div class="center">EDITED BY<br /><br />
+
+JOHN T. MORSE, JR.<br /><br /></div>
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h3>American Statesmen</h3>
+<hr style="width: 25%;" />
+<h1>THOMAS HART BENTON</h1>
+
+<h3>BY</h3>
+
+<h2>THEODORE ROOSEVELT</h2>
+
+
+<div class="center">BOSTON AND NEW YORK<br />
+HOUGHTON, MIFFLIN AND COMPANY<br />
+The Riverside Press, Cambridge<br /><br />
+1890<br /><br />
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+Copyright, 1886,<br />
+<span class="smcap">By </span>THEODORE ROOSEVELT.<br /><br />
+
+<i>All rights reserved.</i><br /><br /><br /><br />
+
+FIFTH EDITION.<br /><br /><br />
+
+
+<i>The Riverside Press, Cambridge, Mass., U. S. A.</i><br />
+Electrotyped and Printed by H. O. Houghton &amp; Company.
+</div>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<h2><a name="CONTENTS" id="CONTENTS"></a>CONTENTS.</h2>
+<blockquote>
+<p><span class="pgnum-contents">PAGE</span></p>
+<h3><a href="#CHAPTER_I">CHAPTER I.</a></h3>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">The Young West</span><span class="pgnum-contents">1</span></p>
+<h3><a href="#CHAPTER_II">CHAPTER II.</a></h3>
+<p><span class="smcap">Benton's Early Life and Entry into the Senate</span><span class="pgnum-contents">23</span></p>
+<h3><a href="#CHAPTER_III">CHAPTER III.</a></h3>
+<p><span class="smcap">Early Years in the Senate</span><span class="pgnum-contents">47</span></p>
+<h3><a href="#CHAPTER_IV">CHAPTER IV.</a></h3>
+<p><span class="smcap">The Election of Jackson, and the Spoils System</span><span class="pgnum-contents">69</span></p>
+<h3><a href="#CHAPTER_V">CHAPTER V.</a></h3>
+<p><span class="smcap">The Struggle with the Nullifiers</span><span class="pgnum-contents">88</span></p>
+<h3><a href="#CHAPTER_VI">CHAPTER VI.</a></h3>
+<p><span class="smcap">Jackson and Benton make War on the Bank</span><span class="pgnum-contents">114</span></p>
+<h3><a href="#CHAPTER_VII">CHAPTER VII.</a></h3>
+<p><span class="smcap">The Distribution of the Surplus</span><span class="pgnum-contents">143</span></p>
+<h3><a href="#CHAPTER_VIII">CHAPTER VIII.</a></h3>
+<p><span class="smcap">The Slave Question appears in Politics</span><span class="pgnum-contents">157</span>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_vi" id="Page_vi">[vi]</a></span></p>
+<h3><a href="#CHAPTER_IX">CHAPTER IX.</a></h3>
+<p><span class="smcap">The Children's Teeth are set on Edge</span><span class="pgnum-contents">184</span></p>
+<h3><a href="#CHAPTER_X">CHAPTER X.</a></h3>
+<p><span class="smcap">Last Days of the Jacksonian Democracy</span><span class="pgnum-contents">209</span></p>
+<h3><a href="#CHAPTER_XI">CHAPTER XI.</a></h3>
+<p><span class="smcap">The President without a Party</span><span class="pgnum-contents">237</span></p>
+<h3><a href="#CHAPTER_XII">CHAPTER XII.</a></h3>
+<p><span class="smcap">Boundary Troubles with England</span><span class="pgnum-contents">260</span></p>
+<h3><a href="#CHAPTER_XIII">CHAPTER XIII.</a></h3>
+<p><span class="smcap">The Abolitionists Dance to the Slave Barons' Piping</span><span class="pgnum-contents">290</span></p>
+<h3><a href="#CHAPTER_XIV">CHAPTER XIV.</a></h3>
+<p><span class="smcap">Slavery in the New Territories</span><span class="pgnum-contents">317</span></p>
+<h3><a href="#CHAPTER_XV">CHAPTER XV.</a></h3>
+<p><span class="smcap">The Losing Fight</span><span class="pgnum-contents">341</span>
+</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1"></a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="THOMAS_HART_BENTON" id="THOMAS_HART_BENTON"></a>THOMAS HART BENTON.</h2>
+
+<hr style="width: 25%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_I" id="CHAPTER_I"></a>CHAPTER I.</h2>
+
+<h3>THE YOUNG WEST.</h3>
+
+
+<p>Even before the end of the Revolutionary
+War the movement had begun which was to
+change in form a straggling chain of sea-board
+republics into a mighty continental nation, the
+great bulk of whose people would live to the
+westward of the Appalachian Mountains. The
+hardy and restless backwoodsmen, dwelling
+along the eastern slopes of the Alleghanies,
+were already crossing the mountain-crests and
+hewing their way into the vast, sombre forests
+of the Mississippi basin; and for the first time
+English-speaking communities were growing
+up along waters whose outlet was into the Gulf
+of Mexico and not into the Atlantic Ocean.
+Among these communities Kentucky and Tennessee
+were the earliest to form themselves
+into states; and around them, as a nucleus,
+other states of the woodland and the prairie
+were rapidly developed, until, by the close of
+the second decade in the present century, the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[2]</a></span>
+region between the Great Lakes and the Gulf
+was almost solidly filled in, and finally, in 1820,
+by the admission of Missouri, the Union held
+within its borders a political body whose whole
+territory lay to the west of the Mississippi.</p>
+
+<p>All the men who founded these states were
+of much the same type; they were rough frontiersmen,
+of strong will and adventurous temper,
+accustomed to the hard, barren, and yet
+strangely fascinating life of those who dwell as
+pioneers in the wilderness. Moreover, they
+were nearly all of the same blood. The people
+of New York and New England were as yet filling
+out their own territory; it was not till many
+years afterwards that their stock became the
+predominant one in the northwestern country.
+Most of the men who founded the new states
+north of the Ohio came originally from the old
+states south of the Potomac; Virginia and North
+Carolina were the first of the original thirteen
+to thrust forth their children in masses, that
+they might shift for themselves in the then untrodden
+West.</p>
+
+<p>But though these early Western pioneers were
+for the most part of Southern stock, they were
+by no means of the same stamp as the men who
+then and thereafter formed the ruling caste in
+the old slave-holding states. They were the
+mountaineers, the men of the foot-hills and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[3]</a></span>
+uplands, who lived in what were called the
+backwater counties. Many of them were themselves
+of northern origin. In striking contrast
+to the somewhat sluggish and peaceful elements
+going to make up the rest of its heterogeneous
+population, Pennsylvania also originally held
+within its boundaries many members of that
+most fiery and restless race, the Scotch-Irish.
+These naturally drew towards the wilder, western
+parts of the state, settling along the slopes
+of the numerous inland mountain ridges running
+parallel to the Atlantic coast; and from
+thence they drifted southward through the long
+valleys, until they met and mingled with their
+kinsfolk of Virginia and the Carolinas, when
+the movement again trended towards the West.
+In a generation or two, all, whether their forefathers
+were English, Scotch, Irish, or, as was
+often the case, German and Huguenot, were
+welded into one people; and in a very short
+time the stern and hard surroundings of their
+life had hammered this people into a peculiar
+and characteristically American type, which to
+this day remains almost unchanged. In their
+old haunts we still see the same tall, gaunt men,
+with strongly marked faces and saturnine, resolute
+eyes; men who may pass half their days
+in listless idleness, but who are also able to show
+on occasion the fiercest intensity of purpose and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[4]</a></span>
+the most sustained energy of action. We see
+them, moreover, in many places, even across to
+the Pacific coast and down to the Rio Grande.
+For after thronging through the gaps and passes
+of the Appalachians, and penetrating the forest
+region to the outskirts of the treeless country
+beyond, the whilom mountaineers and woodsmen,
+the wielders of the axe and rifle, then
+streamed off far to the West and South and
+even to the Northwest, their lumbering, white-topped
+wagons being, even to the present moment,
+a familiar sight to those who travel over
+the prairies and the great plains; while it is
+their descendants who, in the saddle instead of
+afoot, and with rope and revolver instead of
+axe and rifle, now form the bulk of the reckless
+horsemen who spend their lives in guarding the
+wandering cattle herds that graze over the vast,
+arid plains of the "Far West."</p>
+
+<p>The method of settlement of these states of
+the Mississippi valley had nothing whatever in
+common with the way in which California and
+the Australian colonies were suddenly filled up
+by the promiscuous overflow of a civilized population,
+which had practically no fear of any
+resistance from the stunted and scanty native
+races. It was far more closely akin to the tribe
+movements of the Germanic peoples in time
+past; to that movement, for example, by which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[5]</a></span>
+the Juttish and Low Dutch sea-thieves on the
+coast of Britain worked their way inland at the
+cost of the Cymric Celts. The early settlers of
+the territory lying immediately west of the Alleghanies
+were all of the same kind; they were
+in search of homes, not of riches, and their actions
+were planned accordingly, except in so far
+as they were influenced by mere restless love of
+adventure and excitement. Individuals and single
+families, of course, often started off by themselves;
+but for the most part the men moved in
+bands, with their wives and their children, their
+cattle and their few household goods; each settler
+being from the necessity of the case also a
+fighter, ready, and often forced, to do desperate
+battle in defense of himself and his family.
+Where such a band or little party settled, there
+would gradually grow up a village or small
+town; for instance, where those renowned pioneers
+and heroes of the backwoods, Boone and
+Harrod, first formed permanent settlements after
+they had moved into Kentucky, now stand
+the towns of Boonsboro and Harrodsburg.</p>
+
+<p>The country whither these settlers went was
+not one into which timid men would willingly
+venture, and the founders of the West were perforce
+men of stern stuff, who from the very
+beginning formed a most warlike race. It is
+impossible to understand aright the social and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[6]</a></span>
+political life of the section, unless we keep
+prominently before our minds that it derived
+its distinguishing traits largely from the extremely
+militant character acquired by all the
+early settlers during the long drawn out warfare
+in which the first two generations were
+engaged. The land was already held by powerful
+Indian tribes and confederacies, who waged
+war after war, of the most ferocious and bloody
+character, against the men of the border, in
+the effort to avert their inevitable doom, or at
+least to stem for the time being the invasion
+of the swelling tide of white settlement. At
+the present time, when an Indian uprising is
+a matter chiefly of annoyance, and dangerous
+only to scattered, outlying settlers, it is difficult
+to realize the formidable nature of the savage
+Indian wars waged at the end of the last and
+the beginning of the present centuries. The
+red nations were then really redoubtable enemies,
+able to send into the field thousands of
+well-armed warriors, whose ferocious bravery
+and skill rendered them quite as formidable
+antagonists as trained European soldiers would
+have been. Warfare with them did not affect
+merely outlying farms or hamlets; it meant
+a complete stoppage of the white movement
+westward, and great and imminent danger
+even to the large communities already in existence;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[7]</a></span>
+a state of things which would have
+to continue until the armies raised among the
+pioneers were able, in fair shock of battle, to
+shatter the strength of their red foes. The victories
+of Wayne and Harrison were conditions
+precedent to the opening of the Ohio valley;
+Kentucky was won by a hundred nameless and
+bloody fights, whose heroes, like Shelby and
+Sevier, afterwards rose to prominent rank in
+civil life; and it was only after a hard-fought
+campaign and slaughtering victories that the
+Tennesseeans were able to break the power of
+the great Creek confederacy, which was thrust
+in between them and what were at that time
+the French and Spanish lands lying to the
+south and southwest.</p>
+
+<p>The founders of our Western States were
+valiant warriors as well as hardy pioneers, and
+from the very first their fighting was not confined
+to uncivilized foes. It was they who at
+King's Mountain slew gallant Ferguson, and
+completely destroyed his little army; it was
+from their ranks that most of Morgan's men
+were recruited, when that grizzled old bush-fighter
+smote Tarleton so roughly at the battle
+of the Cowpens. These two blows crippled
+Cornwallis, and were among the chief causes of
+his final overthrow. At last, during the War
+of 1812, there was played out the final act in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[8]</a></span>
+the military drama of which the West had been
+the stage during the lifetime of a generation.
+For this war had a twofold aspect: on the
+sea-board it was regarded as a contest for the
+rights of our sailors and as a revolt against
+Great Britain's domineering insolence; west of
+the mountains, on the other hand, it was simply
+a renewal on a large scale of the Indian
+struggles, all the red-skinned peoples joining
+together in a great and last effort to keep the
+lands which were being wrested from them;
+and there Great Britain's part was chiefly that
+of ally to the savages, helping them with her
+gold and with her well-drilled mercenary troops.
+The battle of the Thames is memorable rather
+because of the defeat and death of Tecumseh,
+than because of the flight of Proctor and the
+capture of his British regulars; and for the
+opening of the Southwest the ferocious fight at
+the Horseshoe Bend was almost as important as
+the far more famous conflict of New Orleans.</p>
+
+<p>The War of 1812 brought out conspicuously
+the solidarity of interest in the West. The
+people there were then all pretty much of the
+same blood; and they made common cause
+against outsiders in the military field exactly as
+afterwards they for some time acted together
+politically. Further eastward, on the Niagara
+frontier, the fighting was done by the troops of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[9]</a></span>
+New York and New England, unassisted by the
+Southern States; and in turn the latter had
+to shift for themselves when Washington was
+burned and Baltimore menaced. It was far
+otherwise in the regions lying beyond the
+Appalachians. Throughout all the fighting in
+the Northwest, where Ohio was the state most
+menaced, the troops of Kentucky formed the
+bulk of the American army, and it was the
+charge of their mounted riflemen which at a
+blow won the battle of the Thames. Again,
+on that famous January morning, when it
+seemed as if the fair Creole city was already in
+Packenham's grasp, it was the wild soldiery of
+Tennessee who, lolling behind their mud breastworks,
+peered out through the lifting fog at
+the scarlet array of the English veterans, as the
+latter, fresh from their long and unbroken series
+of victories over the best troops of Europe,
+advanced, for the first time, to meet defeat.</p>
+
+<p>This solidarity of interest and feeling on the
+part of the trans-Appalachian communities is a
+factor often not taken into account in relating
+the political history of the early part of this
+century; most modern writers (who keep forgetting
+that the question of slavery was then
+not one tenth as absorbing as it afterwards became)
+apparently deeming that the line of
+demarkation between North and South was at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[10]</a></span>
+that period, as it has since in reality become,
+as strongly defined west of the mountains as
+east of them. That such was not the case was
+due to several different causes. The first comers
+into Tennessee and Kentucky belonged to
+the class of so-called poor whites, who owned
+few or no slaves, and who were far less sectionally
+southern in their feelings than were the
+rich planters of the low, alluvial plains towards
+the coast of the Atlantic; and though a slave-owning
+population quickly followed the first
+pioneers, yet the latter had imprinted a stamp
+on the character of the two states which was
+never wholly effaced,&mdash;as witness the tens of
+thousands of soldiers which both, even the more
+southern of the two, furnished to the Union
+army in the Civil War.</p>
+
+<p>If this immigration made Kentucky and Tennessee,
+and afterwards Missouri, less distinctively
+Southern in character than the South
+Atlantic States, it at the same time, by furnishing
+the first and for some time the most numerous
+element in the population of the states
+north of the Ohio, made the latter less characteristically
+Northern than was the case with
+those lying east of them. Up to 1810 Indiana
+kept petitioning Congress to allow slavery
+within her borders; Illinois, in the early days,
+felt as hostile towards Massachusetts as did<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[11]</a></span>
+Missouri. Moreover, at first the Southern
+States west of the mountains greatly outweighed
+the Northern, both in numbers and importance.</p>
+
+<p>Thus several things came about. In the first
+place, all the communities across the Alleghanies
+originally felt themselves to be closely knit
+together by ties of blood, sentiment, and interest;
+they felt that they were, taking them
+altogether, Western as opposed to Eastern. In
+the next place, they were at first Southern
+rather than Northern in their feeling. But, in
+the third place, they were by no means so extremely
+Southern as were the Southern Atlantic
+States. This was the way in which they looked
+at themselves; and this was the way in which
+at that time others looked at them. In our
+day Kentucky is regarded politically as being
+simply an integral portion of the solid South;
+but the greatest of her sons, Clay, was known
+to his own generation, not as a Southern statesman,
+but as "Harry of the West." Of the two
+presidents, Harrison and Taylor, whom the
+Whigs elected, one lived in Ohio and one in
+Louisiana; but both were chosen simply as
+Western men, and, as a matter of fact, both
+were born in Virginia. Andrew Jackson's victory
+over Adams was in some slight sense a
+triumph of the South over the North, but it
+was far more a triumph of the West over the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[12]</a></span>
+East. Webster's famous sneer at old Zachary
+Taylor was aimed at him as a "frontier
+colonel;" in other words, though Taylor had
+a large plantation in Louisiana, Webster, and
+many others besides, looked upon him as the
+champion of the rough democracy of the West
+rather than as the representative of the polished
+slave-holders of the South.</p>
+
+<p>Thus, during the first part of this century, the
+term "Western" was as applicable to the states
+lying south of the Ohio as to those lying north
+of it. Moreover, at first the Central, or, as they
+were more usually termed, the Border States,
+were more populous and influential than were
+those on either side of them, and so largely
+shaped the general tone of Western feeling.
+While the voters in these states, whether Whigs
+or Democrats, accepted as their leaders men
+like Clay in Kentucky, Benton in Missouri, and
+Andrew Jackson in Tennessee, it could be
+taken for granted that on the whole they felt
+for the South against the North, but much
+more for the West against the East, and most
+strongly of all for the Union as against any
+section whatsoever. Many influences came
+together to start and keep alive this feeling;
+but one, more potent than all the others combined,
+was working steadily, and with ever-increasing
+power, against it; and when slavery<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[13]</a></span>
+finally brought about a break between the
+Northern and Southern States of the West as
+complete as that in the East, then the Democrats
+of the stamp of Jackson and Benton disappeared
+as completely from public life as did
+the Whigs of the stamp of Clay.</p>
+
+<p>Benton's long political career can never be
+thoroughly understood unless it is kept in mind
+that he was primarily a Western and not a
+Southern statesman; and it owes its especial
+interest to the fact that during its continuance
+the West first rose to power, acting as a unit,
+and to the further fact that it was brought to a
+close by the same causes which soon afterwards
+broke up the West exactly as the East was already
+broken. Benton was not one of the few
+statesmen who have left the indelible marks of
+their own individuality upon our history; but
+he was, perhaps, the most typical representative
+of the statesmanship of the Middle West at the
+time when the latter gave the tone to the political
+thought of the entire Mississippi valley.
+The political school which he represented came
+to its fullest development in the so-called Border
+States of Kentucky, Tennessee, and Missouri,
+and swayed the destinies of the West so long as
+the states to the north as well as the states to
+the south were content to accept the leadership
+of those that lay between them. It came to an<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[14]</a></span>
+end and disappeared from sight when people
+north of the Ohio at last set up their own
+standard, and when, after some hesitation, the
+Border States threw in their lot with the other
+side and concluded to follow the Southern communities,
+which they had hitherto led. Benton
+was one of those public men who formulate and
+express, rather than shape, the thought of the
+people who stand behind them and whom they
+represent. A man of strong intellect and keen
+energy, he was for many years the foremost
+representative of at least one phase of that
+thought; being, also, a man of high principle
+and determined courage, when a younger generation
+had grown up and the bent of the thought
+had changed, he declined to change with it,
+bravely accepting political defeat as the alternative,
+and going down without flinching a
+hair's breadth from the ground on which he
+had always stood.</p>
+
+<p>To understand his public actions as well as
+his political ideas and principles it is, of course,
+necessary to know at least a little of the men
+among whom he lived and from whom he sprang:
+the men who were the first of our people to
+press out beyond the limits of the thirteen old
+states; who filled Kentucky, Tennessee, Arkansas,
+and Missouri, and who for so long a time
+were the dominant class all through the West,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[15]</a></span>
+until, at last, the flood of Northeastern immigration
+completely swamped their influence
+north of the Ohio, while along the Gulf coast
+the political control slipped from their hands
+into the grasp of the great planter class.</p>
+
+<p>The wood-choppers, game-hunters, and Indian-fighters,
+who first came over the mountains,
+were only the forerunners of the more
+regular settlers who followed them; but these
+last had much the same attributes as their
+predecessors. For many years after the settlements
+were firmly rooted, the life of the
+settlers was still subject to all the perils of
+the wilderness. Above all, the constant warfare
+in which they were engaged for nearly
+thirty-five years, and which culminated in the
+battle of New Orleans, left a deep and lasting
+imprint on their character. Their incessant
+wars were waged almost wholly by the settlers
+themselves, with comparatively little help from
+the federal government, and with hardly any
+regular troops as allies. A backwoods levy,
+whether raised to meet an Indian inroad or to
+march against the disciplined armies of the
+British, was merely a force of volunteers, made
+up from among the full-grown male settlers,
+who were induced to join either from motives of
+patriotism, or from love of adventure, or because
+they felt that their homes and belongings were<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[16]</a></span>
+in danger from which they could only extricate
+them by their own prowess. Every settler thus
+became more or less of a soldier, was always
+expert with the rifle, and was taught to rely
+upon his own skill and courage for his protection.
+But the military service in which he was
+from time to time engaged was of such a lawless
+kind, and was carried on with such utter
+absence of discipline, that it did not accustom
+him in the least to habits of self-command, or
+render him inclined to brook the exercise of
+authority by an outsider; so that the Western
+people grew up with warlike traditions and
+habits of thought, accustomed to give free rein
+to their passions, and to take into their own
+hands the avenging of real or supposed wrongs,
+but without any of the love for order and for
+acting in concert with their fellows which characterize
+those who have seen service in regular
+armies. On the contrary, the chief effect of
+this long-continued and harassing Border warfare
+was to make more marked the sullen and
+almost defiant self-reliance of the pioneer, and
+to develop his peculiarly American spirit of individual
+self-sufficiency, his impatience of outside
+interference or control, to a degree not
+known elsewhere, even on this continent. It
+also gave a distinct military cast to his way of
+looking at territory which did not belong to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[17]</a></span>
+him. He stood where he was because he was a
+conqueror; he had wrested his land by force
+from its rightful Indian lords; he fully intended
+to repeat the same feat as soon as he should
+reach the Spanish lands lying to the west and
+southwest; he would have done so in the case
+of French Louisiana if it had not been that the
+latter was purchased, and was thus saved from
+being taken by force of arms. This belligerent,
+or, more properly speaking, piratical way of
+looking at neighboring territory, was very characteristic
+of the West, and was at the root of
+the doctrine of "manifest destiny."</p>
+
+<p>All the early settlers, and most of those who
+came after them, were poor, living narrow lives
+fraught with great hardship, and varying between
+toil and half-aimless roving; even when
+the conditions of their life became easier it
+was some time before the influence of their
+old existence ceased to make itself felt in their
+way of looking at things. The first pioneers
+were, it is true, soon followed by great slave-owners;
+and by degrees there grew up a clan of
+large landed proprietors and stock-raisers, akin
+to the planter caste which was so all-powerful
+along the coast; but it was never relatively
+either so large or so influential as the latter,
+and was not separated from the rest of the
+white population by anything like so wide a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[18]</a></span>
+gap as that which, in the Southern Atlantic and
+Gulf States, marked the difference between the
+rich growers of cotton, rice, and sugar, and the
+squalid "poor whites" or "crackers."</p>
+
+<p>The people of the Border States were thus
+mainly composed of small land-owners, scattered
+throughout the country; they tilled their
+small farms for themselves, were hewers of
+their own wood, and drawers of their own
+water, and for generations remained accustomed
+to and skillful in the use of the rifle. The pioneers
+of the Middle West were not dwellers in
+towns; they kept to the open country, where
+each man could shift for himself without help
+or hindrance from his neighbors, scorning the
+irksome restraints and the lack of individual
+freedom of city life. They built but few cities
+of any size; the only two really important ones
+of whose inhabitants they formed any considerable
+part, St. Louis and New Orleans, were
+both founded by the French long before our
+people came across the mountains into the Mississippi
+valley. Their life was essentially a
+country life, alike for the rich and for the bulk
+of the population. The few raw frontier towns
+and squalid, straggling villages were neither
+seats of superior culture nor yet centres for the
+distribution of educated thought, as in the
+North. Large tracts of land remained always<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[19]</a></span>
+populated by a class of backwoodsmen differing
+but little from the first comers. Such was
+the district from which grand, simple old Davy
+Crockett went to Washington as a Whig congressman;
+and perhaps there was never a
+quainter figure in our national legislature than
+that of the grim old rifleman, who shares with
+Daniel Boone the honor of standing foremost
+in the list of our mighty hunters. Crockett
+and his kind had little in common with the
+men who ruled supreme in the politics of most
+of the Southern States; and even at this day
+many of their descendants in the wooded
+mountain land are Republicans; for when the
+Middle States had lost the control of the West,
+and when those who had hitherto followed such
+leaders as Jackson, Clay, and Benton, drifted
+with the tide that set so strongly to the South,
+it was only the men of the type of dogged,
+stubborn old Crockett who dared to make head
+against it. But, indeed, one of the characteristics
+of the people with whom we are dealing
+was the slowness and suspicion with which they
+received a new idea, and the tenacity with which
+they clung to one that they had at last adopted.</p>
+
+<p>They were above all a people of strong, virile
+character, certain to make their weight
+felt either for good or for evil. They had
+many virtues which can fairly be called great,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[20]</a></span>
+and their faults were equally strongly marked.
+They were not a thrifty people, nor one given
+to long-sustained, drudging work; there were
+not then, nor are there now, to be found in this
+land such comfortable, prosperous homes and
+farms as those which dot all the country where
+dwell the men of Northeastern stock. They
+were not, as a rule, even ordinarily well educated;
+the public school formed no such important
+feature in their life as it did in the life
+of their fellow-citizens farther north. They
+had narrow, bitter prejudices and dislikes; the
+hard and dangerous lives they had led had run
+their character into a stern and almost forbidding
+mould. They valued personal prowess
+very highly, and respected no man who did not
+possess the strongest capacity for self-help, and
+who could not shift for himself in any danger.
+They felt an intense, although perhaps ignorant,
+pride in and love for their country, and looked
+upon all the lands hemming in the United
+States as territory which they or their children
+should some day inherit; for they were a race
+of masterful spirit, and accustomed to regard
+with easy tolerance any but the most flagrant
+violations of law. They prized highly such
+qualities as courage, loyalty, truth, and patriotism,
+but they were, as a whole, poor, and not
+over-scrupulous of the rights of others, nor yet<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[21]</a></span>
+with the nicest sense of money obligations; so
+that the history of their state legislation affecting
+the rights of debtor and creditor, whether
+public or private, in hard times, is not pleasant
+reading for an American who is proud of his
+country. Their passions, once roused, were intense,
+and if they really wished anything they
+worked for it with indomitable persistency.
+There was little that was soft or outwardly
+attractive in their character: it was stern, rude,
+and hard, like the lives they led; but it was the
+character of those who were every inch men,
+and who were Americans through to the very
+heart's core.</p>
+
+<p>In their private lives their lawless and arrogant
+freedom and lack of self-restraint produced
+much gross licentiousness and barbarous cruelty;
+and every little frontier community could
+tell its story of animal savagery as regards the
+home relations of certain of its members. Yet
+in spite of this they, as a whole, felt the family
+ties strongly, and in the main had quite a high
+standard of private morality. Many of them,
+at any rate, were, according to their lights,
+deeply and sincerely religious; though even
+their religion showed their strong, coarse-fibred,
+narrow natures. Episcopalianism was
+the creed of the rich slave-owner, who dwelt
+along the sea-board; but the Western settlers
+belonged to some one or other of the divisions<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[22]</a></span>
+of the great Methodist and Baptist churches.
+They were as savagely in earnest about this
+as about everything else; meekness, mildness,
+broad liberality, and gentle tolerance of difference
+in religious views were not virtues they
+appreciated. They were always ready to do
+battle for their faith, and, indeed, had to do it,
+as it was quite a common amusement for the
+wilder and more lawless members of the community
+to try to break up by force the great
+camp-meetings, which formed so conspicuous
+a feature in the social and religious life of the
+country. For even irreligion took the form of
+active rebellion against God, rather than disbelief
+in his existence.</p>
+
+<p>Physically they were, and are, especially in
+Kentucky, the finest members of our race; an
+examination of the statistics relating to the
+volunteers in the Civil War shows that the natives
+of no other state, and the men from no
+foreign country whatsoever, came up to them
+in bodily development.</p>
+
+<p>Such a people, in choosing men to represent
+them in the national councils, would naturally
+pay small heed to refined, graceful, and cultivated
+statesmanship; their allegiance would be
+given to men of abounding vitality, of rugged
+intellect, and of indomitable will. No better
+or more characteristic possessor of these attributes
+could be imagined than Thomas Benton.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[23]</a></span></p>
+
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_II" id="CHAPTER_II"></a>CHAPTER II.</h2>
+
+<h3>BENTON'S EARLY LIFE AND ENTRY INTO THE
+SENATE.</h3>
+
+
+<p>Thomas Hart Benton was born on March
+14, 1782, near Hillsborough, in Orange County,
+North Carolina,&mdash;the same state that fifteen
+years before, almost to a day, had seen the
+birth of the great political chief whose most
+prominent supporter he in after life became.
+Benton, however, came of good colonial stock;
+and his early surroundings were not characterized
+by the squalid poverty that marked Jackson's,
+though the difference in the social condition
+of the two families was of small consequence
+on the frontier, where caste was, and
+is, almost unknown, and social equality is not
+a mere figure of speech&mdash;particularly it was not
+so at that time in the Southwest, where there
+were no servants, except black slaves, and
+where even what in the North would be called
+"hired help" was almost an unknown quantity.</p>
+
+<p>Benton's father, who was a lawyer in good
+standing at the North Carolina bar, died when<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[24]</a></span>
+the boy was very young, leaving him to be
+brought up by his Virginian mother. She was
+a woman of force, and, for her time, of much
+education. She herself began the training of
+her son's mind, studying with him history and
+biography, while he also, of course, had access
+to his father's law library. The home in which
+he was brought up was, for that time and for
+that part of the country, straightlaced; his
+mother, though a Virginian, had many traits
+which belonged rather to the descendants of
+the Puritans, and possessed both their strength
+of character and their austerely religious spirit.
+Although living in a roistering age, among a
+class peculiarly given to all the coarser kinds
+of pleasure, and especially to drink and every
+form of gambling, she nevertheless preserved
+the most rigid decorum and morality in her
+own household, frowning especially upon all
+intemperance, and never permitting a pack of
+cards to be found within her doors. She was
+greatly beloved and respected by the son, whose
+mind she did so much to mould, and she lived
+to see him become one of the foremost statesmen
+of the country.</p>
+
+<p>Young Benton was always fond of reading.
+He began his studies at home, and continued
+them at a grammar school taught by a young
+New Englander of good ability, a very large proportion<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[25]</a></span>
+of the school-teachers of the country
+then coming from New England; indeed, school-teachers
+and peddlers were, on the whole, the
+chief contributions made by the Northeast to the
+<i>personnel</i> of the new Southwest. Benton then
+began a course at Chapel Hill, the University
+of North Carolina, but broke off before completing
+it, as his mother decided to move her
+family westward to the almost unbroken wilderness
+near Nashville, Tennessee, where his
+father had left them a large tract of land. But
+he was such an insatiable student and reader
+that he rapidly acquired a very extensive knowledge,
+not only of law, but of history and even of
+Latin and English literature, and thus became
+a well-read and cultivated, indeed a learned,
+man; though his frequent displays of learning
+and knowledge were sometimes marked by a
+trace of that self-complacent, amusing pedantry
+so apt to characterize a really well-educated
+man who lives in a community in which he
+believes, and with which he has thoroughly
+identified himself, but whose members are for
+the most part below the average in mental
+cultivation.</p>
+
+<p>The Bentons founded a little town, named
+after them, and in which, of course, they took
+their position as leaders and rich landed proprietors.
+It lay on the very outskirts of the Indian<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[26]</a></span>
+country; indeed, the great war trail of the
+Southern Indians led right through the settlement,
+and they at all times swarmed around it.
+The change from the still somewhat rude civilization
+of North Carolina to the wildness on
+the border was far less abrupt and startling
+then than would be the case under similar circumstances
+now, and the Bentons soon identified
+themselves completely with the life and interests
+of the people around them. They even
+abandoned the Episcopalianism of their old
+home, and became Methodists, like their neighbors.
+Young Benton himself had his hands
+full, at first, in attending to his great backwoods
+farm, tilled by slaves, and in pushing the
+growth of the settlement by building first a
+rude log school-house (he himself taught school
+at one time, while studying law), and a meeting-house
+of the same primitive construction,
+then mills, roads, bridges, and so forth. The
+work hardened and developed him, and he
+readily enough turned into a regular frontiersman
+of the better and richer sort. The neighboring
+town of Nashville was a raw, pretentious
+place, where horse-racing, cock-fighting, gambling,
+whiskey-drinking, and the various coarse
+vices which masquerade as pleasures in frontier
+towns, all throve in rank luxuriance. It was
+somewhat of a change from Benton's early<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[27]</a></span>
+training, but he took to it kindly, and though
+never a vicious or debauched man, he bore his
+full share in the savage brawls, the shooting
+and stabbing affrays, which went to make up
+one of the leading features in the excessively
+unattractive social life of the place and epoch.</p>
+
+<p>At that time dueling prevailed more or less
+throughout the United States, and in the South
+and West to an extent never before or since
+attained. On the frontier, not only did every
+man of spirit expect now and then to be called
+on to engage in a duel, but he also had to make
+up his mind to take occasional part in bloody
+street-fights. Tennessee, the state where Benton
+then had his home, was famous for the affrays
+that took place within its borders; and that
+they were common enough among the people at
+large may be gathered from the fact that they
+were of continual occurrence among judges,
+high state officials, and in the very legislature
+itself, where senators and assemblymen were
+always becoming involved in undignified rows
+and foolish squabbles, apparently without fear
+of exciting any unfavorable comment, as witness
+Davy Crockett's naive account of his early experiences
+as a backwoods member of the Tennessee
+assembly. Like Jackson, Benton killed his
+man in a duel. This was much later, in 1817,
+when he was a citizen of Missouri. His opponent<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[28]</a></span>
+was a lawyer named Lucas. They fought
+twice, on Bloody Island, near St. Louis. On
+the first occasion both were wounded; on the
+second Lucas was killed. The latter came of a
+truculent family. A recent biographer of his
+father, Judge John R. Lucas, remarks, with
+refreshing unconsciousness of the grotesque
+humor of the chronicle: "This gentleman was
+one of the most remarkable men who ever
+settled west of the Mississippi River....
+Towards the close of his life Judge Lucas
+became melancholy and dejected&mdash;the result
+of domestic affliction, for six of his sons met
+death by violence." One feels curious to know
+how the other sons died.</p>
+
+<p>But the most famous of Benton's affrays was
+that with Jackson himself, in 1813. This rose
+out of a duel of laughable rather than serious
+character, in which Benton's brother was
+worsted by General Carroll, afterwards one of
+Jackson's lieutenants at New Orleans. The
+encounter itself took place between the Benton
+brothers on one side, and on the other, Jackson,
+General Coffee, also of New Orleans fame, and
+another friend. The place was a great rambling
+Nashville inn, and the details were so intricate
+that probably not even the participants themselves
+knew exactly what had taken place,
+while all the witnesses impartially contradicted<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[29]</a></span>
+each other and themselves. At any rate, Jackson
+was shot and Benton was pitched headlong
+down-stairs, and all the other combatants were
+more or less damaged; but it ended in Jackson
+being carried off by his friends, leaving the
+Bentons masters of the field, where they
+strutted up and down and indulged in a good
+deal of loud bravado. Previous to this Benton
+and Jackson had been on the best of terms, and
+although there was naturally a temporary break
+in their friendship, yet it proved strong enough
+in the end to stand even such a violent wrench
+as that given by this preposterously senseless
+and almost fatal brawl. They not only became
+completely reconciled, but eventually even the
+closest and warmest of personal and political
+friends; for Benton was as generous and forgiving
+as he was hot-tempered, and Jackson's
+ruder nature was at any rate free from any
+small meanness or malice.</p>
+
+<p>In spite of occasional interludes of this kind,
+which must have given a rather ferocious fillip
+to his otherwise monotonous life, Benton completed
+his legal studies, was admitted to the
+bar, and began to practice as a frontier lawyer
+at Franklin. Very soon, however, he for the
+first time entered the more congenial field of
+politics, and in 1811 served a single term in
+the lower house of the Tennessee legislature.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[30]</a></span>
+Even thus early he made his mark. He had a
+bill passed introducing the circuit system into
+the state judiciary, a reform of much importance,
+especially to the poorer class of litigants;
+and he also introduced, and had enacted into a
+law, a bill providing that a slave should have
+the same right to the full benefit of a jury trial
+as would a white man suffering under the same
+accusation. This last measure is noteworthy
+as foreshadowing the position which Benton
+afterwards took in national politics, where he
+appeared as a slave-holder, it is true, but as one
+of the most enlightened and least radical of his
+class. Its passage also showed the tendency of
+Southern opinion at the time, which was undoubtedly
+in the direction of bettering the condition
+of the blacks, though the events of the
+next few years produced such a violent revulsion
+of feeling concerning the negro race that
+this current of public opinion was completely
+reversed. Benton, however, was made of sturdy
+stuff, and as he grew older his views on the
+question did not alter as did those of most of
+his colleagues.</p>
+
+<p>Shortly after he left the legislature the War
+of 1812 broke out, and its events impressed on
+Benton another of what soon became his cardinal
+principles. The war was brought on by
+the South and West, the Democrats all favoring<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[31]</a></span>
+it, while the Federalists, forming the then anti-Democratic
+party, especially in the Northeast,
+opposed it; and finally their more extreme
+members, at the famous Hartford Convention,
+passed resolutions supposed to tend towards the
+dissolution of the Union, and which brought
+upon the party the bitter condemnation of their
+antagonists. Says Benton himself: "At the
+time of its first appearance the right of secession
+was repulsed and repudiated by the Democracy
+generally.... The leading language
+in respect to it south of the Potomac was that no
+state had a right to withdraw from the Union,
+... and that any attempt to dissolve it, or to
+obstruct the action of constitutional laws, was
+treason. If since that time political parties and
+sectional localities have exchanged attitudes on
+this question, it cannot alter the question of
+right." For, having once grasped an idea and
+made it his own, Benton clung to it with unyielding
+tenacity, no matter whether it was or
+was not abandoned by the majority of those
+with whom he had been in the habit of acting.</p>
+
+<p>Thus early Benton's political character became
+moulded into the shape which it ever
+afterwards retained. He was a slave-holder,
+but as advanced as a slave-holder could be; he
+remained to a certain extent a Southerner, but
+his Southernism was of the type prevalent<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[32]</a></span>
+immediately after the Revolution, and not of
+the kind that came to the fore prior to the
+Rebellion. He was much more a Westerner in
+his feelings, and more than all else he was
+emphatically a Union man.</p>
+
+<p>Like every other hot spirit of the West&mdash;and
+the West was full of little but hot spirits&mdash;Benton
+heartily favored the War of 1812.
+He served as a colonel of volunteers under
+Jackson, but never saw actual fighting, and his
+short term of soldiership was of no further
+account than to furnish an excuse to Polk, thirty-five
+years later, for nominating him commanding
+general in the time of the Mexican
+War,&mdash;an incident which, as the nomination
+was rejected, may be regarded as merely ludicrous,
+the gross impropriety of the act safely
+defying criticism. He was of genuine use,
+however, in calling on and exciting the volunteers
+to come forward; for he was a fluent
+speaker, of fine presence, and his pompous self-sufficiency
+was rather admired than otherwise
+by the frontiersmen, while his force, energy, and
+earnestness commanded their respect. He also,
+when Jackson's reckless impetuosity got him
+into a snarl with the feeble national administration,
+whose imbecile incapacity to carry on
+the war became day by day more painfully
+evident, went to Washington, and there finally<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[33]</a></span>
+extricated his chief by dint of threatening that,
+if "justice" was not done him, Tennessee
+would, in future political contests, be found
+ranged with the administration's foes. For
+Benton already possessed political influence, and
+being, like most of his class, anti-Federalist, or
+Democratic, in sentiment, was therefore of the
+same party as the people at Washington, and
+was a man whose representations would have
+some weight with them.</p>
+
+<p>During his stay in Tennessee Benton's character
+was greatly influenced by his being
+thrown into close contact with many of the
+extraordinary men who then or afterwards
+made their mark in the strange and picturesque
+annals of the Southwest. Jackson even thus
+early loomed up as the greatest and arch-typical
+representative of his people and his section.
+The religious bent of the time was shown in
+the life of the grand, rugged old Methodist,
+Peter Cartwright, who, in the far-off backwoods,
+was a preacher and practical exponent
+of "muscular Christianity" half a century before
+the day when, under Bishop Selwyn and
+Charles Kingsley, it became a cult among the
+most highly civilized classes of England. There
+was David Crockett, rifleman and congressman,
+doomed to a tragic and heroic death in that
+remarkable conflict of which it was said at the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[34]</a></span>
+time, that "Thermopylæ had its messengers of
+death, but the Alamo had none;" and there
+was Houston, who, after a singular and romantic
+career, became the greatest of the statesmen
+and soldiers of Texas. It was these men,
+and their like, who, under the shadow of world-old
+forests and in the sunlight of the great,
+lonely plains, wrought out the destinies of a nation
+and a continent, and who, with their rude
+war-craft and state-craft, solved problems that,
+in the importance of their results, dwarf the issues
+of all European struggles since the day of
+Waterloo as completely as the Punic wars in
+their outcome threw into the shade the consequences
+of the wars waged at the same time
+between the different Greek monarchies.</p>
+
+<p>Benton, in his mental training, came much
+nearer to the statesmen of the sea-board, and
+was far better bred and better educated, than
+the rest of the men around him. But he was,
+and was felt by them to be, thoroughly one of
+their number, and the most able expounder of
+their views; and it is just because he is so completely
+the type of a great and important class,
+rather than because even of his undoubted and
+commanding ability as a statesman, that his
+life and public services will always repay study.
+His vanity and boastfulness were faults which he
+shared with almost all his people; and, after all,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[35]</a></span>
+if they overrated the consequence of their own
+deeds, the deeds, nevertheless, did possess great
+importance, and their fault was slight compared
+to that committed by some of us at the
+present day, who have gone to the opposite extreme
+and try to belittle the actions of our
+fathers. Benton was deeply imbued with the
+masterful, overbearing spirit of the West,&mdash;a
+spirit whose manifestations are not always agreeable,
+but the possession of which is certainly a
+most healthy sign of the virile strength of a
+young community. He thoroughly appreciated
+that he was helping to shape the future of a
+country, whose wonderful development is the
+most important feature in the history of the
+nineteenth century; the non-appreciation of
+which fact is in itself sufficient utterly to disqualify
+any American statesman from rising to
+the first rank.</p>
+
+<p>It was not in Tennessee, however, that Benton
+rose to political prominence, for shortly after
+the close of the war he crossed the Mississippi
+and made his permanent home in the territory
+of Missouri. Missouri was then our extreme
+western outpost, and its citizens possessed the
+characteristic western traits to an even exaggerated
+extent. The people were pushing,
+restless, and hardy; they were lawless and violent
+to a degree. In spite of the culture and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[36]</a></span>
+education of some families, society, as a whole,
+was marked by florid unconventionality and
+rawness. The general and widespread intemperance
+of the judges and high officials of state
+was even more marked than their proclivities
+for brawling. The lawyers, as usual, furnished
+the bulk of the politicians; success at the bar
+depended less upon learning than upon "push"
+and audacity. The fatal feuds between individuals
+and families were as frequent and as
+bloody as among Highland clans a century before.
+The following quotations are taken at
+random from a work on the Bench and Bar of
+Missouri, by an ex-judge of its supreme court:
+"A man by the name of Hiram K. Turk, and
+four sons, settled in 1839 near Warsaw, and a
+personal difficulty occurred between them and
+a family of the name of Jones, resulting in
+the death of one or two. The people began to
+take sides with one or the other, and finally
+a general outbreak took place, in which many
+were killed, resulting in a general reign of
+terror and of violence beyond the power of the
+law to subdue." The social annals of this
+pleasant town of Warsaw could not normally
+have been dull; in 1844, for instance, they were
+enlivened by Judge Cherry and Senator Major
+fighting to the death on one of its principal
+streets, the latter being slain. The judges<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[37]</a></span>
+themselves were by no means bigoted in their
+support of law and order. "In those days it
+was common for people to settle their quarrels
+during court week.... Judge Allen took
+great delight in these exhibitions, and would at
+any time adjourn his court to witness one....
+He (Allen) always traveled with a holster of
+large pistols in front of his saddle, and a knife
+with a blade at least a foot long." Hannibal
+Chollop was no mere creature of fancy; on the
+contrary, his name was legion, and he flourished
+rankly in every town throughout the Mississippi
+valley. But, after all, this ruffianism was really
+not a whit worse in its effects on the national
+character than was the case with certain of the
+"universal peace" and "non-resistance" developments
+in the Northeastern States; in fact,
+it was more healthy. A class of professional
+non-combatants is as hurtful to the real, healthy
+growth of a nation as is a class of fire-eaters;
+for a weakness or folly is nationally as bad as a
+vice, or worse; and, in the long run, a Quaker
+may be quite as undesirable a citizen as is a
+duelist. No man who is not willing to bear
+arms and to fight for his rights can give a good
+reason why he should be entitled to the privilege
+of living in a free community. The decline
+of the militant spirit in the Northeast
+during the first half of this century was much<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[38]</a></span>
+to be regretted. To it is due, more than to any
+other cause, the undoubted average individual
+inferiority of the Northern compared to the
+Southern troops; at any rate, at the beginning
+of the great war of the Rebellion. The Southerners,
+by their whole mode of living, their
+habits, and their love of out-door sports, kept
+up their warlike spirit; while in the North the
+so-called upper classes developed along the lines
+of a wealthy and timid bourgeoisie type, measuring
+everything by a mercantile standard (a
+peculiarly debasing one if taken purely by
+itself), and submitting to be ruled in local
+affairs by low foreign mobs, and in national
+matters by their arrogant Southern kinsmen.
+The militant spirit of these last certainly stood
+them in good stead in the Civil War. The
+world has never seen better soldiers than those
+who followed Lee; and their leader will undoubtedly
+rank as without any exception the
+very greatest of all the great captains that the
+English-speaking peoples have brought forth&mdash;and
+this, although the last and chief of his
+antagonists may himself claim to stand as the
+full equal of Marlborough and Wellington.</p>
+
+<p>The other Western States still kept touch on
+the old colonial communities of the sea-coast,
+having a second or alternative outlet through
+Louisiana, newly acquired by the United States,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[39]</a></span>
+it is true, but which was nevertheless an old settled
+land. Missouri, however, had lost all connection
+with the sea-coast, and though, through
+her great river towns, swarming with raftsmen
+and flat-boatmen, she drove her main and most
+thriving trade with the other Mississippi cities,
+yet her restless and adventure-loving citizens
+were already seeking other outlets for their activity,
+and were establishing trade relations with
+the Mexicans; being thus the earliest among
+our people to come into active contact with the
+Hispano-Indian race from whom we afterwards
+wrested so large a part of their inheritance.
+Missouri was thrust out beyond the Mississippi
+into the vast plains-country of the Far West,
+and except on the river-front was completely
+isolated, being flanked on every side by great
+stretches of level wilderness, inhabited by roaming
+tribes of warlike Indians. Thus for the
+first time the borderers began to number in
+their ranks plainsmen as well as backwoodsmen.
+In such a community there were sure to
+be numbers of men anxious to take part in any
+enterprise that united the chance of great pecuniary
+gain with the certainty of even greater
+personal risk, and both these conditions were
+fulfilled in the trading expeditions pushed out
+from Missouri across the trackless wastes lying
+between it and the fringe of Mexican settlements<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[40]</a></span>
+on the Rio del Norte. The route followed
+by these caravans, which brought back
+furs and precious metals, soon became famous
+under the name of the Santa Fé trail; and
+the story of the perils, hardships, and gains of
+the adventurous traders who followed it would
+make one of the most striking chapters of
+American history.</p>
+
+<p>Among such people Benton's views and habits
+of thought became more markedly Western and
+ultra-American than ever, especially in regard
+to our encroachments upon the territory of
+neighboring powers. The general feeling in
+the West upon this last subject afterwards
+crystallized into what became known as the
+"Manifest Destiny" idea, which, reduced to its
+simplest terms, was: that it was our manifest
+destiny to swallow up the land of all adjoining
+nations who were too weak to withstand us; a
+theory that forthwith obtained immense popularity
+among all statesmen of easy international
+morality. It cannot be too often repeated
+that no one can understand even the
+domestic, and more especially the foreign, policy
+of Benton and his school without first understanding
+the surroundings amidst which they
+had been brought up and the people whose
+chosen representatives they were. Recent historians,
+for instance, always speak as if our<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[41]</a></span>
+grasping after territory in the Southwest was
+due solely to the desire of the Southerners to
+acquire lands out of which to carve new slave-holding
+states, and as if it was merely a move
+in the interests of the slave-power. This is
+true enough so far as the motives of Calhoun,
+Tyler, and the other public leaders of the Gulf
+and southern sea-board states were concerned.
+But the hearty Western support given to the
+movement was due to entirely different causes,
+the chief among them being the fact that the
+Westerners honestly believed themselves to be
+indeed created the heirs of the earth, or at least
+of so much of it as was known by the name of
+North America, and were prepared to struggle
+stoutly for the immediate possession of their
+heritage.</p>
+
+<p>One of Benton's earliest public utterances
+was in regard to a matter which precisely
+illustrates this feeling. It was while Missouri
+was still a territory, and when Benton, then a
+prominent member of the St. Louis bar, had
+by his force, capacity, and power as a public
+speaker already become well known among his
+future constituents. The treaty with Spain, by
+which we secured Florida, was then before the
+Senate, which body had to consider it several
+times, owing to the dull irresolution and sloth
+of the Spanish government in ratifying it. The<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[42]</a></span>
+bounds it gave us were far too narrow to suit
+the more fiery Western spirits, and these cheered
+Benton to the echo when he attacked it in public
+with fierce vehemence. "The magnificent
+valley of the Mississippi is ours, with all its
+fountains, springs, and floods; and woe to the
+statesman who shall undertake to surrender one
+drop of its water, one inch of its soil to any foreign
+power." So he said, his words ringing
+with the boastful confidence so well liked by
+the masterful men of the West, strong in their
+youth, and proudly conscious of their strength.
+The treaty was ratified in the Senate, nevertheless,
+all the old Southern States favoring it,
+and the only votes at any stage recorded against
+it being of four Western senators, coming respectively
+from Ohio, Kentucky, Tennessee,
+and Louisiana. So that in 1818, at any rate, the
+desire for territorial aggrandizement at the expense
+of Maine or Mexico was common to the
+West as a whole, both to the free and the slave
+states, and was not exclusively favored by the
+Southerners. The only effect of Benton's speech
+was to give rise to the idea that he was hostile
+to the Southern and Democratic administration
+at Washington, and against this feeling he had
+to contend in the course of his successful candidacy
+for the United States senatorship the
+following year, when Missouri was claiming admittance
+to the Union.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[43]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>It was in reference to this matter of admitting
+Missouri that the slavery question for the
+first time made its appearance in national
+politics, where it threw everything into confusion
+and for the moment overshadowed all else;
+though it vanished almost as quickly as it had
+appeared, and did not again come to the front
+for several years. The Northerners, as a whole,
+desiring to "restrict" the growth of slavery
+and the slave-power, demanded that Missouri,
+before being admitted as a state, should
+abolish slavery within her boundaries. The
+South was equally determined that she should
+be admitted as a slave state; and for the first
+time the politicians of the country divided on
+geographical rather than on party lines, though
+the division proved but temporary, and was of
+but little interest except as foreshadowing what
+was to come a score of years later. Even within
+the territory itself the same contest was carried
+on with the violence bred by political conflicts
+in frontier states, there being a very respectable
+"restriction" party, which favored abolition.
+Benton was himself a slave-holder, and
+as the question was in no way one between the
+East and the West, or between the Union as a
+whole and any part of it, he naturally gave full
+swing to his Southern feelings, and entered with
+tremendous vigor into the contest on the anti-restriction<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[44]</a></span>
+side. So successful were his efforts,
+and so great was the majority of the Missourians
+who sympathized with him, that the
+restrictionists were completely routed and succeeded
+in electing but one delegate to the constitutional
+convention. In Congress the matter
+was finally settled by the passage of the famous
+Missouri Compromise bill, a measure Southern
+in its origin, but approved at the time by many
+if not most Northerners, and disapproved by
+not a few Southerners. Benton heartily believed
+in it, announcing somewhat vaguely that he
+was "equally opposed to slavery agitation and
+to slavery extension." By its terms Missouri
+was admitted as a slave state, while slavery was
+abolished in all the rest of the old province of
+Louisiana lying north and west of it and north of
+the parallel of 36° 30'. Owing to an objectionable
+clause in its Constitution, the admission
+was not fully completed until 1821, and then
+only through the instrumentality of Henry
+Clay. But Benton took his seat immediately,
+and entered on his thirty years' of service in
+the United States Senate. His appearance in
+national politics was thus coincident with the
+appearance of the question which, it is true,
+almost immediately sank out of sight for a
+period of fifteen years, but which then reappeared
+to stay for good and to become of progressively<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[45]</a></span>
+absorbing importance, until, combining
+itself with the still greater question of national
+unity, it dwarfed all other issues, cleft
+the West as well as the East asunder, and, as
+one of its minor results, brought about the
+political downfall of Benton himself and of his
+whole school in what were called the Border
+States.</p>
+
+<p>Before entering the Senate, Benton did something
+which well illustrates his peculiar uprightness,
+and the care which he took to keep his public
+acts free from the least suspicion of improper
+influence. When he was at the bar in St. Louis,
+real estate litigation was much the most important
+branch of legal business. The condition of
+Missouri land-titles was very mixed, since many
+of them were based upon the thousands of "concessions"
+of land made by the old French and
+Spanish governments, which had been ratified
+by Congress, but subject to certain conditions
+which the Creole inhabitants, being ignorant
+and lawless, had generally failed to fulfill. By
+an act of Congress these inchoate claims were to
+be brought before the United States recorder of
+land titles; and the Missouri bar were divided
+as to what action should be taken on them, the
+majority insisting that they should be held void,
+while Benton headed the opposite party, which
+was averse to forfeiting property on technical<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[46]</a></span>
+grounds, and advocated the confirmation of
+every honest claim. Further and important
+legislation was needed to provide for these
+claims. Benton, being much the most influential
+member of the bar who had advocated the
+confirmation of the claims, and being so able,
+honest, and energetic, was the favorite counsel
+of the claimants, and had hundreds of their
+titles under his professional charge. Of course
+in such cases the compensation of the lawyer
+depended solely upon his success; and success
+to Benton would have meant wealth. Nevertheless,
+and though his action was greatly to
+his own pecuniary hurt, the first thing he did
+when elected senator was to convene his clients,
+and tell them that henceforth he could have
+nothing more to do, as their attorney, with the
+prosecution of their claims, giving as his reason
+that their success largely depended upon the action
+of Congress, of which he was now himself
+a member, so that he was bound to consult, not
+any private interest, but the good of the community
+as a whole. He even refused to designate
+his successor in the causes, saying that he
+was determined not only to be quite unbiased
+in acting upon the subject of these claims as
+senator, but not to have, nor to be suspected
+of having, any personal interest in the fate of
+any of them. Many a modern statesman might
+most profitably copy his sensitiveness.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[47]</a></span></p>
+
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_III" id="CHAPTER_III"></a>CHAPTER III.</h2>
+
+<h3>EARLY YEARS IN THE SENATE.</h3>
+
+
+<p>When Benton took his seat in the United
+States Senate, Monroe, the last president of
+the great house of Virginia, was about beginning
+his second term. He was a courteous, high-bred
+gentleman, of no especial ability, but well fitted
+to act as presidential figure-head during the
+politically quiet years of that era of good feeling
+which lasted from 1816 till 1824. The
+Federalist party, after its conduct during the
+war, had vanished into well-deserved obscurity,
+and though influences of various sorts were
+working most powerfully to split the dominant
+and all-embracing Democracy into factional
+fragments, these movements had not yet come
+to a head.</p>
+
+<p>The slavery question, it cannot be too often
+said, was as yet of little or no political consequence.
+The violent excitement over the admission
+of Missouri had subsided as quickly
+as it had arisen; and though the Compromise
+bill was of immense importance in itself, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[48]</a></span>
+still more as giving a hint of what was to come,
+it must be remembered that its effect upon
+general politics, during the years immediately
+succeeding its passage, was slight. Later on, the
+slavery question became of such paramount consequence,
+and so completely identified with the
+movement for the dissolution of the Union, that
+it seems impossible for even the best of recent
+historians of American politics to understand
+that such was not the case at this time. One
+writer of note even goes so far as to state that
+"From the night of March 2, 1820, party history
+is made up without interruption or break
+of the development of geographical [the context
+shows this to mean Northern and Southern]
+parties." There is very little ground for such
+a sweeping assertion until a considerable time
+after the date indicated; indeed, it was more
+than ten years later before any symptom of the
+development spoken of became at all marked.
+Until then, parties divided even less on geographical
+lines than had been the case earlier,
+during the last years of the existence of the
+Federalists; and what little division there was
+had no reference to slavery. Nor was it till
+nearly a score of years after the passage of the
+Missouri Compromise bill that the separatist
+spirit began to identify itself for good with the
+idea of the maintenance of slavery. Previously<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[49]</a></span>
+to that there had been outbursts of separatist
+feeling in different states, but always due to entirely
+different causes. Georgia flared up in hot
+defiance of the federal government, when the
+latter rubbed against her on the question of removing
+the Cherokees from within her borders.
+But her having negro slaves did not affect her
+feelings in the least, and her attitude was just
+such as any Western state with Indians on its
+frontier is now apt to assume so far as it dares,&mdash;such
+an attitude as Arizona, for example,
+would at this moment take in reference to the
+Apaches, if she were able. Slavery was doubtless
+remotely one of the irritating causes that
+combined to work South Carolina up to a fever
+heat of insanity over the nullification excitement.
+But in its immediate origin nullification
+arose from the outcry against the protective
+tariff, and it is almost as unfair to ascribe it
+in any way to the influence of slavery as it
+would be to assign a similar cause for the Virginia
+and Kentucky resolutions of 1798, or to
+say that the absence of slavery was the reason
+for the abortively disloyal agitation in New
+England, which culminated in the Hartford Convention.
+The separatist feeling is ingrained in
+the fibre of our race, and though in itself a
+most dangerous failing and weakness, is yet
+merely a perversion and distortion of the defiant<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[50]</a></span>
+and self-reliant independence of spirit which is
+one of the chief of the race virtues; and slavery
+was partly the cause and partly merely the
+occasion of the abnormal growth of the separatist
+movement in the South. Nor was the tariff
+question so intimately associated with that of
+slavery as has been commonly asserted. This
+might be easily guessed from the fact that the
+originator and chief advocate of a high tariff
+himself came from a slave state, and drew many
+of his warmest supporters from among the slave-holding
+sugar-planters. Except in the futile
+discussion over the proposed Panama Congress it
+was not till Benton's third senatorial term that
+slavery became of really great weight in politics.</p>
+
+<p>One of the first subjects that attracted Benton's
+attention in the Senate was the Oregon
+question, and on this he showed himself at once
+in his true character as a Western man, proud
+alike of every part of his country, and as desirous
+of seeing the West extended in a northerly
+as in a southerly direction. Himself a slave-holder,
+from a slave state, he was one of the
+earliest and most vehement advocates of the extension
+of our free territory northwards along
+the Pacific coast. All the country stretching
+north and south of the Oregon River was then
+held by the United States in joint possession
+with Great Britain. But the whole region was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[51]</a></span>
+still entirely unsettled, and as a matter of fact
+our British rivals were the only parties in actual
+occupation. The title to the territory was
+doubtful, as must always be the case when it
+rests upon the inaccurate maps of forgotten explorers,
+or upon the chance landings of stray
+sailors and traders, especially if the land in
+dispute is unoccupied and of vast but uncertain
+extent, of little present value, and far distant
+from the powers claiming it. The real
+truth is that such titles are of very little practical
+value, and are rightly enough disregarded
+by any nations strong enough to do so. Benton's
+intense Americanism, and his pride and
+confidence in his country and in her unlimited
+capacity for growth of every sort, gifted him
+with the power to look much farther into the
+future, as regarded the expansion of the United
+States, than did his colleagues; and moreover
+caused him to consider the question from a
+much more far-seeing and statesmanlike stand-point.
+The land belonged to no man, and yet
+was sure to become very valuable; our title to it
+was not very good, but was probably better than
+that of any one else. Sooner or later it would
+be filled with the overflow of our population,
+and would border on our dominion, and on
+our dominion alone. It was therefore just, and
+moreover in the highest degree desirable, that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[52]</a></span>
+it should be made a part of that dominion at
+the earliest possible moment. Benton introduced
+a bill to enable the president to terminate
+the arrangement with Great Britain and make
+a definite settlement in our favor; and though
+the Senate refused to pass it, yet he had the
+satisfaction of bringing the subject prominently
+before the people, and, moreover, of outlining
+the way in which it would have to be and was
+finally settled. In one of his speeches on the
+matter he said, using rather highflown language,
+(for he was unfortunately deficient in sense of
+humor): "Upon the people of Eastern Asia the
+establishment of a civilized power on the opposite
+coast of America could not fail to produce
+great and wonderful benefits. Science, liberal
+principles in government, and the true religion
+might cast their lights across the intervening
+sea. The valley of the Columbia might become
+the granary of China and Japan, and an outlet
+to their imprisoned and exuberant population."
+Could he have foreseen how, in the future, the
+Americans of the valley of the Columbia would
+greet the "imprisoned and exuberant population"
+of China, he would probably have been
+more doubtful as to the willingness of the latter
+empire to accept our standard of the true religion
+and liberal principles of government. In
+the course of the same speech he for the first<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[53]</a></span>
+time, and by what was then considered a bold
+flight of imagination, suggested the possibility
+of sending foreign ministers to the Oriental
+nations, to China, Japan, and Persia, "and even
+to the Grand Turk."</p>
+
+<p>Better success attended a bill he introduced
+to establish a trading-road from Missouri through
+the Indian country to New Mexico, which, after
+much debate, passed both houses and was signed
+by President Monroe. The road thus marked
+out and established became, and remained for
+many years, a great thoroughfare, and among
+the chief of the channels through which our foreign
+commerce flowed. Until Benton secured
+the enactment of this law, so important to the
+interests and development of the West, the
+overland trade with Mexico had been carried
+on by individual effort and at the cost of incalculable
+hazard, hardship, and risk of life. Mexico,
+with its gold and silver mines, its strange
+physical features, its population utterly foreign
+to us in race, religion, speech, and ways of life,
+and especially because of the glamour of mystery
+which surrounded it and partly shrouded
+it from sight, always dazzled and strongly attracted
+the minds of the Southwesterners, occupying
+much the same place in their thoughts
+that the Spanish Main did in the imagination of
+England during the reign of Elizabeth. The<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[54]</a></span>
+young men of the Mississippi valley looked upon
+an expedition with one of the bands of armed
+traders, who wound their way across Indian-haunted
+wastes, through deep canyons and over
+lofty mountain passes, to Santa Fé, Chihuahua,
+and Sonora, with the same feelings of eager excitement
+and longing that were doubtless felt by
+some of their forefathers more than two centuries
+previously in regard to the cruises of Drake
+and Hawkins. The long wagon trains or pack
+trains of the traders carried with them all kinds
+of goods, but especially cotton, and brought back
+gold and silver bullion, bales of furs and droves
+of mules; and, moreover, they brought back tales
+of lawless adventure, of great gains and losses,
+of fights against Indians and Mexicans, and of
+triumphs and privations, which still further inflamed
+the minds of the Western men. Where
+they had already gone as traders, who could on
+occasion fight, they all hoped on some future
+day to go as warriors, who would acquire gain
+by their conquests. These hopes were openly
+expressed, and with very little more idea of
+there being any right or wrong in the matter
+than so many Norse Vikings might have felt.
+The Southwesterners are credited with altogether
+too complex motives when it is supposed
+that they were actuated in regard to the conquest
+of northern Mexico by a desire to provide for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[55]</a></span>
+additional slave states to offset the growth of
+the North; their emotions in regard to their
+neighbor's land were in the main perfectly simple
+and purely piratical. That the Northeast
+did not share in the greed for new territory
+felt by the other sections of the country was
+due partly to the decline in its militant spirit,
+(a decline on many accounts sincerely to be
+regretted,) and partly to its geographical situation,
+since it adjoined Canada, an unattractive
+and already well-settled country, jealously
+guarded by the might of Great Britain.</p>
+
+<p>Another question, on which Benton showed
+himself to be thoroughly a representative of
+Western sentiment, was the removal of the
+Indian tribes. Here he took a most active and
+prominent part in reporting and favoring the
+bills, and in advocating the treaties, by which
+the Indian tribes of the South and West were
+forced or induced, (for the latter word was very
+frequently used as a euphemistic synonym of
+the former,) to abandon great tracts of territory
+to the whites and to move farther away from
+the boundaries of their ever-encroaching civilization.
+Nor was his action wholly limited to
+the Senate, for it was at his instance that
+General Clark, at St. Louis, concluded the
+treaties with the Kansas and Osage tribes, by
+which the latter surrendered to the United<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[56]</a></span>
+States all the vast territory which they nominally
+owned west of Missouri and Arkansas,
+except small reserves for themselves. Benton,
+as was to be expected, took the frontier view
+of the Indian question, which, by the way,
+though often wrong, is much more apt to be
+right than is the so-called humanitarian or
+Eastern view. But, so far as was compatible
+with having the Indians removed, he always
+endeavored to have them kindly and humanely
+treated. There was, of course, much injustice
+and wrong inevitably attendant upon the Indian
+policy advocated by him, and by the rest
+of the Southern and Western statesmen; but
+it is difficult to see what other course could
+have been pursued with most of the tribes. In
+the Western States there were then sixty millions
+of acres of the best land, owned in great
+tracts by barbarous or half-barbarous Indians,
+who were always troublesome and often dangerous
+neighbors, and who did not come in any
+way under the laws of the states in which they
+lived. The states thus encumbered would evidently
+never have been satisfied until all their
+soil was under their own jurisdiction and open
+to settlement. The Cherokees had advanced
+far on the road toward civilization, and it was
+undoubtedly a cruel grief and wrong to take
+them away from their homes; but the only alternative<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[57]</a></span>
+would have been to deprive them of
+much of their land, and to provide for their
+gradually becoming citizens of the states in
+which they were. For a movement of this sort
+the times were not then, and, unfortunately,
+are not yet ripe.</p>
+
+<p>Much maudlin nonsense has been written
+about the governmental treatment of the Indians,
+especially as regards taking their land.
+For the simple truth is that they had no possible
+title to most of the lands we took, not even
+that of occupancy, and at the most were in
+possession merely by virtue of having butchered
+the previous inhabitants. For many of
+its actions towards them the government does
+indeed deserve the severest criticism; but it
+has erred quite as often on the side of too much
+leniency as on the side of too much severity.
+From the very nature of things, it was wholly
+impossible that there should not be much mutual
+wrong-doing and injury in the intercourse
+between the Indians and ourselves. It was
+equally out of the question to let them remain
+as they were, and to bring the bulk of their
+number up to our standard of civilization with
+sufficient speed to enable them to accommodate
+themselves to the changed condition of their
+surroundings. The policy towards them advocated
+by Benton, which was much the same as,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[58]</a></span>
+although more humane than, that followed by
+most other Western men who have had practically
+to face the problem, worked harshly in
+many instances, and was the cause of a certain
+amount of temporary suffering. But it was
+infinitely better for the nation, as a whole, and,
+in the end, was really more just and merciful,
+than it would have been to attempt following
+out any of the visionary schemes which the
+more impracticable Indian enthusiasts are fond
+of recommending.</p>
+
+<p>It was during Monroe's last term that Henry
+Clay brought in the first protective tariff bill,
+as distinguished from tariff bills to raise revenue
+with protection as an incident only. It was
+passed by a curiously mixed vote, which hardly
+indicated any one's future position on the tariff
+excepting that of Clay himself; Massachusetts,
+under the lead of Webster, joining hands with
+the Southern sea-coast states to oppose it, while
+Tennessee and New York split, and Missouri
+and Kentucky, together with most of the North,
+favored it. Benton voted for it, but on the
+great question of internal improvements he
+stood out clearly for the views that he ever
+afterwards held. This was first brought up by
+the veto, on constitutional grounds, of the
+Cumberland Road bill, which had previously
+passed both houses with singular unanimity,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[59]</a></span>
+Benton's vote being one of the very few recorded
+against it. In regard to all such matters
+Benton was strongly in favor of a strict construction
+of the Constitution and of guarding
+the rights of the states, in spite of his devoted
+attachment to the Union. While voting against
+this bill, and denying the power or the right of
+the federal government to take charge of improvements
+which would benefit one state only,
+Benton was nevertheless careful to reserve to
+himself the right to support measures for improving
+national rivers or harbors yielding revenues.
+The trouble is, that however much the
+two classes of cases may differ in point of expediency,
+they overlap so completely that it
+is wholly impossible to draw a hard and fast
+line between them, and the question of constitutionality,
+if waived in the one instance, can
+scarcely with propriety be raised in the other.</p>
+
+<p>With the close of Monroe's second term the
+"era of good feeling" came to an end, and the
+great Democratic-Republican party split up into
+several fragments, which gradually crystallized
+round two centres. But in 1824 this process
+was still incomplete, and the presidential election
+of that year was a simple scramble between
+four different candidates,&mdash;Jackson,
+Adams, Clay, and Crawford. Jackson had the
+greatest number of votes, but as no one had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[60]</a></span>
+a majority, the election was thrown into the
+House of Representatives, where the Clay men,
+inasmuch as their candidate was out of the race,
+went over to Adams and elected him. Benton
+at the time, and afterwards in his "Thirty
+Years' View," inveighed against this choice as
+being a violation of what he called the "principle
+demos krateo"&mdash;a barbarous phrase for
+which he had a great fondness, and which he
+used and misused on every possible occasion,
+whether in speaking or writing. He insisted
+that, as Jackson had secured the majority of
+the electoral vote, it was the duty of the House
+of Representatives to ratify promptly this
+"choice of the people." The Constitution expressly
+provided that this need not be done.
+So Benton, who on questions of state rights
+and internal improvements was so pronounced
+a stickler for a strict construction of the Constitution,
+here coolly assumed the absurd position
+that the Constitution was wrong on this
+particular point, and should be disregarded, on
+the ground that there was a struggle "between
+the theory of the Constitution and the democratic
+principle." His proposition was ridiculous.
+The "democratic principle" had nothing
+more to do with the matter than had the law
+of gravitation. Either the Constitution was or
+it was not to be accepted as a serious document,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[61]</a></span>
+that meant something; in the former case the
+election of Adams was proper in every aspect,
+in the latter it was unnecessary to have held
+any election at all.</p>
+
+<p>At this period every one was floundering
+about in efforts to establish political relations,
+Benton not less than others; for he had begun
+the canvass as a supporter of Clay, and had
+then gone over to Crawford. But at the end
+he had become a Jacksonian Democrat, and
+during the rest of his political career he figured
+as the most prominent representative of the
+Jacksonian Democracy in the Senate. Van
+Buren himself, afterwards Jackson's prime favorite
+and political heir, was a Crawford man
+during this campaign.</p>
+
+<p>Adams, after his election, which was owing
+to Clay's support, gave Clay the position of
+secretary of state in his cabinet. The affair
+unquestionably had an unfortunate look, and
+the Jacksonians, especially Jackson, at once
+raised a great hue and cry that there had been
+a corrupt bargain. Benton, much to his credit,
+refused to join in the outcry, stating that he
+had good and sufficient reasons&mdash;which he gave&mdash;to
+be sure of its falsity; a position which
+brought him into temporary disfavor with many
+of his party associates, and which a man who
+had Benton's ambition and bitter partisanship,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[62]</a></span>
+without having his sturdy pluck, would have
+hesitated to take. The assault was directed
+with especial bitterness against Clay, whom
+Jackson ever afterwards included in the very
+large list of individuals whom he hated with
+the most rancorous and unreasoning virulence.
+Randolph of Roanoke, the privileged eccentric
+of the Senate, in one of those long harangues
+in which he touched upon everybody and everything,
+except possibly the point at issue, made
+a rabid onslaught upon the Clay-Adams coalition
+as an alliance of "the blackleg and the
+Puritan." Clay, who was susceptible enough
+to the charge of loose living, but who was a
+man of rigid honor and rather fond than otherwise
+of fighting, promptly challenged him, and
+a harmless interchange of shots took place.
+Benton was on the field as the friend of both
+parties, and his account of the affair is very
+amusing in its description of the solemn, hair-splitting
+punctilio with which it is evident that
+both Randolph and many of his contemporaries
+regarded points of dueling honor, which to us
+seem either absurd, trivial, or wholly incomprehensible.</p>
+
+<p>Two tolerably well-defined parties now
+emerged from the chaos of contending politicians;
+one was the party of the administration,
+whose members called themselves National Republicans,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[63]</a></span>
+and later on Whigs; the other was
+the Jacksonian Democracy. Adams's inaugural
+address and first message outlined the Whig
+policy as favoring a protective tariff, internal
+improvements, and a free construction of the
+Constitution generally. The Jacksonians accordingly
+took the opposite side on all these
+points, partly from principle and partly from
+perversity. In the Senate they assailed with
+turgid eloquence every administration measure,
+whether it was good or bad, very much of their
+opposition being purely factious in character.
+There has never been a time when there was
+more rabid, objectless, and unscrupulous display
+of partisanship. Benton, little to his
+credit, was a leader in these purposeless conflicts.
+The most furious of them took place
+over the proposed Panama mission. This was
+a scheme that originated in the fertile brain of
+Henry Clay, whose Americanism was of a type
+quite as pronounced as Benton's, and who was
+always inclined to drag us into a position of
+hostility to European powers. The Spanish-American
+States, having succeeded in winning
+their independence from Spain, were desirous of
+establishing some principle of concert in action
+among the American republics as a whole, and
+for this purpose proposed to hold an international
+congress at Panama. Clay's fondness<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[64]</a></span>
+for a spirited and spectacular foreign policy
+made him grasp eagerly at the chance of transforming
+the United States into the head of an
+American league of free republics, which would
+be a kind of cis-Atlantic offset to the Holy Alliance
+of European despotisms. Adams took
+up the idea, nominated ministers to the Panama
+Congress, and gave his reasons for his course in
+a special message to the Senate. The administration
+men drew the most rosy and impossible
+pictures of the incalculable benefits which would
+be derived from the proposed congress; and the
+Jacksonians attacked it with an exaggerated
+denunciation that was even less justified by the
+facts.</p>
+
+<p>Adams's message was properly open to attack
+on one or two points; notably in reference
+to its proposals that we should endeavor to get
+the Spanish-American States to introduce religious
+tolerance within their borders. It was
+certainly an unhappy suggestion that we should
+endeavor to remove the mote of religious intolerance
+from our brother's eye while indignantly
+resenting the least allusion to the beam
+of slavery in our own. It was on this very
+point of slavery that the real opposition hinged.
+The Spanish States had emancipated their comparatively
+small negro populations, and, as is
+usually the case with Latin nations, did not<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[65]</a></span>
+have a very strong caste feeling against the
+blacks, some of whom accordingly had risen to
+high civic and military rank; and they also
+proposed to admit to their congress the negro
+republic of Hayti. Certain of the slave-holders
+of the South fiercely objected to any such association;
+and on this occasion Benton for once
+led and voiced the ultra-Southern feeling on the
+subject, announcing in his speech that diplomatic
+intercourse with Hayti should not even
+be discussed in the senate chamber, and that
+we could have no association with republics
+who had "black generals in their armies and
+mulatto senators in their congresses." But this
+feeling on the part of the slave-holders against
+the measure was largely, although not wholly,
+spurious; and really had less to do with the attitude
+of the Jacksonian Democrats than had
+a mere factious opposition to Adams and Clay.
+This was shown by the vote on the confirmation
+of the ministers, when the senators divided on
+party and not on sectional lines. The nominations
+were confirmed, but not till after such a
+length of time that the ministers were unable to
+reach Panama until after the congress had adjourned.</p>
+
+<p>The Oregon question again came up during
+Adams's term, the administration favoring the
+renewal of the joint occupation convention, by<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[66]</a></span>
+which we held the country in common with
+Great Britain. There was not much public
+feeling in the matter; in the East there was
+none whatever. But Benton, when he opposed
+the renewal, and claimed the whole territory as
+ours, gave expression to the desires of all the
+Westerners who thought over the subject at
+all. He was followed by only half a dozen
+senators, all but one from the West, and from
+both sides of the Ohio&mdash;Illinois, Kentucky,
+Tennessee, Mississippi; the Northwest and
+Southwest as usual acting together.</p>
+
+<p>The vote on the protective tariff law of 1828
+furnished another illustration of the solidarity
+of the West. New England had abandoned
+her free trade position since 1824, and the
+North went strongly for the new tariff; the
+Southern sea-coast states, except Louisiana, opposed
+it bitterly; and the bill was carried by the
+support of the Western States, both the free
+and the slave. This tariff bill was the first of
+the immediate irritating causes which induced
+South Carolina to go into the nullification movement.
+Benton's attitude on the measure was
+that of a good many other men who, in their
+public capacities, are obliged to appear as protectionists,
+but who lack his frankness in stating
+their reasons. He utterly disbelieved in
+and was opposed to the principle of the bill, but<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[67]</a></span>
+as it had bid for and secured the interest of
+Missouri by a heavy duty on lead, he felt himself
+forced to support it; and so he announced
+his position. He simply went with his state,
+precisely as did Webster, the latter, in following
+Massachusetts' change of front and supporting
+the tariff of 1828, turning a full and
+complete somersault. Neither the one nor the
+other was to blame. Free traders are apt to
+look at the tariff from a sentimental stand-point;
+but it is in reality purely a business matter,
+and should be decided solely on grounds of expediency.
+Political economists have pretty
+generally agreed that protection is vicious in
+theory and harmful in practice; but if the
+majority of the people in interest wish it, and
+it affects only themselves, there is no earthly
+reason why they should not be allowed to try
+the experiment to their hearts' content. The
+trouble is that it rarely does affect only themselves;
+and in 1828 the evil was peculiarly
+aggravated on account of the unequal way in
+which the proposed law would affect different
+sections. It purported to benefit the rest of
+the country, but it undoubtedly worked real
+injury to the planter states, and there is small
+ground for wonder that the irritation over it in
+the region so affected should have been intense.</p>
+
+<p>During Adams's term Benton began his fight<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[68]</a></span>
+for disposing of the public lands to actual
+settlers at a small cost. It was a move of
+enormous importance to the whole West; and
+Benton's long and sturdy contest for it, and for
+the right of preëmption, entitle him to the
+greatest credit. He never gave up the struggle,
+although repulsed again and again, and at the
+best only partially successful; for he had to encounter
+much opposition, especially from the
+short-sighted selfishness of many of the Northeasterners,
+who wished to consider the public
+lands purely as sources of revenue. He utterly
+opposed the then existing system of selling land
+to the highest bidder&mdash;a most hurtful practice;
+and objected to the establishment of an arbitrary
+minimum price, which practically kept all
+land below a certain value out of the market
+altogether. He succeeded in establishing the
+preëmption system, and had the system of renting
+public mines, etc., abolished; and he struggled
+for the principle of giving land outright to
+settlers in certain cases. As a whole, his theory
+of a liberal system of land distribution was undoubtedly
+the correct one, and he deserves the
+greatest credit for having pushed it as he did.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[69]</a></span></p>
+
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_IV" id="CHAPTER_IV"></a>CHAPTER IV.</h2>
+
+<h3>THE ELECTION OF JACKSON, AND THE SPOILS
+SYSTEM.</h3>
+
+
+<p>In the presidential election of 1828 Jackson
+and Adams were pitted against each other as
+the only candidates before the people, and Jackson
+won an overwhelming victory. The followers
+of the two were fast developing respectively
+into Democrats and Whigs, and the
+parties were hardening and taking shape, while
+the dividing lines were being drawn more
+clearly and distinctly. But the contest was
+largely a personal one, and Jackson's success
+was due to his own immense popularity more
+than to any party principles which he was supposed
+to represent. Almost the entire strength
+of Adams was in the Northeast; but it is absolutely
+wrong to assume, because of this fact,
+that the election even remotely foreshadowed
+the way in which party lines would be drawn in
+the coming sectional antagonism over slavery.
+Adams led Jackson in the two slave states of
+Maryland and Delaware; and in the free states
+outside of New England Jackson had an even<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[70]</a></span>
+greater lead over Adams. East of the Alleghanies
+it may here and there have been taken
+as in some sort a triumph of the South over the
+North; but its sectional significance, as far as
+it had any, really came from its being a victory
+of the West over the East. Infinitely more
+important than this was the fact that it represented
+the overwhelmingly successful upheaval
+of the most extreme democratic elements in the
+community.</p>
+
+<p>Until 1828 all the presidents, and indeed almost
+all the men who took the lead in public
+life, alike in national and in state affairs, had
+been drawn from what in Europe would have
+been called the "upper classes." They were
+mainly college-bred men of high social standing,
+as well educated as any in the community, usually
+rich or at least well-to-do. Their subordinates
+in office were of much the same material.
+It was believed, and the belief was acted upon,
+that public life needed an apprenticeship of
+training and experience. Many of our public
+men had been able; almost all had been honorable
+and upright. The change of parties in
+1800, when the Jeffersonian Democracy came
+in, altered the policy of the government, but not
+the character of the officials. In that movement,
+though Jefferson had behind him the mass
+of the people as the rank and file of his party,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[71]</a></span>
+yet all his captains were still drawn from among
+the men in the same social position as himself.
+The Revolutionary War had been fought under
+the leadership of the colonial gentry; and for
+years after it was over the people, as a whole,
+felt that their interests could be safely intrusted
+to and were identical with those of the descendants
+of their revolutionary leaders. The classes
+in which were to be found almost all the learning,
+the talent, the business activity, and the
+inherited wealth and refinement of the country,
+had also hitherto contributed much to the body
+of its rulers.</p>
+
+<p>The Jacksonian Democracy stood for the revolt
+against these rulers; its leaders, as well as
+their followers, all came from the mass of the
+people. The majority of the voters supported
+Jackson because they felt he was one of themselves,
+and because they understood that his
+election would mean the complete overthrow of
+the classes in power and their retirement from
+the control of the government. There was
+nothing to be said against the rulers of the day;
+they had served the country and all its citizens
+well, and they were dismissed, not because the
+voters could truthfully allege any wrong-doing
+whatsoever against them, but solely because, in
+their purely private and personal feelings and
+habits of life, they were supposed to differ from<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[72]</a></span>
+the mass of the people. This was such an outrageously
+absurd feeling that the very men who
+were actuated by it, or who, like Benton, shaped
+and guided it, were ashamed to confess the true
+reason of their actions, and tried to cloak it behind
+an outcry, as vague and senseless as it was
+clamorous, against "aristocratic corruption" and
+other shadowy and spectral evils. Benton even
+talked loosely of "retrieving the country from
+the deplorable condition in which the enlightened
+classes had sunk it," although the country
+was perfectly prosperous and in its usual state
+of quiet, healthy growth. On the other hand,
+the opponents of Jackson indulged in talk almost
+as wild, and fears even more extravagant
+than his supporters' hopes; and the root of
+much of their opposition lay in a concealed but
+still existent caste antagonism to a man of Jackson's
+birth and bringing up. In fact, neither
+side, in spite of all their loud talk of American
+Republicanism, had yet mastered enough of its
+true spirit to be able to see that so long as public
+officers did their whole duty to all classes
+alike, it was not in the least the affair of their
+constituents whether they chose to spend their
+hours of social relaxation in their shirt-sleeves
+or in dress coats.</p>
+
+<p>The change was a great one; it was not a
+change of the policy under which the government<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[73]</a></span>
+was managed, as in Jefferson's triumph,
+but of the men who controlled it. The two
+great democratic victories had little in common;
+almost as little as had the two great leaders under
+whose auspices they were respectively won,&mdash;and
+few men were ever more unlike than the
+scholarly, timid, and shifty doctrinaire, who supplanted
+the elder Adams, and the ignorant, headstrong,
+and straightforward soldier, who was victor
+over the younger. That the change was the
+deliberate choice of the great mass of the people,
+and that it was one for the worse, was then,
+and has been ever since, the opinion of most
+thinking men; certainly the public service then
+took its first and greatest step in that downward
+career of progressive debasement and deterioration
+which has only been checked in our own
+days. But those who would, off-hand, decry the
+democratic principle on this account would do
+well to look at the nearly contemporaneous
+career of the pet heroes of a trans-Atlantic
+aristocracy before passing judgment. A very
+charming English historian of our day<a name="FNanchor_1_1" id="FNanchor_1_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a> has compared
+Wellington with Washington; it would
+have been far juster to have compared him
+with Andrew Jackson. Both were men of
+strong, narrow minds and bitter prejudices, with
+few statesmanlike qualities, who, for brilliant<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[74]</a></span>
+military services, were raised to the highest civil
+positions in the gift of the state. The feeling
+among the aristocratic classes of Great Britain
+in favor of the Iron Duke was nearly as strong
+and quite as unreasonable as was the homage
+paid by their homelier kinsfolk across the Atlantic
+to Old Hickory. Wellington's military
+successes were far greater, for he had more
+chances; but no single feat of his surpassed the
+remarkable victory won against his ablest lieutenant
+and choicest troops by a much smaller
+number of backwoods riflemen under Andrew
+Jackson. As a statesman Wellington may have
+done less harm than Jackson, for he had less influence;
+but he has no such great mark to his
+credit as the old Tennessean's attitude toward
+the Nullifiers. If Jackson's election is a proof
+that the majority is not always right, Wellington's
+elevation may be taken as showing that
+the minority, or a fraction thereof, is in its
+turn quite as likely to be wrong.</p>
+
+<p>This caste antagonism was the distinguishing
+feature in the election of 1828, and the partially
+sectional character of the contest was due to
+the different degree of development the caste
+spirit had reached in different portions of the
+Union. In New England wealth was quite
+evenly distributed, and education and intelligence
+were nearly universal; so there the antagonism<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[75]</a></span>
+was slight, the bulk of the New England
+vote being given, as usually before and
+since, in favor of the right candidate. In the
+Middle States, on the contrary, the antagonism
+was very strong. In the South it was of but
+little political account as between the whites
+themselves, they all being knit together by the
+barbarous bond of a common lordship of race;
+and here the feeling for Jackson was largely
+derived from the close kinship still felt for the
+West. In the West itself, where Jackson's
+great strength lay, the people were still too
+much on the same plane of thought as well as of
+material prosperity, and the wealthy and cultivated
+classes were of too limited extent to admit
+of much caste feeling against the latter;
+and, accordingly, instead of hostility to them, the
+Western caste spirit took the form of hostility
+to their far more numerous representatives who
+had hitherto formed the bulk of the political
+rulers of the East.</p>
+
+<p>New England was not only the most advanced
+portion of the Union, as regards intelligence,
+culture, and general prosperity, but was
+also most disagreeably aware of the fact, and
+was possessed with a self-conscious virtue that
+was peculiarly irritating to the Westerners, who
+knew that they were looked down upon, and
+savagely resented it on every occasion; and, besides,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[76]</a></span>
+New England was apt to meddle in affairs
+that more nearly concerned other localities.
+Several of Benton's speeches, at this time, show
+this irritation against the Northeast, and also
+incidentally bring out the solidarity of interest
+felt throughout the West. In a long and able
+speech, favoring the repeal of the iniquitous
+"salt tax," or high duty on imported salt (a
+great hobby of his, in which, after many efforts,
+he was finally successful), he brought out the
+latter point very strongly, besides complaining
+of the disproportionate lightness of the burden
+imposed upon the Northeast by the high tariff,
+of which he announced himself to be but a
+moderate adherent. In common with all other
+Western statesmen, he resented keenly the
+suspicion with which the Northeast was then
+only too apt to regard the West, quoting in one
+of his speeches with angry resentment a prevalent
+New England sneer at "the savages beyond
+the Alleghanies." At the time we are
+speaking of it must be remembered that many
+even of the most advanced Easterners were
+utterly incapable of appreciating the almost
+limitless capacity of their country for growth
+and expansion, being in this respect far behind
+their Western brethren; indeed, many regarded
+the acquisition of any new territory in the West
+with alarm and regret, as tending to make the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[77]</a></span>
+Union of such unwieldy size that it would break
+of its own weight.</p>
+
+<p>Benton was the leading opponent of a proposal,
+introduced by Senator Foot of Connecticut,
+to inquire into the expediency of limiting
+the sales of public lands to such lands as were
+then in the market. The limitation would have
+been most injurious to the entire West, which
+was thus menaced by the action of a New Englander,
+while Benton appeared as the champion
+of the whole section, North and South alike,
+in the speech wherein he strenuously and successfully
+opposed the adoption of the resolution,
+and at the same time bitterly attacked
+the quarter of the country from which it came,
+as having from the earliest years opposed everything
+that might advance the interests of the
+people beyond the Alleghanies. Webster came
+to the assistance of the mover of the measure
+in a speech wherein, among other things, he
+claimed for the North the merit of the passage
+of the Ordinance of 1787, in relation to the
+Northwest Territory, and especially of the anti-slavery
+clause therein contained. But Benton
+here caught him tripping, and in a very good
+speech showed that he was completely mistaken
+in his facts. The debate now, however, completely
+left the point at issue, taking a bitterly
+sectional turn, and giving rise to the famous<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[78]</a></span>
+controversy between Hayne, of South Carolina,
+who for the first time on the floor of the Senate
+announced the doctrine of nullification, and
+Webster, who, in response to his antagonist,
+voiced the feeling of the Union men of the
+North in that wonderful and magnificent speech
+known ever since under the name of the "Reply
+to Hayne," and the calling forth of which
+will henceforward be Hayne's sole title to fame.
+Benton, though himself a strong Union and
+anti-nullification man, was still too excited over
+the subject-matter of the bill and the original
+discussion over it to understand that the debate
+had ranged off upon matters of infinitely greater
+importance, and entirely failed to realize that
+he had listened to the greatest piece of oratory
+of the century. On the contrary, encouraged
+by his success earlier in the debate, he actually
+attempted a kind of reply to Webster, attacking
+him with invective and sarcasm as an alarmist,
+and taunting him with the memory of the
+Hartford Convention, which had been held by
+members of the Federalist party, to which Webster
+himself had once belonged. Benton afterwards
+became convinced that Webster's views
+were by no means those of a mere alarmist, and
+frankly stated that he had been wrong in his
+position; but at the time, heated by his original
+grievance, as a Western man, against New England,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[79]</a></span>
+he failed entirely to understand the true
+drift of Hayne's speech. Much of New England's
+policy to the West was certainly excessively
+narrow-minded.</p>
+
+<p>Jackson's administration derives a most unenviable
+notoriety as being the one under which
+the "spoils system" became, for the first time,
+grafted on the civil service of the nation; appointments
+and removals in the public service
+being made dependent upon political qualifications,
+and not, as hitherto, upon merit or capacity.
+Benton, to his honor, always stoutly
+opposed this system. It is unfair to assert that
+Jackson was the originator of this method of
+appointment; but he was certainly its foster-father,
+and more than any one else is responsible
+for its introduction into the affairs of the
+national government. Despite all the Eastern
+sneers at the "savages" of the West, it was from
+Eastern men that this most effective method of
+debauching political life came. The Jacksonian
+Democrats of the West, when they introduced
+it into the working of the federal government,
+simply copied the system which they found already
+firmly established by their Eastern allies
+in New York and Pennsylvania. For many
+years the course of politics throughout the
+country had been preparing and foreshadowing
+the advent of the "spoils system." The greatest<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[80]</a></span>
+single stroke in its favor had been done at
+the instigation of Crawford, when that scheming
+politician was seeking the presidency, and,
+to further his ends, he procured the passage by
+Congress of a law limiting the term of service
+of all public officials to four years, thus turning
+out of office all the fifty thousand public
+servants during each presidential term. This
+law has never been repealed, every low politician
+being vitally interested in keeping it as it is,
+and accordingly it is to be found on the statute-books
+at the present day; and though it has the
+company of some other very bad measures, it
+still remains very much the worst of all, as regards
+both the evil it has done and that which
+it is still doing. This four years' limitation law
+was passed without comment or protest, every
+one voting in its favor, its probable working not
+being comprehended in the least. Says Benton,
+who, with all his colleagues, voted for it: "The
+object of the law was to pass the disbursing
+officers every four years under the supervision
+of the appointing power, for the inspection of
+their accounts, in order that defaulters might
+be detected and dropped, while the faithful
+should be ascertained and continued.... It was
+found to operate contrary to its intent, and to
+have become the facile means of getting rid of
+faithful disbursing officers, instead of retaining<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[81]</a></span>
+them." New York has always had a low political
+standard, one or the other of its great party
+and factional organizations, and often both or
+all of them, being at all times most unlovely
+bodies of excessively unwholesome moral tone.
+Aaron Burr introduced the "spoils system"
+into her state affairs, and his methods were followed
+and improved upon by Marcy, Wright,
+Van Buren, and all the "Albany Regency." In
+1829 these men found themselves an important
+constituent portion of the winning party, and
+immediately, by the help of the only too willing
+Jackson, proceeded to apply their system to
+affairs at Washington. It was about this time
+that, in the course of a debate in the Senate,
+Marcy gave utterance to the now notorious
+maxim, "To the victors belong the spoils."</p>
+
+<p>Under Adams the non-partisan character of
+the public service had been guarded with a
+scrupulous care that could almost be called exaggerated.
+Indeed, Adams certainly went altogether
+too far in his non-partisanship when it
+came to appointing cabinet and other high officers,
+his views on such points being not only
+fantastic, but absolutely wrong. The colorless
+character of his administration was largely due
+to his having, in his anxiety to avoid blind and
+unreasoning adherence to party, committed the
+only less serious fault of paying too little heed to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[82]</a></span>
+party; for a healthy party spirit is prerequisite
+to the performance of effective work in American
+political life. Adams was not elected purely
+for himself, but also on account of the men and
+the principles that he was supposed to represent;
+and when he partly surrounded himself
+with men of opposite principles, he just so far,
+though from the best of motives, betrayed his
+supporters, and rightly forfeited much of their
+confidence. But, under him, every public servant
+felt that, so long as he faithfully served
+the state, his position was secure, no matter
+what his political opinions might be.</p>
+
+<p>With the incoming of the Jacksonians all
+this changed, and terribly for the worse. A
+perfect reign of terror ensued among the office-holders.
+In the first month of the new administration
+more removals took place than during
+all the previous administrations put together.
+Appointments were made with little or no attention
+to fitness, or even honesty, but solely
+because of personal or political services. Removals
+were not made in accordance with any
+known rule at all; the most frivolous pretexts
+were sufficient, if advanced by useful politicians
+who needed places already held by capable incumbents.
+Spying and tale-bearing became
+prominent features of official life, the meaner
+office-holders trying to save their own heads by<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[83]</a></span>
+denouncing others. The very best men were unceremoniously
+and causelessly dismissed; gray-headed
+clerks, who had been appointed by the
+earlier presidents,&mdash;by Washington, the elder
+Adams, and Jefferson,&mdash;being turned off at an
+hour's notice, although a quarter of a century's
+faithful work in the public service had unfitted
+them to earn their living elsewhere. Indeed,
+it was upon the best and most efficient men that
+the blow fell heaviest; the spies, tale-bearers,
+and tricksters often retained their positions.
+In 1829 the public service was, as it always had
+been, administered purely in the interest of the
+people; and the man who was styled the especial
+champion of the people dealt that service
+the heaviest blow it has ever received.</p>
+
+<p>Benton himself always took a sound stand on
+the civil service question, although his partisanship
+led him at times to defend Jackson's course
+when he must have known well that it was indefensible.
+He viewed with the greatest alarm
+and hostility the growth of the "spoils system,"
+and early introduced, as chairman of a special
+committee, a bill to repeal the harmful four
+years' limitation act. In discussing this proposed
+bill afterwards, he wrote, in words that
+apply as much at this time as they did then:
+"The expiration of the four years' term came
+to be considered as the termination and vacation<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[84]</a></span>
+of all the offices on which it fell, and the creation
+of vacancies to be filled at the option of the
+president. The bill to remedy this defect gave
+legal effect to the original intention of the law
+by confining the vacation of office to actual defaulters.
+The power of the president to dismiss
+civil officers was not attempted to be curtailed,
+but the restraints of responsibility were
+placed upon its exercise by requiring the cause
+of dismission to be communicated to Congress
+in each case. The section of the bill to that effect
+was in these words: <i>That in all nominations
+made by the president to the Senate, to fill
+vacancies occasioned by an exercise of the president's
+power to remove from office, the fact of the
+removal shall be stated to the Senate at the same
+time that the nomination is made, with a statement
+of the reasons for which such officer may
+have been removed.</i> This was intended to operate
+as a restraint upon removals without cause."</p>
+
+<p>In the "Thirty Years' View" he again writes,
+in language which would be appropriate from
+every advanced civil service reformer of the
+present day, that is, from every disinterested
+man who has studied the workings of the "spoils
+system" with any intelligence:&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>I consider "sweeping" removals, as now practiced
+by both parties, a great political evil in our country,
+injurious to individuals, to the public service, to the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[85]</a></span>
+purity of elections, and to the harmony and union of
+the people. Certainly no individual has a right to
+an office; no one has an estate or property in a public
+employment; but when a mere ministerial worker in
+a subordinate station has learned its duties by experience
+and approved his fidelity by his conduct, it
+is an injury to the public service to exchange him for
+a novice whose only title to the place may be a political
+badge or partisan service. It is exchanging
+experience for inexperience, tried ability for untried,
+and destroying the incentive to good conduct by destroying
+its reward. To the party displaced it is an
+injury, he having become a proficient in that business,
+expecting to remain in it during good behavior,
+and finding it difficult, at an advanced age, and with
+fixed habits, to begin a new career in some new walk
+of life. It converts elections into scrambles for office,
+and degrades the government into an office for
+rewards and punishments; and divides the people of
+the Union into two adverse parties, each in its turn,
+and as it becomes dominant, to strip and proscribe
+the other.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Benton had now taken the position which he
+was for many years to hold, as the recognized
+senatorial leader of a great and well-defined
+party. Until 1828 the prominent political
+chiefs of the nation had either been its presidents,
+or had been in the cabinets of these presidents.
+But after Jackson's time they were in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[86]</a></span>
+the Senate, and it was on this body that public
+attention was concentrated. Jackson's cabinet
+itself showed such a falling off, when compared
+with the cabinets of any of his predecessors, as
+to justify the caustic criticism that, when he
+took office, there came in "the millennium of
+the minnows." In the Senate, on the contrary,
+there were never before or since so many men
+of commanding intellect and powers. Calhoun
+had been elected as vice-president on the Jacksonian
+ticket, and was thus, in 1829, presiding
+over the body of which he soon became an active
+member; Webster and Clay were already
+taking their positions as the leaders of the great
+National Republican, or, as it was afterwards
+called, Whig party.</p>
+
+<p>When the rupture between Calhoun and the
+Jacksonian Democrats, and the resignation of
+the former from the vice-presidency took place,
+three parties developed in the United States
+Senate. One was composed of the Jacksonian
+Democrats, with Benton at their head; one was
+made up of the little band of Nullifiers, led by
+Calhoun; and the third included the rather loose
+array of the Whigs, under Clay and Webster.
+The feeling of the Jacksonians towards Calhoun
+and the Nullifiers and towards Clay and
+the Clay Whigs were largely those of personal<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[87]</a></span>
+animosity; but they had very little of this sentiment
+towards Webster and his associates,
+their differences with them being on questions
+of party principle, or else proceeding from
+merely sectional causes.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[88]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_V" id="CHAPTER_V"></a>CHAPTER V.</h2>
+
+<h3>THE STRUGGLE WITH THE NULLIFIERS.</h3>
+
+
+<p>During both Jackson's presidential terms he
+and his adherents were engaged in two great
+struggles; that with the Nullifiers, and that
+with the Bank. Although these struggles were
+in part synchronous, it will be easier to discuss
+each by itself.</p>
+
+<p>The nullification movement in South Carolina,
+during the latter part of the third and
+early part of the fourth decades in the present
+century, had nothing to do, except in the most
+distant way, with slavery. Its immediate cause
+was the high tariff; remotely it sprang from
+the same feelings which produced the Virginia
+and Kentucky resolutions of 1798.</p>
+
+<p>Certain of the Slave States, including those
+which raised hemp, indigo, and sugar, were high-tariff
+states; indeed, it was not till towards the
+close of the presidency of Monroe that there
+had been much sectional feeling over the policy
+of protection. Originally, while we were a
+purely agricultural and mercantile people, free<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[89]</a></span>
+trade was the only economic policy which occurred
+to us as possible to be followed, the first
+tariff bill being passed in 1816. South Carolina
+then was inclined to favor the system, Calhoun
+himself supporting the bill, and, his subsequent
+denials to the contrary notwithstanding, distinctly
+advocating the policy of protection to
+native industries; while Massachusetts then and
+afterwards stoutly opposed its introduction, as
+hostile to her interests. However, the bill was
+passed, and Massachusetts had to submit to its
+operation. After 1816 new tariff laws were
+enacted about every four years, and soon the
+coast Slave States, except Louisiana, realized
+that their working was hurtful to the interests
+of the planters. New England also changed
+her attitude; and when the protective tariff bill
+of 1828 came up, its opponents and supporters
+were sharply divided by sectional lines. But
+these lines were not such as would have divided
+the states on the question of slavery. The
+Northeast and Northwest alike favored the
+measure, as also did all the Southern States
+west of the Alleghanies, and Louisiana. It was
+therefore passed by an overwhelming vote,
+against the solid opposition of the belt of Southern
+coast states stretching from Virginia to
+Mississippi, and including these two.</p>
+
+<p>The states that felt themselves harmed by<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[90]</a></span>
+the tariff did something more than record their
+disapproval by the votes of their representatives
+in Congress. They nearly all, through their
+legislatures, entered emphatic protests against
+its adoption, as being most harmful to them and
+dangerous to the Union; and some accompanied
+their protests with threats as to what would be
+done if the obnoxious laws should be enforced.
+They certainly had grounds for discontent. In
+1828 the tariff, whether it benefited the country
+as a whole or not, unquestionably harmed
+the South; and in a federal Union it is most
+unwise to pass laws which shall benefit one part
+of the community to the hurt of another part,
+when the latter receives no compensation. The
+truculent and unyielding attitude of the extreme
+protectionists was irritating in the extreme;
+for cooler men than the South Carolinians
+might well have been exasperated at such
+an utterance as that of Henry Clay, when he
+stated that for the sake of the "American system"&mdash;by
+which title he was fond of styling a
+doctrine already ancient in mediæval times&mdash;he
+would "defy the South, the president and the
+devil."</p>
+
+<p>On the other hand, both the good and the
+evil effects of the tariff were greatly exaggerated.
+Some harm to the planter states was
+doubtless caused by it; but their falling back,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[91]</a></span>
+as compared with the North, in the race for prosperity,
+was doubtless caused much more by the
+presence of slavery, as Dallas, of Pennsylvania,
+pointed out in the course of some very temperate
+and moderate remarks in the Senate. Clay's
+assertions as to what the tariff had done for
+the West were equally ill-founded, as Benton
+showed in a good speech, wherein he described
+picturesquely enough the industries and general
+condition of his portion of the country, and
+asserted with truth that its revived prosperity
+was due to its own resources, entirely independent
+of federal aid or legislation. He said: "I
+do not think we are indebted to the high tariff
+for our fertile lands and our navigable rivers;
+and I am certain we are indebted to these blessings
+for the prosperity we enjoy." "In all that
+comes from the soil the people of the West are
+rich. They have an abundant supply of food
+for man and beast, and a large surplus to send
+abroad. They have the comfortable living
+which industry creates for itself in a rich soil,
+but beyond this they are poor.... They have no
+roads paved or macadamized; no canals or
+aqueducts; no bridges of stone across the innumerable
+streams; no edifices dedicated to
+eternity; no schools for the fine arts; not a
+public library for which an ordinary scholar
+would not apologize." Then he went on to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[92]</a></span>
+speak of the commerce of the West and its
+exports, "the marching myriads of living animals
+annually taking their departure from the
+heart of the West, defiling through the gorges
+of the Cumberland, the Alleghany, and the
+Appalachian mountains, or traversing the plains
+of the South, diverging as they march, ... and
+the flying steamboats and the fleets of floating
+arks, loaded with the products of the forest,
+the farm, and the pasture, following the courses
+of our noble rivers, and bearing their freights
+to the great city" of New Orleans.</p>
+
+<p>Unfortunately Benton would interlard even
+his best speeches with theories of economics
+often more or less crude, and, still worse, with
+a series of classic quotations and allusions; for
+he was grievously afflicted with the rage for
+cheap pseudo-classicism that Jefferson and his
+school had borrowed from the French revolutionists.
+Nor could he resist the temptation to
+drag in allusions to some favorite hobby. The
+repeal of the salt-tax was an especial favorite
+of his. He was perfectly right in attacking
+the tax, and deserves the greatest credit for
+the persistency which finally won him the victory.
+But his associates, unless of a humorous
+turn of mind, must have found his allusions
+to it rather tiresome, as when, apropos of the
+commerce of the Mississippi, and without any<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[93]</a></span>
+possible excuse for speaking of the iniquity of
+taxing salt, he suddenly alluded to New Orleans
+as "that great city which revives upon
+the banks of the Mississippi the name of the
+greatest of the emperors<a name="FNanchor_2_2" id="FNanchor_2_2"></a><a href="#Footnote_2_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a> that ever reigned
+upon the banks of the Tiber, and who eclipsed
+the glory of his own heroic exploits by giving
+an order to his legions never to levy a contribution
+of salt upon a Roman citizen!"</p>
+
+<p>It must be admitted that the tariff did some
+harm to the South, and that it was natural for
+the latter to feel resentment at the way in
+which it worked. But it must also be remembered
+that no law can be passed which
+does not distribute its benefits more or less
+unequally, and which does not, in all probability,
+work harm in some cases. Moreover,
+the South was estopped from complaining of
+one section being harmed by a law that benefited,
+or was supposed to benefit, the country at
+large, by her position in regard to the famous
+embargo and non-intervention acts. These inflicted
+infinitely more damage and loss in New
+England than any tariff law could inflict on
+South Carolina, and, moreover, were put into
+execution on account of a quarrel with England
+forced on by the West and South contrary
+to the desire of the East. Yet the Southerners<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[94]</a></span>
+were fierce in their denunciations of such
+of the Federalists as went to the extreme in
+opposition to them. Even in 1816 Massachusetts
+had been obliged to submit with good
+grace to the workings of a tariff which she
+deemed hostile to her interests, and which many
+Southerners then advocated. Certainly, even if
+the new tariff laws were ill-advised, unjust, and
+unequal in their working, yet they did not, in
+the most remote degree, justify any effort to
+break up the Union; especially the South had
+no business to complain when she herself had
+joined in laying heavier burdens on the shoulders
+of New England.</p>
+
+<p>Complain she did, however; and soon added
+threats to complaints, and was evidently ready
+to add acts to threats. Georgia, at first, took
+the lead in denunciation; but South Carolina
+soon surpassed her, and finally went to the
+length of advocating and preparing for separation
+from the Union; a step that produced a
+revulsion of feeling even among her fellow anti-tariff
+states. The South Carolinian statesmen
+now proclaimed the doctrine of nullification,&mdash;that
+is, proclaimed that if any state deemed a
+federal law improper, it could proceed to declare
+that law null and void so far as its own
+territory was concerned,&mdash;and, as a corollary,
+that it had the right forcibly to prevent execution<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[95]</a></span>
+of this void law within its borders. This
+was proclaimed, not as an exercise of the right
+of revolution, which, in the last resort, belongs,
+of course, to every community and class, but as
+a constitutional privilege. Jefferson was quoted
+as the father of the idea, and the Kentucky
+resolutions of 1798-99, which he drew, were
+cited as the precedent for the South Carolinian
+action. In both these last assertions
+the Nullifiers were correct. Jefferson was the
+father of nullification, and therefore of secession.
+He used the word "nullify" in the original
+draft which he supplied to the Kentucky
+legislature, and though that body struck it out
+of the resolutions which they passed in 1798,
+they inserted it in those of the following year.
+This was done mainly as an unscrupulous party
+move on Jefferson's part, and when his side
+came into power he became a firm upholder of
+the Union; and, being constitutionally unable
+to put a proper value on truthfulness, he even
+denied that his resolutions could be construed
+to favor nullification&mdash;though they could by no
+possibility be construed to mean anything else.</p>
+
+<p>At this time it is not necessary to discuss
+nullification as a constitutional dogma; it is an
+absurdity too great to demand serious refutation.
+The United States has the same right to
+protect itself from death by nullification, secession,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[96]</a></span>
+or rebellion, that a man has to protect
+himself from death by assassination. Calhoun's
+hair-splitting and metaphysical disquisitions on
+the constitutionality of nullification have now
+little more practical interest than have the extraordinary
+arguments and discussions of the
+school-men of the Middle Ages.</p>
+
+<p>But at the time they were of vital interest,
+for they were words which it was known South
+Carolina was prepared to back up by deeds.
+Calhoun was vice-president, the second officer
+in the federal government, and yet also the
+avowed leader of the most bitter disunionists.
+His state supported him by an overwhelming
+majority, although even within its own borders
+there was an able opposition, headed by the
+gallant and loyal family of the Draytons,&mdash;the
+same family that afterwards furnished the captain
+of Farragut's flag-ship, the glorious old
+Hartford. There was a strong sentiment in the
+other Southern States in his favor; the public
+men of South Carolina made speech after speech
+goading him on to take even more advanced
+ground.</p>
+
+<p>In Washington the current at first seemed
+to be all setting in favor of the Nullifiers; they
+even counted on Jackson's support, as he was
+a Southerner and a states'-rights man. But he
+was also a strong Unionist, and, moreover, at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[97]</a></span>
+this time, felt very bitterly towards Calhoun,
+with whom he had just had a split, and had in
+consequence remodeled his cabinet, thrusting
+out all Calhoun's supporters, and adopting Van
+Buren as his political heir,&mdash;the position which
+it was hitherto supposed the great Carolina
+separatist occupied.</p>
+
+<p>The first man to take up the gauntlet the
+Nullifiers had thrown down was Webster, in his
+famous reply to Hayne. He, of course, voiced
+the sentiment of the Whigs, and especially of
+the Northeast, where the high tariff was regarded
+with peculiar favor, where the Union
+feeling was strong, and where there was a certain
+antagonism felt towards the South. The
+Jacksonian Democrats, whose strength lay in
+the West, had not yet spoken. They were,
+for the most part, neither ultra protectionists
+nor absolute free-traders; Jackson's early presidential
+utterances had given offense to the
+South by not condemning all high-tariff legislation,
+but at the same time had declared in favor
+of a much more moderate degree of protection
+than suited the Whigs. Only a few weeks
+after Webster's speech Jackson's chance came,
+and he declared himself in unmistakable terms.
+It was on the occasion of the Jefferson birthday
+banquet, April 13, 1830. An effort was
+then being made to have Jefferson's birthday<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[98]</a></span>
+celebrated annually; and the Nullifiers, rightly
+claiming him as their first and chief apostle,
+attempted to turn this particular feast into a
+demonstration in favor of nullification. Most
+of the speakers present were actively or passively
+in favor of the movement, and the toasts
+proposed strongly savored of the new doctrine.
+But Jackson, Benton, and a number of other
+Union men were in attendance also, and when
+it came to Jackson's turn he electrified the audience
+by proposing: "Our federal Union; it
+must be preserved." Calhoun at once answered
+with: "The Union; next to our liberty the
+most dear; may we all remember that it can
+only be preserved by respecting the rights of
+the states and distributing equally the benefit
+and burden of the Union." The issue between
+the president and the vice-president was now
+complete, and the Jacksonian Democracy was
+squarely committed against nullification. Jackson
+had risen to the occasion as only a strong
+and a great man could rise, and his few, telling
+words, finely contrasting at every point
+with Calhoun's utterances, rang throughout the
+whole country, and will last as long as our government.
+One result, at least, the Nullifiers
+accomplished,&mdash;they completely put an end to
+the Jefferson birthday celebrations.</p>
+
+<p>The South Carolinians had no intention of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[99]</a></span>
+flinching from the contest which they had provoked,
+even when they saw that the North and
+West were united against them, and though
+the tide began to set the same way in their sister
+states of the South; North Carolina, among
+the latter, being the first and most pronounced
+in her support of the president and denunciation
+of the Nullifiers. The men of the Palmetto
+State have always ranked high for hotheaded
+courage, and they soon showed that
+they had wills as fiery as that of Jackson himself.
+Yet in the latter they had met an antagonist
+well worthy of any foeman's steel. In
+declining an invitation to be present at Charleston,
+on July 4, 1831, the president again defined
+most clearly his position in favor of the Union,
+and his words had an especial significance because
+he let it be seen that he was fully determined
+to back them up by force if necessary.
+But his letter only had the effect of inflaming
+still more the minds of the South Carolinians.
+The prime cause of irritation, the tariff, still
+remained; and in 1832, Clay, having entered
+the Senate after a long retirement from politics,
+put the finishing stroke to their anger by
+procuring the passage of a new tariff bill, which
+left the planter states almost as badly off as did
+the law of 1828. Jackson signed this, although
+not believing that it went far enough in the
+reduction of duties.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[100]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>In the presidential election of 1832, Jackson
+defeated Clay by an enormous majority; Van
+Buren was elected vice-president, there being
+thus a Northern man on the ticket. South
+Carolina declined to take part in the election,
+throwing away her vote. Again, it must be
+kept in mind that the slave question did not
+shape, or, indeed, enter into this contest at all,
+directly, although beginning to be present in
+the background as a source of irritation. In
+1832 there was ten-fold more feeling in the
+North against Masonry, and secret societies
+generally, than there was against slavery.</p>
+
+<p>Benton threw himself in, heart and soul, with
+the Union party, acting as Jackson's right-hand
+man throughout the contest with South Carolina,
+and showing an even more resolute and unflinching
+front than Old Hickory himself. No
+better or trustier ally than the Missouri statesman,
+in a hard fight for a principle, could be
+desired. He was intensely national in all his
+habits of thought; he took a deep, personal
+pride in all his country,&mdash;North, South, East,
+and West. He had been very loath to believe
+that any movement hostile to the Union was
+really on foot; but once thoroughly convinced
+of it he chose his own line of action without an
+instant's hesitation.</p>
+
+<p>A fortnight after the presidential election<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[101]</a></span>
+South Carolina passed her ordinance of nullification,
+directed against the tariff laws generally,
+and against those of 1828 and 1832 in particular.
+The ordinance was to take effect on February
+1st; and if meantime the federal government
+should make any attempt to enforce the
+laws, the fact of such attempt was to end the
+continuance of South Carolina in the Union.</p>
+
+<p>Jackson promptly issued a proclamation
+against nullification, composed jointly by himself
+and the great Louisiana jurist and statesman,
+Livingston. It is one of the ablest, as
+well as one of the most important, of all American
+state papers. It is hard to see how any
+American can read it now without feeling his
+veins thrill. Some claim it as being mainly the
+work of Jackson, others as that of Livingston;
+it is great honor for either to have had a hand
+in its production.</p>
+
+<p>In his annual message the president merely
+referred, in passing, to the Nullifiers, expressing
+his opinion that the action in reducing the duties,
+which the extinction of the public debt
+would permit and require, would put an end to
+the proceedings. As matters grew more threatening,
+however, South Carolina making every
+preparation for war and apparently not being
+conciliated in the least by the evident desire in
+Congress to meet her more than half-way on<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[102]</a></span>
+the tariff question, Jackson sent a special message
+to both houses. He had already sent General
+Scott to Charleston, and had begun the
+concentration of certain military and naval
+forces in or near the state boundaries. He now
+asked Congress to pass a measure to enable him
+to deal better with possible resistance to the
+laws. South Carolina having complained of the
+oppressed condition in which she found herself,
+owing to the working of the tariff, Jackson, in
+his message, with some humor, quoted in reply
+the last Thanksgiving proclamation of her governor,
+wherein he dilated upon the state's unexampled
+prosperity and happiness.</p>
+
+<p>It must always be kept in mind in describing
+the attitude of the Jacksonian Democrats
+towards the Nullifiers that they were all along,
+especially in the West, hostile to a very high
+tariff. Jackson and Benton had always favored
+a much lower tariff than that established in
+1828 and hardly changed in 1832. It was no
+change of front on their part now to advocate a
+reduction of duties. Jackson and Benton both
+felt that there was much ground for South Carolina's
+original complaint, although as strongly
+opposed to her nullification attitude as any
+Northerner. Most of the Southern senators and
+representatives, though opposed to nullification,
+were almost equally hostile to the high tariff;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[103]</a></span>
+and very many others were at heart in sympathy
+with nullification itself. The intensely
+national and anti-separatist tone of Jackson's
+declaration,&mdash;a document that might well have
+come from Washington or Lincoln, and that
+would have reflected high honor on either,&mdash;though
+warmly approved by Benton, was very
+repugnant to many of the Southern Democrats,
+and was too much even for certain of the Whigs.
+In fact, it reads like the utterance of some great
+Federalist or Republican leader. The feeling
+in Congress, as a whole, was as strong against
+the tariff as it was against nullification; and
+Jackson had to take this into account, all the
+more because not only was he in some degree
+of the same way of thinking, but also many of
+his followers entertained the sentiment even
+more earnestly.</p>
+
+<p>Calhoun introduced a series of nullification
+resolutions into the Senate, and defended them
+strongly in the prolonged constitutional debate
+that followed. South Carolina meanwhile put
+off the date at which her decrees were to take
+effect, so that she might see what Congress
+would do. Beyond question, Jackson's firmness,
+and the way in which he was backed up
+by Benton, Webster, and their followers, was
+having some effect. He had openly avowed his
+intention, if matters went too far, of hanging<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[104]</a></span>
+Calhoun "higher than Haman." He unquestionably
+meant to imprison him, as well as the
+other South Carolina leaders, the instant that
+state came into actual collision with the Union;
+and to the end of his life regretted, and with
+reason, that he had not done so without waiting
+for an overt act of resistance. Some historians
+have treated this as if it were an idle threat;
+but such it certainly was not. Jackson undoubtedly
+fully meant what he said, and would
+have acted promptly had the provocation occurred,
+and, moreover, he would have been sustained
+by the country. He was not the man to
+weigh minutely what would and what would
+not fall just on one side or the other of the line
+defining treason; nor was it the time for too
+scrupulous adherence to precise wording. Had
+a collision occurred, neither Calhoun nor his
+colleague would ever have been permitted to
+leave Washington; and brave though they were,
+the fact unquestionably had much influence
+with them.</p>
+
+<p>Webster was now acting heartily with Benton.
+He introduced a set of resolutions which
+showed that in the matters both of the tariff
+and of nullification his position was much the
+same as was that of the Missourian. Unfortunately
+Congress, as a whole, was by no means
+so stiff-kneed. A certain number of Whigs followed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[105]</a></span>
+Webster, and a certain number of Democrats
+clung to Benton; but most Southerners
+were very reluctant to allow pressure to be
+brought to bear on South Carolina, and many
+Northerners were as willing to compromise as
+Henry Clay himself. In accordance with Jackson's
+recommendations two bills were introduced:
+one the so-called "Force bill," to allow
+the president to take steps to defend the federal
+authority in the event of actual collision; and
+the other a moderate, and, on the whole, proper
+tariff bill, to reduce protective duties. Both
+were introduced by administration supporters.
+Benton and Webster warmly sustained the
+"Force bill," which was bitterly attacked by
+the Nullifiers and by most of the Southerners,
+who really hardly knew what stand to take,
+the leading opponent being Tyler of Virginia,
+whose disunion attitude was almost as clearly
+marked as that of Calhoun himself. The measure
+was eminently just, and was precisely what
+the crisis demanded; and the Senate finally
+passed it and sent it to the House.</p>
+
+<p>All this time an obstinate struggle was going
+on over the tariff bill. Calhoun and his sympathizers
+were beginning to see that there was
+real danger ahead, alike to themselves, their
+constituents, and their principles, if they followed
+unswervingly the course they had laid<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[106]</a></span>
+down; and the weak-kneed brethren on the
+other side, headed by Clay, were becoming even
+more uneasy. Calhoun wished to avert collision
+with the federal government; Clay was quite as
+anxious to avoid an outbreak in the South and
+to save what he could of the protective system,
+which was evidently doomed. Calhoun was
+willing to sacrifice some of his constitutional
+theories in regard to protection; Clay was
+ready greatly to reduce protection itself. Each,
+of them, but especially Clay, was prepared to
+shift his stand somewhat from that of abstract
+moral right to that of expediency. Benton and
+Webster were too resolute and determined in
+their hostility to any form of yielding to South
+Carolina's insolent defiance to admit any hope
+of getting them to accept a compromise; but
+the majority of the members were known to be
+only too ready to jump at any half-way measure
+which would patch up the affair for the present,
+no matter what the sacrifice of principle or how
+great the risk incurred for the future. Accordingly,
+Clay and Calhoun met and agreed on a
+curious bill, in reality recognizing the protective
+system, but making a great although gradual
+reduction of duties; and Clay introduced this
+as a "compromise measure." It was substituted
+in the House for the administration tariff
+bill, was passed and sent to the Senate. It<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[107]</a></span>
+gave South Carolina much, but not all, that
+she demanded. Her representatives announced
+themselves satisfied, and supported it, together
+with all their Southern sympathizers. Webster
+and Benton fought it stoutly to the last, but it
+was passed by a great majority; a few Northerners
+followed Webster, and Benton received
+fair support from his Missouri colleagues and
+the Maryland senators; the other senators,
+Whigs and Democrats alike, voted for the
+measure. Many of the Southerners were imbued
+with separatist principles, although not
+yet to the extent that Calhoun was; others,
+though Union men, did not possess the unflinching
+will and stern strength of character that
+enabled Benton to stand out against any section
+of the country, even his own, if it was
+wrong. Silas Wright, of New York, a typical
+Northern "dough-face" politician, gave exact
+expression to the "dough-face" sentiment, which
+induced Northern members to vote for the compromise,
+when he stated that he was unalterably
+opposed to the principle of the bill, but
+that on account of the attitude of South Carolina,
+and of the extreme desire which he had to
+remove all cause of discontent in that state, and
+in order to enable her again to become an affectionate
+member of the Union, he would vote
+for what was satisfactory to her, although repugnant<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[108]</a></span>
+to himself. Wright, Marcy, and their
+successors in New York politics, almost up to
+the present day, certainly carried cringing subserviency
+to the South to a pitch that was fairly
+sublime.</p>
+
+<p>The "Force bill" and the compromise tariff
+bill passed both houses nearly simultaneously,
+and were sent up to the president, who signed
+both on the same day. His signing the compromise
+bill was a piece of weakness out of
+keeping with his whole character, and especially
+out of keeping with his previous course
+towards the Nullifiers. The position assumed
+by Benton and Webster, that South Carolina
+should be made to submit first and should have
+the justice of her claims examined into afterwards,
+was unquestionably the only proper attitude.</p>
+
+<p>Benton wrote:&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>My objections to this bill, and to its mode of being
+passed, were deep and abiding, and went far beyond
+its own obnoxious provisions, and all the transient
+and temporary considerations connected with it....
+A compromise made with a state in arms is a capitulation
+to that state.... The injury was great then, and
+a permanent evil example. It remitted the government
+to the condition of the old confederation, acting
+upon sovereignties instead of individuals. It violated
+the feature of our Union which discriminated it from<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[109]</a></span>
+all confederacies that ever existed, and which was
+wisely and patriotically put into the Constitution to
+save it from the fate which had attended all confederacies,
+ancient and modern.... The framers of
+our Constitution established a Union instead of a
+League&mdash;to be sovereign and independent within its
+sphere, acting upon persons through its own laws
+and courts, instead of acting on communities through
+persuasion or force. The effect of this compromise
+legislation was to destroy this great feature of our
+Union&mdash;to bring the general and state governments
+into conflict&mdash;and to substitute a sovereign state for
+an offending individual as often as a state chose to
+make the cause of that individual her own.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Not only was Benton's interpretation of the
+Constitution sound, and one that by the course
+of events has now come to be universally accepted,
+but his criticisms on the wisdom of the
+compromise bill were perfectly just. Had the
+Anti-Nullifiers stood firm, the Nullifiers would
+probably have given way, and if not, would
+certainly have been crushed. Against a solid
+North and West, with a divided South, even
+her own people not being unanimous, and with
+Jackson as chief executive, South Carolina
+could not have made even a respectable resistance.
+A salutary lesson then might very possibly
+have saved infinite trouble and bloodshed
+thereafter. But in Jackson's case it must be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[110]</a></span>
+remembered that, so far as his acts depended
+purely upon his own will and judgment, no
+fault can be found with him; he erred only in
+ratifying a compromise agreed to by the vast
+majority of the representatives of the people in
+both houses of Congress.</p>
+
+<p>The battle did not result in a decisive victory
+for either side. This was shown by the very
+fact that each party insisted that it had won a
+signal triumph. Calhoun and Clay afterwards
+quarreled in the senate chamber as to which
+had given up the more in the compromise.
+South Carolina had declared, first, that the
+tariff was unconstitutional, and therefore to be
+opposed upon principle; second, that it worked
+injustice to her interests, and must be abolished
+forthwith; thirdly, that, if it were not so
+abolished, she would assert her power to nullify
+a federal law, and, if necessary, would secede
+from the Union. When her representatives
+agreed to the compromise bill, they abandoned
+the first point; the second was decided largely
+in her favor, though protection was not by any
+means entirely given up; the third she was allowed
+to insist upon with impunity, although
+the other side, by passing the "Force bill,"
+showed that in case matters did proceed to extremities
+they were prepared to act upon the
+opposite conviction. Still, she gained most of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[111]</a></span>
+that for which she contended, and the victory,
+as a whole, rested with her. Calhoun's purposes
+seem to have been, in the main, pure;
+but few criminals have worked as much harm
+to their country as he did. The plea of good
+intentions is not one that can be allowed to
+have much weight in passing historical judgment
+upon a man whose wrong-headedness and
+distorted way of looking at things produced, or
+helped to produce, such incalculable evil; there
+is a wide political applicability in the remark
+attributed to a famous Texan, to the effect that
+he might, in the end, pardon a man who shot
+him on purpose, but that he would surely never
+forgive one who did so accidentally.</p>
+
+<p>Without doubt, the honors of the nullification
+dispute were borne off by Benton and Webster.
+The latter's reply to Hayne is, perhaps, the
+greatest single speech of the nineteenth century,
+and he deserves the highest credit for the
+stubbornness with which he stood by his colors
+to the last. There never was any question of
+Webster's courage; on the occasions when he
+changed front he was actuated by self-interest
+and ambition, not by timidity. Usually he
+appears as an advocate rather than an earnest
+believer in the cause he represents; but when
+it came to be a question of the Union, he felt
+what he said with the whole strength of his
+nature.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[112]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>An even greater meed of praise attaches to
+Benton for the unswerving fidelity which he
+showed to the Union in this crisis. Webster
+was a high-tariff man, and was backed up by
+all the sectional antipathies of the Northeast in
+his opposition to the Nullifiers; Benton, on the
+contrary, was a believer in a low tariff, or in
+one for revenue merely, and his sectional antipathies
+were the other way. Yet, even when
+deserted by his chief, and when he was opposed
+to every senator from south of the Potomac
+and the Ohio, he did not flinch for a moment
+from his attitude of aggressive loyalty to the
+national Union. He had a singularly strong
+and upright character; this country has never
+had a statesman more fearlessly true to his convictions,
+when great questions were at stake,
+no matter what might be the cost to himself,
+or the pressure from outside,&mdash;even when, as
+happened later, his own state was against him.
+Intellectually he cannot for a moment be compared
+to the great Massachusetts senator; but
+morally he towers much higher.</p>
+
+<p>Yet, while praising Jackson and Benton for
+their behavior towards South Carolina, we cannot
+forget that but a couple of years previously
+they had not raised their voices even in the
+mildest rebuke of Georgia for conduct which,
+though not nearly so bad in degree as that of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[113]</a></span>
+South Carolina, was of much the same kind.
+Towards the close of Adams's term, Georgia
+had bid defiance to the mandates of the Supreme
+Court, and proceeded to settle the Indian
+question within her borders without regard
+to the authority of the United States, and
+these matters were still unsettled when Jackson
+became president. Unfortunately he let his
+personal feelings bias him; and, as he took the
+Western and Georgian view of the Indian question,
+and, moreover, hated the Supreme Court
+because it was largely Federalist in its composition,
+he declined to interfere. David Crockett,
+himself a Union man and a nationalist to
+the backbone, rated Jackson savagely, and with
+justice, for the inconsistency of his conduct in
+the two cases, accusing him of having, by his
+harmful leniency to Georgia, encouraged South
+Carolina to act as she did, and ridiculing him
+because, while he smiled at the deeds of the
+one state, when the like acts were done by the
+other, "he took up the rod of correction and
+shook it over her".</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[114]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_VI" id="CHAPTER_VI"></a>CHAPTER VI.</h2>
+
+<h3>JACKSON AND BENTON MAKE WAR ON THE
+BANK.</h3>
+
+
+<p>If the struggle with the Nullifiers showed
+Benton at his best, in the conflict with the
+Bank he exhibited certain qualities which
+hardly place him in so favorable a light. Jackson's
+attack upon the Bank was a move undertaken
+mainly on his own responsibility, and one
+which, at first, most of his prominent friends
+were alarmed to see him undertake. Benton
+alone supported him from the beginning. Captain
+and lieutenant alike intensely appreciated
+the joy of battle; they cared for a fight because
+it was a fight, and the certainty of a struggle,
+such as would have daunted weaker or more
+timid men, simply offered to them an additional
+inducement to follow out the course they had
+planned. Benton's thorough-going support was
+invaluable to Jackson. The president sorely
+needed a friend in the Senate who would uphold
+him through thick and thin, and who yet
+commanded the respect of all his opponents by<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[115]</a></span>
+his strength, ability, and courage. To be sure,
+Benton's knowledge of financial economics was
+not always profound; but, on the other hand, a
+thorough mastery of the laws of finance would
+have been, in this fight, a very serious disadvantage
+to any champion of Jackson.</p>
+
+<p>The rights and wrongs of this matter have
+been worn threadbare in countless discussions.
+For much of the hostility of Jackson and Benton
+towards the Bank, there were excellent
+grounds; but many of their actions were wholly
+indefensible and very harmful in their results
+to the country. An assault upon what Benton
+called "the money power" is apt to be popular
+in a democratic republic, partly on account of
+the vague fear with which the poorer and more
+ignorant voters regard a powerful institution,
+whose working they do not understand, and
+partly on account of the jealousy they feel towards
+those who are better off than themselves.
+When these feelings are appealed to by men
+who are intensely in earnest, and who are themselves
+convinced of the justice and wisdom of
+their course, they become very formidable factors
+in any political contest.</p>
+
+<p>The struggle first became important when
+the question of the re-charter of the Bank was
+raised, towards the end of Jackson's first term,
+the present charter still having three years to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[116]</a></span>
+run. This charter had in it many grave faults;
+and there might well be a question as to
+whether it should be renewed. The Bank itself,
+beyond doubt, possessed enormous power;
+too much power for its own or outsiders' good.
+Its president, Biddle, was a man of some ability,
+but conceited to the last degree, untruthful,
+and to a certain extent unscrupulous in the use
+he made of the political influence of the great
+moneyed institution over which he presided.
+Some of the financial theories on which he
+managed the Bank were wrong; yet, on the
+whole, it was well conducted, and under its care
+the monetary condition of the country was
+quiet and good, infinitely better than it had
+been before, or than, under the auspices of the
+Jacksonian Democracy, it afterwards became.</p>
+
+<p>The two great reasons for Jackson's success
+throughout his political career were to be found
+in the strength of the feeling in his favor among
+the poorer and least educated classes of voters,
+and in the ardent support given him by the low
+politicians, who, by playing on his prejudices
+and passions, moulded him to their wishes, and
+who organized and perfected in their own and
+his interests a great political machine, founded
+on the "spoils system"; and both the Jacksonian
+rank and file and the Jacksonian politicians
+soon agreed heartily in their opposition<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[117]</a></span>
+to the Bank. Jackson and Benton opposed it
+for the same reasons that the bulk of their followers
+did; that is to say, partly from honest
+and ignorant prejudice and partly from a well-founded
+feeling of distrust as to some of its actions.
+The mass of their fellow party-leaders
+and henchmen assailed it with the cry that it
+was exerting its influence to debauch politics,
+while at the same time they really sought to
+use it as a power in politics on their own side.</p>
+
+<p>Jackson, in his first annual message in 1829,
+had hinted that he was opposed to the re-charter
+of the Bank, then a question of the future
+and not to arise for four or five years. At the
+same time he had called in question the constitutionality
+and expediency of the Bank's
+existence, and had criticised as vicious its currency
+system. The matter of constitutionality
+had been already decided by the Supreme Court,
+the proper tribunal, and was, and had been for
+years, an accepted fact; it was an absurdity to
+call it in question. As regards the matter of
+expediency, certainly the Jacksonians failed
+signally to put anything better in its place.
+Yet it was undeniable that there were grave
+defects in the currency system.</p>
+
+<p>The president's message roused but little interest,
+and what little it did rouse was among
+the Bank's friends. At once these began to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[118]</a></span>
+prepare the way for the re-charter by an active
+and extensive agitation in its favor. The main
+bank was at Philadelphia, but it had branches
+everywhere, and naturally each branch bank
+was a centre of opposition to the president's
+proposed policy. As the friends of the Bank
+were greatly interested, and as the matter did
+not immediately concern those who afterwards
+became its foes, the former, for the time, had it
+all their own way, and the drift of public opinion
+seemed to be strongly in its favor.</p>
+
+<p>Benton was almost the only public man of
+prominence who tried to stem this tide from
+the beginning. Jackson's own party associates
+were originally largely against him, and so he
+stood all the more in need of the vigorous
+support which he received from the Missouri
+senator. Indeed, it would be unfair in the matter
+of the attack on the Bank to call Benton
+Jackson's follower; he might with more propriety
+be called the leader in the assault, although
+of course he could accomplish little compared
+with what was done by the great popular
+idol. He had always been hostile to the Bank,
+largely as a matter of Jeffersonian tradition,
+and he had shown his hostility by resolutions
+introduced in the Senate before Jackson was
+elected president.</p>
+
+<p>Early in 1831 he asked leave to introduce a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[119]</a></span>
+resolution against the re-charter of the Bank;
+his purpose being merely to give formal notice
+of war against it, and to attempt to stir up a
+current of feeling counter to that which then
+seemed to be generally prevailing in its favor.
+In his speech he carefully avoided laying stress
+upon any such abstract point as that of constitutionality,
+and dwelt instead upon the questions
+that would affect the popular mind; assailing
+the Bank "as having too much power
+over the people and the government, over business
+and politics, and as too much disposed to
+exercise that power to the prejudice of the freedom
+and equality which should prevail in a
+republic, to be allowed to exist in our country."
+The force of such an argument in a popular
+election will be acknowledged by all practical
+politicians. But, although Benton probably
+believed what he said, or at any rate most of
+it, he certainly ought not to have opened the
+discussion of a great financial measure with
+a demagogic appeal to caste prejudices. He
+wished to substitute a gold currency in the place
+of the existing bank-notes, and was not disturbed
+at all as to how he would supply the
+place of the Bank, saying: "I am willing to
+see the charter expire, without providing any
+substitute for the present Bank. I am willing
+to see the currency of the federal government<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[120]</a></span>
+left to the hard money mentioned and intended
+in the Constitution; ... every species of paper
+might be left to the state authorities, unrecognized
+by the federal government!" Of the
+beauties of such a system as the last the country
+later on received practical demonstration.
+Some of his utterances, however, could be commended
+to the friends of greenbacks and of dishonest
+money even at the present day, as when
+he says: "Gold and silver are the best currency
+for a republic; it suits the men of middle property
+and the working people best; and if I
+was going to establish a workingman's party it
+should be on the basis of hard money&mdash;a hard-money
+party against a paper party." The
+Bank was in Philadelphia; much of the stock
+was held in the East, and a good deal was held
+abroad, which gave Benton a chance to play on
+sectional feelings, as follows: "To whom is all
+the power granted? To a company of private
+individuals, many of them foreigners, and the
+mass of them residing in a remote and narrow
+corner of the Union, unconnected by any sympathy
+with the fertile regions of the Great Valley,
+in which the natural power of this Union&mdash;the
+power of numbers&mdash;will be found to reside
+long before the renewed term of a second
+charter would expire." Among the other sentences
+occurs the following bit of pure demagogic<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[121]</a></span>
+pyrotechnics: "It [the Bank] tends to
+aggravate the inequality of fortunes; to make
+the rich richer and the poor poorer; to multiply
+nabobs and paupers; and to deepen and
+widen the gulf which separates Dives from
+Lazarus. A great moneyed power is favorable
+to great capitalists, for it is the principle of
+money to favor money. It is unfavorable to
+small capitalists, for it is the principle of money
+to eschew the needy and unfortunate. It is injurious
+to the laboring classes." Altogether it
+was not a speech to be proud of. The Senate
+refused permission to introduce the resolution
+by the close vote of twenty-three to twenty.</p>
+
+<p>Benton lived only a generation after that one
+which had itself experienced oppression from a
+king, from an aristocratic legislature and from
+a foreign power; and so his rant about the
+undue influence of foreigners in our governmental
+affairs, and his declamation over the
+purely supposititious powers that were presumed
+to be conspiring against the welfare of the
+poorer classes probably more nearly expressed
+his real feelings than would be the case with
+the similar utterances of any leading statesman
+nowadays. He was an enthusiastic believer in
+the extreme Jeffersonian doctrinaire views as
+to the will of the majority being always right,
+and as to the moral perfection of the average<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[122]</a></span>
+voter. Like his fellow-statesmen he failed to
+see the curious absurdity of supporting black
+slavery, and yet claiming universal suffrage for
+whites as a divine right, not as a mere matter
+of expediency resulting on the whole better
+than any other method. He had not learned
+that the majority in a democracy has no more
+right to tyrannize over a minority than, under
+a different system, the latter would have to oppress
+the former; and that, if there is a moral
+principle at stake, the saying that the voice of
+the people is the voice of God may be quite as
+untrue, and do quite as much mischief, as the
+old theory of the divine right of kings. The
+distinguishing feature of our American governmental
+system is the freedom of the individual;
+it is quite as important to prevent his being
+oppressed by many men as it is to save him
+from the tyranny of one.</p>
+
+<p>This speech on the re-charter showed a great
+deal of wide reading and much information;
+but a good part of it was sheer declamation, in
+the turgid, pompous style that Benton, as well
+as a great many other American public speakers,
+was apt to mistake for genuine oratory.
+His subsequent speech on the currency, however,
+was much better. This was likewise delivered
+on the occasion of asking leave to present
+a joint resolution, which leave was refused.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[123]</a></span>
+The branch draft system was the object of the
+assault. These branch drafts were for even
+sums of small denomination, circulating like
+bank-notes; they were drawn on the parent
+bank at Philadelphia to the order of some officer
+of the branch bank and were indorsed by
+the latter to bearer. Thus paper was issued at
+one place which was payable at another and a
+distant place; and among other results there
+ensued a constant inflation of credit. They were
+very mischievous in their workings; they had
+none of the marks of convertible bank-notes or
+money, and so long as credit was active there
+could be no check on the inflation of the currency
+by them. Payment could be voluntarily
+made at the branch banks whence issued, but if
+it was refused the owner had only the right to
+go to Philadelphia and sue the directors there.
+Most of these drafts were issued at the most
+remote and inaccessible branches, the payment
+of them being, therefore, much delayed by distance
+and difficulty; nor were the directors liable
+for excessive issues. They constituted the
+bulk of all the paper seen in circulation; they
+were supposed to be equivalent to money, but
+being bills of exchange they were merely negotiable
+instruments; they did not have the properties
+of bank-notes, which are constantly and
+directly interchangeable with money. In their<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[124]</a></span>
+issue Biddle had laid himself open to attack;
+and in defending them he certainly did not
+always speak the truth, willfully concealing or
+coloring facts. Moreover, his self-satisfaction
+and the foolish pride in his own power, which
+he could not conceal, led him into making
+imprudent boasts as to the great power the
+Bank could exercise over other local banks, and
+over the general prosperity of the country, while
+dilating upon its good conduct in not using
+this power to the disadvantage of the public.
+All this was playing into Benton's hands. He
+showed some of the evils of the branch draft
+system, although apparently not seeing others
+that were quite as important. He attacked the
+Bank for some real and many imaginary wrongdoings;
+and quoted Biddle himself as an authority
+for the existence of powers dangerous to the
+welfare of the state.</p>
+
+<p>The advocates of the Bank were still in the
+majority in both houses of Congress, and soon
+began preparations for pushing through a bill
+for the re-charter. The issue began to become
+political. Webster, Clay, and most of the other
+anti-administration men were for the Bank; and
+so when the convention of the National Republicans,
+who soon afterwards definitely assumed
+the name of Whigs, took place, they declared
+heartily in its favor, and nominated for the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[125]</a></span>
+presidency its most enthusiastic supporter,
+Henry Clay. The Bank itself unquestionably
+preferred not to be dragged into politics; but
+Clay, thinking he saw a chance for a successful
+stroke, fastened upon it, and the convention
+that nominated him made the fight against
+Jackson on the ground that he was hostile to
+the Bank. Even had this not already been the
+case no more certain method of insuring his
+hostility could have been adopted.</p>
+
+<p>Still, however, many of Jackson's supporters
+were also advocates of re-charter; and the bill
+for that purpose commanded the majority in
+Congress. Benton took the lead in organizing
+the opposition, not with the hope of preventing
+its passage, but "to attack incessantly, assail at
+all points, display the evil of the institution,
+rouse the people, and prepare them to sustain
+the veto." In other words, he was preparing
+for an appeal to the people, and working to
+secure an anti-Bank majority in the next Congress.
+He instigated and prepared the investigation
+into the affairs of the Bank, which was
+made in the House, and he led the harassing parliamentary
+warfare carried on against the re-chartering
+bill in the Senate. He himself seems
+to have superintended the preparation of the
+charges which were investigated by the House.
+A great flurry was made over them, Benton and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[126]</a></span>
+all his friends claiming that they were fully
+substantiated; but the only real point scored
+was that against the branch drafts. Benton,
+with the majority of the committee of investigation,
+had the loosest ideas as to what a bank
+ought to do, loud though they were in denunciation
+of what this particular Bank was alleged
+to have done.</p>
+
+<p>Webster made the great argument in favor
+of the re-charter bill. Benton took the lead in
+opposition, stating, what was probably true,&mdash;that
+the bill was brought up so long before the
+charter expired for political reasons, and criticising
+it as premature; a criticism unfortunately
+applicable with even greater force to Jackson's
+message. His speech was largely mere talking
+against time, and he wandered widely from the
+subject. Among other things he invoked the
+aid of the principle of states'-rights, because the
+Bank then had power to establish branches in
+any state, whether the latter liked it or not, and
+free from state taxation. He also appealed to
+the Western members as such, insisting that the
+Bank discriminated against their section of the
+country in favor of the East; the facts being
+that the shrewdness and commercial morality
+of the Northeast, particularly of New England,
+saved them from the evils brought on the Westerners
+by the foolishness with which they abused<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[127]</a></span>
+their credit and the laxness with which they
+looked on monetary obligations. But in spite
+of all that Benton could do the bill passed both
+houses, the Senate voting in its favor by twenty-eight
+ayes against twenty nays.</p>
+
+<p>Jackson, who never feared anything, and was
+more than ready to accept the fight which was
+in some measure forced on him, yet which in
+some degree he had courted, promptly vetoed
+the bill in a message which stated some truths
+forcibly and fearlessly, which developed some
+very queer constitutional and financial theories,
+and which contained a number of absurdities,
+evidently put in, not for the benefit of the Senate,
+but to influence voters at the coming presidential
+election. The leaders of the opposition
+felt obliged to make a show of trying to pass
+the bill over the veto in order to get a chance
+to answer Jackson. Webster again opened the
+argument. Clay made the fiercest onslaught,
+assailing the president personally, besides attacking
+the veto power, and trying to discredit
+its use. But the presidential power of veto is
+among the best features of our government,
+and Benton had no difficulty in making a good
+defense of it; although many of the arguments
+adduced by him in its favor were entirely unsound,
+being based on the wholly groundless
+assumption that the function of the president<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[128]</a></span>
+corresponded to that of the ancient Roman
+tribune of the people, and was supposed to be
+exercised in the interests of the people to control
+the legislature&mdash;thus willfully overlooking
+the fact that the legislature also was elected
+by the people. When on his ultra-democratic
+hobby Benton always rode very loose in the
+saddle, and with little knowledge of where he
+was going. Clay and Benton alike drew all
+sorts of analogies between the state of affairs in
+the United States and that formerly prevailing
+in France, England, and above all in the much-suffering
+republics of antiquity. Benton insisted
+that the Bank had wickedly persuaded the West
+to get in debt to it so as to have that section
+in its power, and that the Western debt had
+been created with a view to political engineering;
+the fact being that the Westerners had run
+into debt purely by their own fault, and that
+the Bank itself was seriously alarmed at the
+condition of its Western branches. The currency
+being in much worse shape in the West
+than in the Northeast, gold and silver naturally
+moved towards the latter place; and this result
+of their own shortcomings was again held up as
+a grievance of the Westerners against the Bank.
+He also read a severe lecture on the interests
+of party discipline to the Democrats who had
+voted for the re-charter, assuring them that they<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[129]</a></span>
+could not continue to be both for the Bank and
+for Jackson. The Jacksonian Democracy, nominally
+the party of the multitude, was in reality
+the nearest approach the United States has ever
+seen to the "one man power;" and to break
+with Jackson was to break with the Democratic
+party. The alternative of expulsion or
+of turning a somersault being thus plainly presented
+to the recalcitrant members, they for
+the most part chose the latter, and performed
+the required feat of legislative acrobatics with
+the most unobtrusive and submissive meekness.
+The debate concluded with a sharp and undignified
+interchange of personalities between the
+Missouri and Kentucky senators, Clay giving
+Benton the lie direct, and the latter retorting
+in kind. Each side, of course, predicted the
+utter ruin of the country, if the other prevailed.
+Benton said that, if the Bank conquered, the
+result would be the establishment of an oligarchy,
+and then of a monarchy, and finally the
+death of the Republic by corruption. Webster
+stated as his belief that, if the sentiments of
+the veto message received general approbation,
+the Constitution could not possibly survive its
+fiftieth year. Webster, however, in that debate,
+showed to good advantage. Benton was no
+match for him, either as a thinker or as a
+speaker; but with the real leader of the Whig<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[130]</a></span>
+party, Henry Clay, he never had much cause
+to fear comparison.</p>
+
+<p>All the state banks were of course rabidly in
+favor of Jackson; and the presidential election
+of 1832 was largely fought on the bank issue.
+In Pennsylvania, however, the feeling for the
+Bank was only less strong than that for Jackson;
+and accordingly that B&oelig;otian community
+sapiently cast its electoral votes for the latter,
+while instructing its senators and representatives
+to support the former. But the complete
+and hopeless defeat of Clay by Jackson sealed
+the fate of the Bank. Jackson was not even
+content to let it die naturally by the lapse of
+its charter. His attitude towards it so far had
+been one for which much could be said; indeed,
+very good grounds can be shown for thinking
+his veto proper. But of the impropriety of his
+next step there could be no possible question.
+Congress had passed a resolution declaring its
+belief in the safety of the United States deposits
+in the Bank; but the president, in the summer
+of 1833, removed these deposits and placed
+them in certain state banks. He experienced
+some difficulty in getting a secretary of the
+treasury who would take such a step; finally
+he found one in Taney.</p>
+
+<p>The Bank memorialized Congress at once;
+and the anti-administration majority in the Senate<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[131]</a></span>
+forthwith took up the quarrel. They first
+rejected Jackson's nominations for bank directors,
+and then refused to confirm Taney himself.
+Two years later Jackson made the latter
+Chief Justice of the Supreme Court, in which
+position he lived to do even more mischief than
+he had time or opportunity to accomplish as
+secretary of the treasury.</p>
+
+<p>Benton was the administration champion in
+the Senate. Opposed to him were Webster and
+Clay, as leaders of the Whigs, supported for
+the time being by Calhoun. The feeling of
+Clay and Calhoun against the president was
+bitterly personal, and was repaid by his rancorous
+hatred. But Webster, though he was
+really on most questions even more antagonistic
+to the ideas of the Jacksonian school, always
+remained personally on good terms with its
+leaders.</p>
+
+<p>Clay introduced a resolution directing the
+return of the deposits; Benton opposed it; it
+passed by a vote of twenty-eight to eighteen,
+but was lost in the House. Clay then introduced
+a resolution demanding to know from the
+president whether the paper alleged to have
+been published by his authority as having been
+read to the cabinet, in relation to the removal
+of the deposits, was genuine or not; and, if it
+was, asking for a copy. Benton opposed the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[132]</a></span>
+motion, which nevertheless passed. But the
+president refused to accede to the demand.
+Meanwhile the new departure in banking, inaugurated
+by the president, was working badly.
+One of the main grounds for removing the deposits
+was the allegation that they were used
+to debauch politics. This was never proved
+against the old United States Bank; but under
+Jackson's administration, which corrupted the
+public service in every way, the deposits became
+fruitful sources of political reward and bribery.</p>
+
+<p>Clay then introduced his famous resolution
+censuring the president for his action, and supported
+it in a long and fiery speech; a speech
+which, like most of Clay's, was received by his
+followers at the time with rapture, but in which
+this generation fails to find the sign of that remarkable
+ability with which his own contemporaries
+credited the great Kentuckian. He attacked
+Jackson with fierce invective, painting
+him as an unscrupulous tyrant, who was inaugurating
+a revolution in the government of
+the Union. But he was outdone by Calhoun,
+who, with continual interludes of complacent
+references to the good already done by the
+Nullifiers, assailed Jackson as one of a band of
+artful, corrupt, and cunning politicians, and
+drew a picture even more lurid than Clay's of
+the future of the country, and the danger of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[133]</a></span>
+impending revolution. Webster's speeches were
+more self-contained in tone. Benton was the
+only Jacksonian senator who could contend with
+the great Nullifier and the two great Whigs;
+and he replied at length, and in much the same
+style as they had spoken.</p>
+
+<p>The Senate was flooded with petitions in
+favor of the Bank, which were presented with
+suitable speeches by the leading Whigs. Benton
+ridiculed the exaggerated tone of alarm in
+which these petitions were drawn, and declared
+that the panic, excitement, and suffering existing
+in business circles throughout the country
+were due to the deliberate design of the Bank,
+and afforded a fresh proof that the latter was a
+dangerous power to the state.</p>
+
+<p>The resolution of censure was at last passed
+by a vote of twenty-six to twenty, and Jackson,
+in a fury, sent in a written protest against
+it, which the Senate refused to receive. The
+excitement all over the country was intense
+throughout the struggle. The suffering, which
+was really caused by the president's act, but
+which was attributed by his supporters to the
+machinations of the Bank, was very real; even
+Benton admitted this, although contending that
+it was not a natural result of the policy pursued,
+but had been artificially excited&mdash;or, as he
+very clumsily phrased it, "though fictitious and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[134]</a></span>
+forged, yet the distress was real, and did an immensity
+of damage." Neither Jackson nor Benton
+yielded an inch to the outside pressure;
+the latter was the soul of the fight in Congress,
+making over thirty speeches during the
+struggle.</p>
+
+<p>During the debate on receiving the president's
+protest, Benton gave notice of his intention
+at an early day to move to expunge from
+the journal the resolution of censure. This
+idea was entirely his own, and he gave the
+notice without having consulted anybody. It
+was, however, a motion after Jackson's own
+heart, as the latter now began to look upon the
+affair as purely personal to himself. His party
+accepted this view of the matter with a servile
+alacrity only surpassed by the way in which its
+leaders themselves bowed down before the mob;
+and for the next two years the state elections
+were concerned purely with personal politics,
+the main point at issue in the choice for every
+United States senator being, whether he would
+or would not support Benton's expunging resolution.
+The whole affair seems to us so puerile
+that we can hardly understand the importance
+attached to it by the actors themselves. But
+the men who happened at that period to be the
+leaders in public affairs were peculiarly and
+frankly incapable of separating in their minds<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[135]</a></span>
+matters merely affecting themselves from matters
+affecting their constituents. Each firmly
+believed that if he was not the whole state, he
+was at least a most important fraction of it;
+and this was as plainly seen in Webster's colossal
+egoism and the frank vanity of Henry Clay
+as in Benton's ponderous self-consciousness and
+the all-pervading personality of Andrew Jackson.</p>
+
+<p>Some of the speeches on the expunging resolution
+show delicious, although entirely unconscious,
+humor. If there ever was a wholly
+irrational state of mind it was that in which
+the Jacksonians perpetually kept themselves.
+Every canvass on Jackson's behalf was one of
+sound, fury, and excitement, of appeal to the
+passions, prejudices, and feelings, but never the
+reason, of the people. A speech for him was
+generally a mere frantic denunciation of whatever
+and whoever was opposed to him, coupled
+with fulsome adulation of "the old hero." His
+supporters rarely indeed spoke to the cool judgment
+of the country, for the very excellent reason
+that the cool judgment of the country was
+apt to be against them. Such being the case,
+it is amusing to read in Benton's speech on receiving
+the protest the following sentences, apparently
+uttered in solemn good faith, and with
+sublime unconsciousness of irony:<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[136]</a></span>&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>To such a community [the American body politic]&mdash;in
+an appeal on a great question of constitutional
+law to the understandings of such a people&mdash;declamation,
+passion, epithets, opprobrious language,
+will stand for nothing. They will float harmless and
+unheeded through the empty air, and strike in vain
+upon the ear of a sober and dispassionate tribunal.
+Indignation, real or affected; wrath, however hot;
+fury, however enraged; asseverations, however violent;
+denunciation, however furious, will avail nothing.
+Facts, inexorable facts, are all that will be attended
+to; reason, calm and self-possessed, is all
+that will be listened to.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The description of the mass of Jacksonian
+voters as forming "a sober and dispassionate
+tribunal" is an artistic touch of fancy quite
+unique, but admirably characteristic of Benton,
+whose statements always rose vigorously to the
+necessities of the occasion.</p>
+
+<p>Webster, in an effort to make the best of untoward
+circumstances, brought in a bill to re-charter
+the Bank for a short period, at the
+same time doing away with some of the features
+that were objectionable in the old charter. This
+bill might have passed, had it not been opposed
+by the extreme Bank men, including Clay and
+Calhoun. In the course of the debate over it
+Benton delivered a very elaborate and carefully
+studied speech in favor of hard money and a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[137]</a></span>
+currency of the precious metals; a speech which
+is to this day well worth careful reading. Some
+of his financial theories were crude and confused;
+but on the main question he was perfectly
+sound. Both he and Jackson deserve
+great credit for having done much to impress
+the popular mind with the benefit of hard, that
+is to say honest, money. Benton was the strongest
+hard-money man then in public life, being,
+indeed, popularly nicknamed "Old Bullion."
+He thoroughly appreciated that a metallic currency
+was of more vital importance to the laboring
+men and to men of small capital generally
+than to any of the richer classes. A
+metallic currency is always surer and safer than
+a paper currency; where it exists a laboring
+man dependent on his wages need fear less than
+any other member of the community the evils
+of bad banking. Benton's idea of the danger
+to the masses from "the money power" was
+exaggerated; but in advocating a sound gold
+currency he took the surest way to overcome
+any possible dangerous tendency. A craze for
+"soft," or dishonest, money&mdash;a greenback
+movement, or one for short weight silver dollars&mdash;works
+more to the disadvantage of the
+whole mass of the people than even to that of
+the capitalists; it is a move directly in the interests
+of "the money power," which its loud-mouthed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[138]</a></span>
+advocates are ostensibly opposing in
+the interests of democracy.</p>
+
+<p>Benton continued his speeches. The panic
+was now subsiding; there had not been time
+for Jackson's ruinous policy of making deposits
+in numerous state banks, and thereby encouraging
+wild inflation of credit, to bear fruit and,
+as it afterwards did, involve the whole country
+in financial disaster. Therefore Benton was
+able to exult greatly over the favorable showing
+of affairs in the report of the secretary of
+the treasury. He also procured the passage of
+a gold currency law, which, however, fixed the
+ratio of value between gold and silver at sixteen
+to one; an improper proportion, but one which
+had prevailed for three centuries in the Spanish-American
+countries, from which he copied it.
+In consequence of this law gold, long banished,
+became once more a circulating medium of exchange.</p>
+
+<p>The Bank of the United States afterwards
+was turned into the State Bank of Pennsylvania;
+it was badly managed and finally became insolvent.
+The Jacksonians accepted its downfall
+as a vindication of their policy; but in reality
+it was due to causes not operative at the
+time of the great struggle between the president
+and the Senate over its continued existence.
+Certainly by no possible financial policy could<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[139]</a></span>
+it have produced such widespread ruin and distress
+as did the system introduced by Jackson.</p>
+
+<p>Long after the Bank controversy had lost all
+practical bearing it continued to be agitated by
+the chief parties to it, who still felt sore from
+the various encounters. Jackson assailed it
+again in his message; a friendly committee of
+the Senate investigated it and reported in its
+favor, besides going out of their way to rake up
+charges against Jackson and Benton. The latter
+replied in a long speech, and became involved
+in personalities with the chairman, Tyler
+of Virginia. Neither side paid attention to
+any but the partisan aspect of the question, and
+the discussions were absolutely profitless.</p>
+
+<p>The whole matter was threshed over again
+and again, long after nothing but chaff was left,
+during the debates on Benton's expunging resolution.
+Few now would defend this resolution.
+The original resolution of censure may have
+been of doubtful propriety; but it was passed,
+was entered on the record, and had become a
+part of the journal of the Senate. It would
+have been perfectly proper to pass another resolution
+condemning or reversing the original one,
+and approving the course of the president; but
+it was in the highest degree improper to set
+about what was in form falsifying the record.
+Still, Benton found plenty of precedents in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[140]</a></span>
+annals of other legislative bodies for what he
+proposed to do, and the country, as a whole,
+backed him up heartily. He was further stimulated
+by the knowledge that there was probably
+no other legislative act in which Jackson
+took such intense interest, or which could so
+gratify his pride; the mortification to Clay and
+Calhoun would be equally great. Benton's motion
+failed more than once, but the complexion
+of the Senate was rapidly changed by the various
+states substituting Democratic for Whig or
+anti-Jackson senators. Some of the changes
+were made, as in Virginia, by senators refusing
+to vote for the expunging resolution, as required
+by the state legislatures, and then resigning
+their seats, pursuant to a ridiculous theory of
+the ultra Democrats, which, if carried out, would
+completely nullify the provision for a six year's
+senatorial term. Finally, at the very close of
+Jackson's administration, Benton found himself
+with a fair majority behind him, and made the
+final move. His speech was of course mainly
+filled with a highly colored account of the blessings
+wrought for the American people by Andrew
+Jackson, and equally of course the latter
+was compared at length to a variety of ancient
+Roman worthies. The final scene in the Senate
+had an element of the comic about it. The expungers
+held a caucus and agreed to sit the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[141]</a></span>
+session out until the resolution was passed; and
+with prudent forethought Benton, well aware
+that when hungry and tired his followers might
+show less inflexibility of purpose, provided in
+an adjoining committee-room "an ample supply
+of cold hams, turkeys, rounds of beef, pickles,
+wines, and cups of hot coffee," wherewith to inspirit
+the faint-hearted.</p>
+
+<p>Fortified by the refreshments, the expungers
+won a complete victory. If the language of
+Jackson's admirers was overdrawn and strained
+to the last degree in lauding him for every virtue
+that he had or had not, it must be remembered
+that his opponents went quite as far
+wrong on the other side in their denunciations
+and extravagant prophecies of gloom. Webster
+made a very dignified and forcible speech in
+closing the argument against the resolution, but
+Calhoun and Clay were much less moderate,&mdash;the
+latter drawing a vivid picture of a rapidly
+approaching reign of lawless military violence,
+and asserting that his opponents had "extinguished
+one of the brightest and purest lights
+that ever burnt at the altar of civil liberty." As
+a proper finale Jackson, to show his appreciation,
+gave a great dinner to the expungers and
+their wives, Benton sitting at the head of the
+table. Jackson and Benton solemnly thought
+that they were taking part in a great act of justice,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[142]</a></span>
+and were amusingly unable to see the comic
+side of their acts. They probably really believed
+most of their own denunciations of the
+Bank, and very possibly thought that the wickedness
+of its followers might tempt them to do
+any desperate deed. At any rate they enjoyed
+posing alike to themselves and to the public as
+persons of antique virtue, who had risked both
+life and reputation in a hazardous but successful
+attempt to save the liberties of the people
+from the vast and hostile forces of the aristocratic
+"money power."</p>
+
+<p>The best verdict on the expunging resolution
+was given by Webster when he characterized
+the whole affair as one which, if it were not regarded
+as a ruthless violation of a sacred instrument,
+would appear to be little elevated above
+the character of a contemptible farce.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[143]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_VII" id="CHAPTER_VII"></a>CHAPTER VII.</h2>
+
+<h3>THE DISTRIBUTION OF THE SURPLUS.</h3>
+
+
+<p>Benton was supremely self-satisfied with the
+part he had played in the struggle with the
+Bank. But very few thinking men would now
+admit that his actions, as a whole, on the occasion
+in question, were to his credit, although in
+the matter of the branch drafts he was perfectly
+right, and in that of the re-charter at least
+occupied defensible ground. His general views
+on monetary matters, however, were sound,
+and on some of the financial questions that
+shortly arose he occupied a rather lonely pre-eminence
+of good sense among his fellow senators;
+such being particularly the case as regards
+the various mischievous schemes in relation to
+disposing of the public lands, and of the money
+drawn from their sale. The revenue derived
+from all sources, including these sales of public
+lands, had for some years been much in excess
+of the governmental expenses, and a surplus
+had accumulated in the treasury. This surplus
+worked more damage than any deficit would
+have done.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[144]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>There were gold mines in the Southern States,
+which had been growing more and more productive;
+and, as the cost of freighting the bullion
+was excessive, a bill was introduced to
+establish branch mints at New Orleans and in
+the gold regions of Georgia and North Carolina.
+Benton advocated this strongly, as a constitutional
+right of the South and West, and as
+greatly in the interest of those two sections;
+and also as being another move in favor of a
+hard-money currency as opposed to one of paper.
+There was strong opposition to the bill;
+many of the Whigs having been carried so far
+by their heated devotion to the United States
+Bank in its quarrel that they had become paper-money
+men. But the vote was neither sectional
+nor partisan in its character. Clay led the opposition,
+while Webster supported Benton.</p>
+
+<p>Before this time propositions to distribute
+among the states the revenue from the public
+lands had become common; and they were succeeded
+by propositions to distribute the lands
+themselves, and then by others to distribute all
+the surplus revenue. Calhoun finally introduced
+an amendment to the Constitution to enable the
+surplus in the treasury during the next eight
+years to be distributed among the various states;
+the estimate being that for the time mentioned
+there would be about nine millions surplus annually.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[145]</a></span>
+Benton attacked the proposal very
+ably, showing the viciousness of a scheme which
+would degrade every state government into the
+position of a mendicant, and would allow money
+to be collected from the citizens with one hand
+in order to be given back to them with the
+other; and also denying that the surplus would
+reach anything like the dimensions indicated.
+He ridiculed the idea of making a constitutional
+amendment to cover so short a period of time;
+and stated that he would greatly prefer to see
+the price paid for public lands by incoming
+settlers reduced, and what surplus there was
+expended on strengthening the defenses of the
+United States against foreign powers. This
+last proposition was eminently proper. We
+were then, as always, in our chronic state of
+utter defenselessness against any hostile attack,
+and yet were in imminent danger of getting embroiled
+with at least one great power&mdash;France.
+Our danger is always that we shall spend too
+little, and not too much, in keeping ourselves
+prepared for foreign war. Calhoun's resolution
+was a total failure, and was never even brought
+to a vote.</p>
+
+<p>Benton's proposed method of using the surplus
+came in with peculiar propriety on account
+of the conduct of the Whigs and Nullifiers in
+joining to oppose the appropriation of three millions<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[146]</a></span>
+of dollars for purposes of defense, which
+was provided for in the general fortification
+bill. The House passed this bill by a great majority.
+It was eminently proper that we should
+at once take steps to provide for the very possible
+contingency of a war with France, as the
+relations with that power were growing more
+threatening every day; but the opposition of
+the anti-Jackson men to the administration and
+to all its measures had become so embittered
+that they were willing to run the risk of seriously
+damaging the national credit and honor,
+if they could thereby score a point against their
+political adversaries. Accordingly, under the
+lead of Webster, Clay, and Calhoun, they defeated
+the bill in the Senate, in spite of all that
+could be done to save it by Benton, who, whatever
+his faults, was always patriotic. The appropriation
+had been very irregular in form,
+and under ordinary circumstances there would
+have been good justification for inquiring into
+it before permitting its passage; but under the
+circumstances its defeat at the moment was
+most unfortunate. For the president had been
+pressing France, even to the point of tolerably
+plain threats, in order to induce or compel her
+to fulfill the conditions of the recent treaty by
+which she had bound herself to pay a considerable
+indemnity, long owing by her to the United<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[147]</a></span>
+States for depredations on our commerce. Now
+she menaced war, avowedly on the ground that
+we were unprepared to resist her; and this vote
+in the Senate naturally led the French government
+to suppose that Jackson was not sustained
+by the country in the vigorous position which
+he had assumed. In speaking on the message
+of the president which alluded to this state of
+affairs, Benton strongly advocated our standing
+firmly for our rights, making a good speech,
+which showed much historical learning. He
+severely reproached the anti-administration senators
+for their previous conduct in causing the
+loss of the defense appropriation bill, and for
+preferring to do worse than waste the surplus
+by distributing it among the different states instead
+of applying it according to the provisions
+of that wise measure.</p>
+
+<p>This brought on a bitter wrangle, in which
+Benton certainly had the best of it. Calhoun
+was in favor of humiliating non-resistance; he
+never advocated warlike measures when the
+dignity of the nation was at stake, fond though
+he was of threatening violence on behalf of
+slavery or that form of secession known as
+nullification. Benton quoted from speeches in
+the French Chamber of Deputies to show that
+the French were encouraged to take the position
+that they did on account of the action of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[148]</a></span>
+the Senate, and the disposition shown by a
+majority among the senators rather to pull
+down the president in a party struggle than
+to uphold him in his efforts to save the national
+honor in a contest with France. A curious
+feature of his speech was that in which
+he warned the latter power that, in the event
+of a conflict, it would have to do with a branch
+of the same race which, "from the days of
+Agincourt and Crecy, of Blenheim and Ramillies,
+down to the days of Salamanca and Waterloo,
+has always known perfectly well how
+to deal with the impetuous and fiery courage
+of the French." This sudden out-cropping of
+what, in Bentonian English, might be called
+Pan-Anglo-Saxon sentiment was all the more
+surprising inasmuch as both Benton himself
+and the party to which he belonged were
+strongly anti-English in their way of looking
+at our foreign policy, at least so far as North
+America was concerned. In the end France
+yielded, though trying to maintain her dignity
+by stating that she had not done so, and the
+United States received what was due them.</p>
+
+<p>Benton strongly opposed the payment by the
+United States of the private claims of its citizens
+for damages arising from the French spoliations
+at the end of the last century. He
+pointed out that the effort to pay such claims,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[149]</a></span>
+scores of years after the time of their accruing,
+rarely benefits any of the parties originally
+in interest, and can only do real service
+to dishonest speculators. His speech on this
+matter would not be bad reading for some of
+the pension-jobbing congressmen of the present
+day, and their supporters; but as concerned
+these French claims he could have been easily
+answered.</p>
+
+<p>In the controversy over the bill introduced
+by Clay, to distribute the revenue derived from
+the public lands among the states for the next
+five years, Benton showed to great advantage
+compared both to the introducer of the bill himself,
+and to Webster, his supporter. He had
+all along taken the view of the land question
+that would be natural to a far-seeing Western
+statesman desirous of encouraging immigration.
+He wished the public lands to be sold in small
+parcels to actual settlers, at prices that would
+allow any poor man who was thrifty to take up
+a claim. He had already introduced a bill to
+sell them at graduated prices, the minimum
+being established at a dollar and twenty-five
+cents an acre; but if land remained unsold at
+this rate for three years it was then to be sold
+for what it would bring in the market. This
+bill passed the Senate, but failed in the House.</p>
+
+<p>In opposing Clay's distribution scheme Benton<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[150]</a></span>
+again brought forward his plan of using the
+surplus to provide for the national defenses;
+and in his speech showed the strongly national
+turn of his mind, saying:&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>In this great system of national defense the whole
+Union is equally interested; for the country, in all
+that concerns its defenses, is but a unit, and every
+section is interested in the defense of every other section,
+and every individual citizen is interested in the
+defense of the whole population. It is in vain to say
+that the navy is on the sea, and the fortifications on
+the sea-board, and that the citizens in the interior
+states, or in the valley of the Mississippi, have no
+interest in these remote defenses. Such an idea is
+mistaken and delusive; the inhabitant of Missouri or
+of Indiana has a direct interest in keeping open the
+mouths of the rivers, defending the sea-port towns,
+and preserving a naval force that will protect the produce
+of his labor in crossing the ocean and arriving
+safely in foreign markets.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Benton's patriotism always included the
+whole country in spite of the strength of his
+local sympathies.</p>
+
+<p>The bill passed the Senate by a rather close
+vote, and went to the House, where it soon become
+evident that it was doomed to failure.
+There was another bill, practically of much the
+same import, before the Senate, providing for
+the distribution of the surplus among the states<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[151]</a></span>
+in proportion to their electoral votes, but omitting
+the excellent proviso concerning the defenses.
+To suit the views of Calhoun and the
+sticklers for strict construction generally, the
+form of this rival bill was changed, so that
+the "distribution" purported to be a "deposit"
+merely; the money being nominally only loaned
+to the states, who pledged their faith to return
+it when Congress should call for it. As it was
+of course evident that such a loan would never
+be repaid, the substitution of "deposit" for
+"distribution" can only be regarded as a verbal
+change to give the doctrinaires a loop-hole
+for escape from their previous position; they
+all took advantage of it, and the bill received
+overwhelming support, and was passed by both
+houses.</p>
+
+<p>Benton, however, stood out against it to the
+last, and in a very powerful speech foretold the
+evils which the plan would surely work. He
+scornfully exposed the way in which some of
+the members were trying, by a trick of wording,
+to hide the nature of the bill they were
+enacting into a law, and thus to seem to justify
+themselves for the support they were giving it.
+"It is in name a deposit; in form, a loan; in
+essence and design, a distribution," said Benton.
+He ridiculed the attitude of the hair-splitting
+strict constructionists, like Calhoun, who had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[152]</a></span>
+always pretended most scrupulously to respect
+the exact wording of the Constitution, and who
+had previously refused to vote for distribution
+on the ground that it was unconstitutional:&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>At the commencement of the present session a
+proposition was made [by Calhoun] to amend the
+Constitution, to permit this identical distribution to be
+made. That proposition is now upon our calendar,
+for the action of Congress. All at once it is discovered
+that a change of name will do as well as a
+change of the Constitution. Strike out the word
+"distribute" and insert the word "deposit," and incontinently
+the impediment is removed; the constitutional
+difficulty is surmounted, and the distribution
+can be made.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>He showed that to the states themselves the
+moneys distributed would either be useless, or
+else&mdash;and much more probably&mdash;they would be
+fruitful sources of corruption and political debauchery.
+He was quite right. It would have
+been very much better to have destroyed the
+surplus than to have distributed it as was actually
+done. None of the states gained any real
+benefit by the transaction; most were seriously
+harmed. At the best, the money was squandered
+in the rage for public improvements that
+then possessed the whole people; often it was
+stolen outright, or never accounted for. In
+the one case, it was an incentive to extravagance;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[153]</a></span>
+in the other, it was a corruption fund.
+Yet the popular feeling was strongly in favor
+of the measure at the time, and Benton was
+almost the only public man of note who dared
+to resist it. On this occasion, as in the closing
+act of the struggle with the Nullifiers, he
+showed more backbone than did his great
+chief; for Jackson signed the bill, although
+criticising it most forcibly and pungently.</p>
+
+<p>The success of this measure naturally encouraged
+the presentation of others. Clay attempted
+to revive his land-money distribution bill, but
+was defeated, mainly through Benton's efforts.
+Three or four other similar schemes, including
+one of Calhoun's, also failed. Finally a clause
+providing for a further "deposit" of surplus
+moneys with the states was tacked to a bill appropriating
+money for defenses, thereby loading
+it down so that it was eventually lost. In the
+Senate the "deposit" amendment was finally
+struck out, in spite of the opposition of Clay,
+Calhoun, and Webster. Throughout the whole
+discussion of the distribution of the surplus
+Benton certainly shines by comparison with
+any one of his three great senatorial rivals.</p>
+
+<p>He shows to equally great advantage compared
+to them in the part taken by him in reference
+to Jackson's so-called specie circulars.
+The craze for speculation had affected the sales<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[154]</a></span>
+of public lands, which were increasing at an
+extraordinary rate, nearly twenty-five million
+dollars' worth being sold in 1836. As a rule,
+the payments were made in the notes of irresponsible
+banks, gotten up in many cases by the
+land speculators themselves. The sales were
+running up to five millions a month, with prospect
+of a boundless increase, so that all the public
+land bade fair to be converted into inconvertible
+paper. Benton had foreseen the evil results
+attending such a change, and, though well
+aware that he was opposing powerful interests
+in his own section of the country, had already
+tried to put a stop to it by law. In his speech
+he had stated that the unprecedented increase
+in the sale of public lands was due to the
+accommodations received by speculators from
+worthless banks, whose notes in small denominations
+would be taken to some distant part of
+the country, whence it would be a long time
+before they were returned and presented for
+payment. The speculators, with paper of which
+the real value was much below par, could outbid
+settlers and cultivators who could only
+offer specie, or notes that were its equivalent.
+He went on to say that "the effect was equally
+injurious to every interest concerned&mdash;except
+the banks and the speculators: it was injurious
+to the treasury, which was filling up with paper;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[155]</a></span>
+to the new states, which were flooded with
+paper; and to settlers and cultivators, who were
+outbid by speculators loaded with this borrowed
+paper. A return to specie payments for
+lands was the remedy for all these evils."</p>
+
+<p>Benton's reasoning was perfectly sound. The
+effects on settlers, on the new states, and on
+the government itself were precisely such as he
+described, and the proposed remedy was the
+right one. But his bill failed; for the Whigs,
+including even Webster, had by this time
+worked themselves up until they were fairly
+crazy at the mere mention of paper-money
+banks.</p>
+
+<p>Jackson, however, not daunted by the fate of
+the bill, got Benton to draw up a treasury order,
+and had it issued. This served the same purpose,
+as it forbade the land-offices to receive
+anything but gold and silver in payment for
+land. It was not issued until Congress had adjourned,
+for fear that body might counteract it
+by a law; and this was precisely what was
+attempted at the next session, when a joint
+resolution was passed rescinding the order, and
+practically endeavoring to impose the worthless
+paper currency of the states upon the federal
+government. Benton stood almost alone in the
+fight he made against this resolution, although
+the right of the matter was so plainly on his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[156]</a></span>
+side. In his speech he foretold clearly the
+coming of the great financial crisis that was
+then near at hand. The resolution, however,
+amounted to nothing, as it turned out, for it
+was passed so late in the session that the president,
+by simply withholding his signature from
+it, was enabled to prevent it from having effect.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[157]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_VIII" id="CHAPTER_VIII"></a>CHAPTER VIII.</h2>
+
+<h3>THE SLAVE QUESTION APPEARS IN POLITICS.</h3>
+
+
+<p>Towards the close of Jackson's administration,
+slavery for the first time made its permanent
+appearance in national politics; although
+for some years yet it had little or no influence
+in shaping the course of political movements.
+In 1833 the abolition societies of the North
+came into prominence; they had been started a
+couple of years previously.</p>
+
+<p>Black slavery was such a grossly anachronistic
+and un-American form of evil, that it is difficult
+to discuss calmly the efforts to abolish it, and
+to remember that many of these efforts were
+calculated to do, and actually did, more harm
+than good. We are also very apt to forget that
+it was perfectly possible and reasonable for enlightened
+and virtuous men, who fully recognized
+it as an evil, yet to prefer its continuance
+to having it interfered with in a way that would
+produce even worse results. Black slavery in
+Hayti was characterized by worse abuse than
+ever was the case in the United States; yet,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[158]</a></span>
+looking at the condition of that republic now,
+it may well be questioned whether it would not
+have been greatly to her benefit in the end to
+have had slavery continue a century or so
+longer,&mdash;its ultimate extinction being certain,&mdash;rather
+than to have had her attain freedom
+as she actually did, with the results that have
+flowed from her action. When an evil of colossal
+size exists, it is often the case that there is
+no possible way of dealing with it that will not
+itself be fraught with baleful results. Nor can
+the ultra-philanthropic method be always, or
+even often, accepted as the best. If there is one
+question upon which the philanthropists of
+the present day, especially the more emotional
+ones, are agreed, it is that any law restricting
+Chinese immigration is an outrage; yet it seems
+incredible that any man of even moderate intelligence
+should not see that no greater calamity
+could now befall the United States than to have
+the Pacific slope fill up with a Mongolian population.</p>
+
+<p>The cause of the Abolitionists has had such a
+halo shed round it by the after course of events,
+which they themselves in reality did very little
+to shape, that it has been usual to speak of
+them with absurdly exaggerated praise. Their
+courage, and for the most part their sincerity,
+cannot be too highly spoken of, but their share<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[159]</a></span>
+in abolishing slavery was far less than has commonly
+been represented; any single non-abolitionist
+politician, like Lincoln or Seward, did
+more than all the professional Abolitionists combined
+really to bring about its destruction. The
+abolition societies were only in a very restricted
+degree the causes of the growing feeling in the
+North against slavery; they are rather to be regarded
+as themselves manifestations or accompaniments
+of that feeling. The anti-slavery outburst
+in the Northern States over the admission
+of Missouri took place a dozen years before
+there was an abolition society in existence; and
+the influence of the professional abolitionists
+upon the growth of the anti-slavery sentiment
+as often as not merely warped it and twisted it
+out of proper shape,&mdash;as when at one time they
+showed a strong inclination to adopt disunion
+views, although it was self-evident that by no
+possibility could slavery be abolished unless the
+Union was preserved. Their tendency towards
+impracticable methods was well shown in the
+position they assumed towards him who was
+not only the greatest American, but also the
+greatest man, of the nineteenth century; for during
+all the terrible four years that sad, strong,
+patient Lincoln worked and suffered for the
+people, he had to dread the influence of the extreme
+Abolitionists only less than that of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[160]</a></span>
+Copperheads. Many of their leaders possessed
+no good qualities beyond their fearlessness and
+truth&mdash;qualities that were also possessed by
+the Southern fire-eaters. They belonged to
+that class of men that is always engaged in
+some agitation or other; only it happened that
+in this particular agitation they were right.
+Wendell Phillips may be taken as a very good
+type of the whole. His services against slavery
+prior to the war should always be remembered
+with gratitude; but after the war, and until
+the day of his death, his position on almost
+every public question was either mischievous or
+ridiculous, and usually both.</p>
+
+<p>When the abolitionist movement started it
+was avowedly designed to be cosmopolitan in
+character; the originators looked down upon
+any merely national or patriotic feeling. This
+again deservedly took away from their influence.
+In fact, it would have been most unfortunate
+had the majority of the Northerners
+been from the beginning in hearty accord with
+the Abolitionists; at the best it would have resulted
+at that time in the disruption of the
+Union and the perpetuation of slavery in the
+South.</p>
+
+<p>But after all is said, the fact remains, that on
+the main issue the Abolitionists were at least
+working in the right direction. Sooner or later,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[161]</a></span>
+by one means or another, slavery had to go.
+It is beyond doubt a misfortune that in certain
+districts the bulk of the population should
+be composed of densely ignorant negroes, often
+criminal or vicious in their instincts; but such
+is the case, and the best, and indeed the only
+proper course to pursue, is to treat them with
+precisely the same justice that is meted out to
+whites. The effort to do so in time immediately
+past has not resulted so successfully as
+was hoped and expected; but nevertheless no
+other way would have worked as well.</p>
+
+<p>Slavery was chiefly responsible for the streak
+of coarse and brutal barbarism which ran
+through the Southern character, and which
+marked the ferocious outcry instantly raised
+by the whole Southern press against the Abolitionists.
+There had been an abortive negro
+rising in Virginia almost at the same time that
+the abolitionist movement first came into prominence;
+and this fact added to the rage and terror
+with which the South regarded the latter.
+The clamor against the North was deafening;
+and though it soon subsided for the time being,
+it never afterwards entirely died away. As
+has been shown already, there had always been
+a strong separatist feeling in the South; but
+hitherto its manifestations had been local and
+sporadic, never affecting all the states at the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[162]</a></span>
+same time; for it had never happened that the
+cause which called forth any particular manifestation
+was one bearing on the whole South
+alike. The alien and sedition laws were more
+fiercely resented in Virginia and Kentucky than
+in South Carolina; the tariff, which so angered
+the latter, pleased Louisiana; and Georgia and
+Alabama alone were affected by the presence
+of great Indian communities within their borders.
+But slavery was an interest common to
+the whole South. When it was felt to be in any
+way menaced, all Southerners came together
+for its protection; and, from the time of the
+rise of the Abolitionists onward, the separatist
+movement throughout the South began to identify
+itself with the maintenance of slavery,
+and gradually to develop greater and greater
+strength. Its growth was furthered and hastened
+by the actions of the more ambitious and
+unscrupulous of the Southern politicians, who
+saw that it offered a chance for them to push
+themselves forward, and who were perfectly
+willing to wreak almost irreparable harm to
+the nation if by so doing they could advance
+their own selfish interests. It was in reference
+to these politicians that Benton quoted with
+approval a letter from ex-President Madison,
+which ran:<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[163]</a></span>&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>The danger is not to be concealed, that the sympathy
+arising from known causes, and the inculcated
+impression of a permanent incompatibility of interests
+between the South and the North may put it in
+the power of popular leaders, aspiring to the highest
+stations, to unite the South, on some critical occasion,
+in a course that will end by creating a new theatre
+of great, though inferior, interest. In pursuing this
+course the first and most obvious step is nullification,
+the next secession, and the last a farewell separation.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>This was a pretty good forecast of the crisis
+that was precipitated by the greedy and reckless
+ambition of the secessionist leaders in 1860.
+The moral difference between Benedict Arnold
+on the one hand, and Aaron Burr or Jefferson
+Davis on the other, is precisely the difference
+that obtains between a politician who sells his
+vote for money and one who supports a bad
+measure in consideration of being given some
+high political position.</p>
+
+<p>The Abolitionists immediately contrived to
+bring themselves before the notice of Congress
+in two ways; by the presentation of petitions
+for the abolition of slavery in the District of
+Columbia, and by sending out to the Southern
+States a shoal of abolition pamphlets, newspapers,
+and rather ridiculous illustrated cuts.
+What the precise point of the last proceeding
+was no one can tell; the circulation of such<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[164]</a></span>
+writings as theirs in the South could not possibly
+serve any good purpose. But they had a
+right to send what they wished, and the conduct
+of many of the Southerners in trying to get a
+federal law passed to prohibit their writings
+from being carried in the mail was as wrong as
+it was foolish; while the brutal clamor raised
+in the South against the whole North as well
+as against the Abolitionists, and the conduct
+of certain Southern legislatures in practically
+setting prices on the heads of the leaders in
+the objectionable movement, in turn angered
+the North and gave the Abolitionists ten-fold
+greater strength than they would otherwise
+have had.</p>
+
+<p>The question first arose upon the presentation
+of a perfectly proper and respectful petition
+sent to the Senate by a society of Pennsylvania
+Quakers, and praying for the abolition of slavery
+in the District of Columbia. The District was
+solely under the control of Congress, and was
+the property of the nation at large, so that Congress
+was the proper and the only body to which
+any petition concerning the affairs of the District
+could be sent; and if the right of petition
+meant anything, it certainly meant that the
+people, or any portion thereof, should have the
+right to petition their representatives in regard
+to their own affairs. Yet certain Southern extremists,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[165]</a></span>
+under the lead of Calhoun, were anxious
+to refuse to receive the paper. Benton
+voted in favor of receiving it, and was followed
+in his action by a number of other Southern
+senators. He spoke at length on the subject,
+and quite moderately, even crediting the petitioners,
+or many of them, with being "good people,
+aiming at benevolent objects, and endeavoring
+to ameliorate the condition of one part of
+the human race, without inflicting calamities on
+another part," which was going very far indeed
+for a slave-holding senator of that time. He
+was of course totally opposed to abolition and
+the Abolitionists, and showed that the only immediate
+effect of the movement had been to
+make the lot of the slaves still worse, and for the
+moment to do away with any chance of intelligently
+discussing the question of emancipation.
+For, like many other Southerners, he fondly
+cherished the idea of gradual peaceful emancipation,&mdash;an
+idea which the course of events
+made wholly visionary, but which, under the
+circumstances, might well have been realized.
+He proceeded to give most questionable praise
+to the North for some acts as outrageous and
+disgraceful as were ever perpetrated by its citizens,
+stating that&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>Their conduct was above all praise, above all
+thanks, above all gratitude. They had chased off the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[166]</a></span>
+foreign emissaries, silenced the gabbling tongues of
+female dupes, and dispersed the assemblages, whether
+fanatical, visionary, or incendiary, of all that congregated
+to preach against evils that affected others, not
+themselves; and to propose remedies to aggravate the
+disease which they had pretended to cure. They
+had acted with a noble spirit. They had exerted a
+vigor beyond all law. They had obeyed the enactments,
+not of the statute-book, but of the heart.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>These fervent encomiums were fully warranted
+by the acts of various Northern mobs, that had
+maltreated abolitionist speakers, broken up
+anti-slavery meetings, and committed numerous
+other deeds of lawless violence. But however
+flattered the Northerners of that generation
+may have been, in feeling that they thoroughly
+deserved Benton's eulogy, it is doubtful if their
+descendants will take quite the same pride in
+looking back to it. An amusing incident of the
+debate was Calhoun's attack upon one of the
+most subservient allies the South ever had in
+the Northern States; he caused to be sent up
+to the desk and read an abolition paper published
+in New Hampshire, which contained a
+bitter assault upon Franklin Pierce, then a
+member of Congress. Nominally he took this
+course to show that there was much greater
+strength in the abolition movement, and therefore
+much greater danger to the South, than the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[167]</a></span>
+Northern senators were willing to admit; in reality
+he seems to have acted partly from wanton
+malice, partly from overbearing contempt for
+the truckling allies and apologists of slavery in
+the North, and partly from a desire not to see
+the discussion die out, but rather, in spite of his
+continual profession to the contrary, to see it
+maintained as a standing subject of irritation.
+He wished to refuse to receive the petitions, on
+the ground that they touched a subject that
+ought not even to be discussed; yet he must
+have known well that he was acting in the very
+way most fitted to give rise to discussion,&mdash;a
+fact that was pointed out to him by Benton, in
+a caustic speech. He also took the ground that
+the question of emancipation affected the states
+exclusively, and that Congress had no more jurisdiction
+over the subject in the District of
+Columbia than she had in the State of North
+Carolina. This precious contribution to the
+true interpretation of the Constitution was so
+farcically and palpably false that it is incredible
+that he should himself have believed what
+he was saying. He was still smarting from the
+nullification controversy; he had seceded from
+his party, and was sore with disappointed ambition;
+and it seems very improbable that he
+was honest in his professions of regret at seeing
+questions come up which would disturb<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[168]</a></span>
+the Union. On the contrary, much of the opposition
+he was continually making to supposititious
+federal and Northern encroachments on
+the rights of the South must have been merely
+factious, and it seems likely that, partly from a
+feeling of revenge and partly with the hope of
+gratifying his ambition, he was anxious to do
+all he could to work the South up to the highest
+pitch of irritation, and keep her there until
+there was a dissolution of the Union. Benton
+evidently thought that this was the case; and
+in reading the constant threats of nullification
+and secession which run through all Calhoun's
+speeches, and the innumerable references he
+makes to the alleged fact that he had come off
+victorious in his treasonable struggle over the
+tariff in 1833, it is difficult not to accept Benton's
+view of the matter. He always spoke of
+Calhoun with extreme aversion, and there were
+probably moments when he was inclined heartily
+to sympathize with Jackson's death-bed regret
+that he had not hung the South Carolina Nullifier.
+Doubtless in private life, or as regards
+any financial matters, Calhoun's conduct was
+always blameless; but it may well be that he
+has received far more credit for purity of motive
+in his public conduct than his actions fairly entitle
+him to.</p>
+
+<p>Calhoun was also greatly exercised over the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[169]</a></span>
+circulation of abolition documents in the South.
+At his request a committee of five was appointed
+to draft a bill on the subject; he was
+chairman, and three of the other four members
+were from the Slave States; yet his report was
+so extreme that only one of the latter would
+sign it with him. He introduced into it a long
+argument to the effect that the Constitution
+was a mere compact between sovereign states,
+and inferentially that nullification and secession
+were justifiable and constitutional; and then
+drew a vivid picture of the unspeakable horrors
+with which, as he contended, the action of the
+Northern Abolitionists menaced the South. The
+bill subjected to penalties any postmaster who
+should knowingly receive and put into the mail
+any publication touching slavery, to go into
+any state which had forbidden by law the circulation
+of such a publication. In discussing
+this bill he asserted that Congress, in refusing
+to pass it, would be coöperating with the Abolitionists;
+and then he went on to threaten as
+usual that in such case nullification or secession
+would become necessary. Benton had become
+pretty well tired of these threats, his attachment
+to the Union even exceeding his dislike
+to seeing slavery meddled with; and he headed
+the list of half a dozen Southern senators who
+joined with the bulk of the Northerners in defeating<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[170]</a></span>
+the bill, which was lost by a vote of
+twenty-five to nineteen. A few of the Northern
+"dough-faces" voted with Calhoun. There
+is a painfully striking contrast between the
+courage shown by Benton, a slave-holder with
+a slave-holding constituency, in opposing this
+bill, and the obsequious subserviency to the extreme
+Southern feeling shown on the same occasion
+by Wright, Van Buren, and Buchanan&mdash;fit
+representatives of the sordid and odious
+political organizations of New York and Pennsylvania.</p>
+
+<p>Several other questions came up towards the
+end of Jackson's administration which were
+more or less remotely affected by the feeling
+about slavery. Benton succeeded in getting a
+bill through to extend the boundaries of the
+State of Missouri so as to take in territory lying
+northwest of her previous limit, the Indian
+title to which was extinguished by treaty. This
+annexed land lay north of the boundary for
+slave territory established by the Missouri Compromise;
+but Benton experienced no difficulty
+in getting his bill through. It was not, however,
+in the least a move designed in the interests
+of the slave power. Missouri's feeling was
+precisely that which would actuate Oregon or
+Washington Territory to-day, if either wished
+to annex part of Northern Idaho.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[171]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The territories of Arkansas and Michigan had
+applied for admission into the Union as states;
+and as one would be a free and the other a slave
+state, it was deemed proper that they should
+come in together. Benton himself urged the
+admission of the free state of Michigan, while
+the interests of Arkansas were confided to
+Buchanan of Pennsylvania. The slavery question
+entered but little into the matter; although
+some objections were raised on that score, as
+well as on account of the irregular manner in
+which the would-be states had acted in preparing
+for admission. The real ground of opposition
+to the admission of the two new states was
+political, as it was known that they could both
+be relied upon for Democratic majorities at
+the approaching presidential election. Many
+Whigs, therefore, both from the North and the
+South, opposed it.</p>
+
+<p>The final removal of the Cherokees from
+Georgia and Alabama was brought about in
+1836 by means of a treaty with those Indians.
+Largely through the instrumentality of Benton,
+and in spite of the opposition of Clay, Calhoun,
+and Webster, this instrument was ratified in the
+Senate by the close vote of thirty-one to fifteen.
+Although new slave territory was thus acquired,
+the vote on the treaty was factional and not
+sectional, being equally divided between the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[172]</a></span>
+Northern and the Southern States, Calhoun
+and six other Southern senators opposing it,
+chiefly from hostility to the administration.
+The removal of the Indians was probably a necessity;
+undoubtedly it worked hardship in individual
+instances, but on the whole it did not
+in the least retard the civilization of the tribe,
+which was fully paid for its losses; and moreover,
+in its new home, continued to make progress
+in every way until it became involved in
+the great civil war, and received a setback from
+which it has not yet recovered. These Cherokees
+were almost the last Indians left in any
+number east of the Mississippi, and their removal
+solved the Indian problem so far as the
+old states were concerned.</p>
+
+<p>Later on Benton went to some trouble to
+disprove the common statement that we have
+robbed the original Indian occupants of their
+lands. He showed by actual statistics that up
+to 1840 we had paid to the Indians eighty-five
+millions of dollars for land purchases, which
+was over five times as much as the United
+States gave the great Napoleon for Louisiana;
+and about three times as much as we paid
+France, Spain, and Mexico together for the
+purchase of Louisiana, Florida, and California;
+while the amount of land received in return
+would not equal any one of these purchases,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[173]</a></span>
+and was but a fractional part of Louisiana or
+California. We paid the Cherokees for their
+territory exactly as much as we paid the French,
+at the height of their power, for Louisiana;
+while as to the Creek and Choctaw nations, we
+paid each more for their lands than we paid for
+Louisiana and Florida combined. The dealings
+of the government with the Indian have often
+been unwise, and sometimes unjust; but they
+are very far indeed from being so black as is
+commonly represented, especially when the tremendous
+difficulties of the case are taken into
+account.</p>
+
+<p>Far more important than any of these matters
+was the acknowledgment of the independence
+of Texas; and in this, as well as in the
+troubles with Mexico which sprang from it,
+slavery again played a prominent part, although
+not nearly so important at first as has commonly
+been represented. Doubtless the slave-holders
+worked hard to secure additional territory
+out of which to form new slave states; but
+Texas and California would have been in the
+end taken by us, had there not been a single
+slave in the Mississippi valley. The greed for
+the conquest of new lands which characterized
+the Western people had nothing whatever to do
+with the fact that some of them owned slaves.
+Long before there had been so much as the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[174]</a></span>
+faintest foreshadowing of the importance which
+the slavery question was to assume, the West
+had been eagerly pressing on to territorial conquest,
+and had been chafing and fretting at the
+restraint put upon it, and at the limits set to
+its strivings by the treaties established with
+foreign powers. The first settlers beyond the
+Alleghanies, and their immediate successors,
+who moved down along the banks of the Ohio,
+the Cumberland, and the Tennessee, and thence
+out to the Mississippi itself, were not generally
+slave-holders; but they were all as anxious to
+wrest the Mississippi valley from the control of
+the French as their descendants were to overrun
+the Spanish lands lying along the Rio Grande.
+In other words, slavery had very little to do
+with the Western aggressions on Mexican territory,
+however it might influence the views of
+Southern statesmen as to lending support to
+the Western schemes.</p>
+
+<p>The territorial boundaries of all the great
+powers originally claiming the soil of the West&mdash;France,
+Spain, and the United States&mdash;were
+very ill-defined, there being no actual possession
+of the lands in dispute, and each power making
+a great showing on its own map. If the extreme
+views of any one were admitted, its adversary,
+for the time being, would have had nothing.
+Thus before the treaty of 1819 with Spain<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[175]</a></span>
+our nominal boundaries and those of the latter
+power in the West overlapped each other; and
+the extreme Western men persisted in saying
+that we had given up some of the territory
+which belonged to us because we had consented
+to adopt a middle line of division, and had not
+insisted upon being allowed the full extent of
+our claims. Benton always took this view of
+it, insisting that we had given up our rights
+by the adoption of this treaty. Many Southerners
+improved on this idea, and spoke of the
+desirability of "re-annexing" the territory we
+had surrendered,&mdash;endeavoring by the use of
+this very inappropriate word to give a color of
+right to their proceedings. As a matter of fact
+it was inevitable, as well as in the highest degree
+desirable for the good of humanity at large,
+that the American people should ultimately
+crowd out the Mexicans from their sparsely populated
+Northern provinces. But it was quite
+as desirable that this should not be done in the
+interests of slavery.</p>
+
+<p>American settlers had begun to press into the
+outlying Spanish province of Texas before the
+treaty of 1819 was ratified. Their numbers
+went on increasing, and at first the Mexican
+government, having achieved independence of
+Spain, encouraged their incoming. But it soon
+saw that their presence boded danger, and forbade<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[176]</a></span>
+further immigration; without effect, however,
+as the settlers and adventurers came
+thronging in as fast as ever. The Americans
+had brought their slaves with them, and when
+the Mexican government issued a decree liberating
+all slaves, they refused to be bound by it;
+and this decree was among the reasons alleged
+for their revolt. It has been represented as the
+chief if not the sole cause of the rebellion; but in
+reality it was not the cause at all; it was merely
+one of the occasions. Long before slavery had
+been abolished in Mexico, and before it had become
+an exciting question in the United States,
+the infant colony of Texas, when but a few
+months old, had made an abortive attempt at
+insurrection. Any one who has ever been on
+the frontier, and who knows anything whatever
+of the domineering, masterful spirit and bitter
+race prejudices of the white frontiersmen, will
+acknowledge at once that it was out of the
+question that the Texans should long continue
+under Mexican rule; and it would have been
+a great misfortune if they had. It was out of
+the question to expect them to submit to the
+mastery of the weaker race, which they were
+supplanting. Whatever might be the pretexts
+alleged for revolt, the real reasons were to be
+found in the deeply-marked difference of race,
+and in the absolute unfitness of the Mexicans<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[177]</a></span>
+then to govern themselves, to say nothing of
+governing others. During the dozen years that
+the American colony in Texas formed part of
+Mexico, the government of the latter went
+through revolution after revolution,&mdash;republic,
+empire, and military dictatorship following one
+another in bewildering succession. A state of
+things like this in the central government, especially
+when the latter belonged to a race alien
+in blood, language, religion, and habits of life,
+would warrant any community in determining
+to shift for itself. Such would probably have
+been the result even on people as sober and
+peaceable as the Texan settlers were warlike,
+reckless, and overbearing.</p>
+
+<p>But the majority of those who fought for
+Texan independence were not men who had already
+settled in that territory, but, on the contrary,
+were adventurers from the States, who
+had come to help their kinsmen and to win for
+themselves, by their own prowess, homes on
+what was then Mexican soil. It may as well be
+frankly admitted that the conduct of the American
+frontiersmen all through this contest can
+be justified on no possible plea of international
+morality or law. Still, we cannot judge them
+by the same standard we should apply to the
+dealings between highly civilized powers of approximately
+the same grade of virtue and intelligence.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[178]</a></span>
+Two nations may be contemporaneous
+so far as mere years go, and yet, for all that,
+may be existing among surroundings which
+practically are centuries apart. The nineteenth
+century on the banks of the Thames, the Seine,
+and the Rhine, or even of the Hudson and the
+Potomac, was one thing; the nineteenth century
+in the valley of the Rio Grande was another and
+quite a different thing.</p>
+
+<p>The conquest of Texas should properly be
+classed with conquests like those of the Norse
+sea-rovers. The virtues and faults alike of the
+Texans were those of a barbaric age. They
+were restless, brave, and eager for adventure,
+excitement, and plunder; they were warlike,
+resolute, and enterprising; they had all the
+marks of a young and hardy race, flushed with
+the pride of strength and self-confidence. On
+the other hand they showed again and again the
+barbaric vies of boastfulness, ignorance, and
+cruelty; and they were utterly careless of the
+rights of others, looking upon the possessions of
+all weaker races as simply their natural prey.
+A band of settlers entering Texas was troubled
+by no greater scruples of conscience than, a
+thousand years before, a ship-load of Knut's followers
+might have felt at landing in England;
+and when they were engaged in warfare with
+the Mexicans they could count with certainty<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[179]</a></span>
+upon assistance from their kinsfolk who had
+been left behind, and for the same reasons that
+had enabled Rolf's Norsemen on the sea-coast of
+France to rely confidently on Scandinavian help
+in their quarrels with their Karling over-lords.
+The great Texan hero, Houston, who drank
+hard and fought hard, who was mighty in battle
+and crafty in council, with his reckless, boastful
+courage and his thirst for changes and risks of
+all kinds, his propensity for private brawling,
+and his queerly blended impulses for good and
+evil, might, with very superficial alterations of
+character, stand as the type of an old-world
+Viking&mdash;plus the virtue of a deep and earnestly
+patriotic attachment to his whole country.
+Indeed his career was as picturesque and
+romantic as that of Harold Hardraada himself,
+and, to boot, was much more important in its
+results.</p>
+
+<p>Thus the Texan struggle for independence
+stirred up the greatest sympathy and enthusiasm
+in the United States. The administration
+remained nominally neutral, but obviously
+sympathized with the Texans, permitting arms
+and men to be sent to their help, without hindrance,
+and indeed doing not a little discreditable
+bullying in the diplomatic dealing with
+Mexico, which that unfortunate community had
+her hands too full to resent. Still we did not<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[180]</a></span>
+commit a more flagrant breach of neutrality
+than, for instance, England was at the same
+time engaged in committing in reference to the
+civil wars in Spain. The victory of San Jacinto,
+in which Houston literally annihilated a Mexican
+force twice the strength of his own, virtually
+decided the contest; and the Senate at
+once passed a resolution recognizing the independence
+of Texas. Calhoun wished that body
+to go farther, and forthwith admit Texas as a
+state into the Union; but Benton and his colleagues
+were not prepared to take such a step
+at so early a date, although intending of course
+that in the end she should be admitted. There
+was little opposition to the recognition of Texan
+independence, although a few members of the
+lower house, headed by Adams, voted against it.
+While a cabinet officer, and afterwards as president,
+Adams had done all that he could to procure
+by purchase or treaty the very land which
+was afterwards the cause of our troubles with
+Mexico.</p>
+
+<p>Much the longest and most elaborate speech
+in favor of the recognition of Texan independence
+was made by Benton, to whom the subject
+appealed very strongly. He announced
+emphatically that he spoke as a Western senator,
+voicing the feeling of the West; and he was
+right. The opposition to the growth of our<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[181]</a></span>
+country on its southwestern frontier was almost
+confined to the Northeast; the West as a
+whole, free states as well as slave, heartily favored
+the movement. The settlers of Texas
+had come mainly, it is true, from the slave
+states; but there were also many who had been
+born north of the Ohio. It was a matter of
+comment that the guns used at San Jacinto
+had come from Cincinnati&mdash;and so had some
+of those who served them.</p>
+
+<p>In Benton's speech he began by pointing out
+the impropriety of doing what Calhoun had
+done in attempting to complicate the question
+of the recognition of Texan independence with
+the admission of Texas as a state. He then proceeded
+to claim for us a good deal more credit
+than we were entitled to for our efforts to
+preserve neutrality; drew a very true picture
+of the commercial bonds that united us to Mexico,
+and of the necessity that they should not be
+lightly broken; gave a spirited sketch of the
+course of the war hitherto, condemning without
+stint the horrible butcheries committed by the
+Mexicans, but touching gingerly on the savage
+revenge taken by the Americans in their turn;
+and ended by a eulogy of the Texans themselves,
+and their leaders.</p>
+
+<p>It was the age of "spread-eagle" speeches,
+and many of Benton's were no exception to the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[182]</a></span>
+rule. As a people we were yet in a condition
+of raw, crude immaturity; and our very sensitiveness
+to foreign criticism&mdash;a sensitiveness
+which we now find it difficult to understand&mdash;and
+the realization of our own awkwardness
+made us inclined to brag about and exaggerate
+our deeds. Our public speakers and writers
+acquired the abominable habit of speaking of
+everything and everybody in the United States
+in the superlative; and therefore, as we claimed
+the highest rank for all our fourth-rate men, we
+put it out of our power to do justice to the
+really first-rate ones; and on account of our
+continual exaggerations we were not believed
+by others, and hardly even believed ourselves,
+when we presented estimates that were truthful.
+When every public speaker was declared to be
+a Demosthenes or a Cicero, people failed to realize
+that we actually had, in Webster, the greatest
+orator of the century; and when every general
+who whipped an Indian tribe was likened
+to Napoleon, we left ourselves no words with
+which properly to characterize the really heroic
+deeds done from time to time in the grim frontier
+warfare. All Benton's oratory took on this
+lurid coloring; and in the present matter his
+final eulogy of the Texan warriors was greatly
+strained, though it would hardly have been in
+his power to pay too high a tribute to some of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[183]</a></span>
+the deeds they had done. It was the heroic
+age of the Southwest; though, as with every
+other heroic age, there were plenty of failings,
+vices, and weaknesses visible, if the stand-point
+of observation was only close enough.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[184]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_IX" id="CHAPTER_IX"></a>CHAPTER IX.</h2>
+
+<h3>THE CHILDREN'S TEETH ARE SET ON EDGE.</h3>
+
+
+<p>In his dealings with the Bank and his disposal
+of the deposits Jackson ate sour grapes to
+his heart's content; and now the teeth of his
+adopted child Van Buren were to be set on
+edge.</p>
+
+<p>Van Buren was the first product of what are
+now called "machine politics" that was put
+into the presidential chair. He owed his elevation
+solely to his own dexterous political
+manipulation, and to the fact that, for his own
+selfish ends, and knowing perfectly well their
+folly, he had yet favored or connived at all
+the actions into which the administration had
+been led either through Jackson's ignorance and
+violence, or by the crafty unscrupulousness
+and limited knowledge of the Kitchen Cabinet.
+The people at large would never have thought
+of him for president of their own accord; but he
+had become Jackson's political legatee, partly
+because he had personally endeared himself to
+the latter, and partly because the politicians<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[185]</a></span>
+felt that he was a man whom they could trust.
+The Jacksonian Democracy was already completely
+ruled by a machine, of which the most
+important cogs were the countless office-holders,
+whom the spoils system had already converted
+into a band of well-drilled political mercenaries.
+A political machine can only be brought to a
+state of high perfection in a party containing
+very many ignorant and uneducated voters;
+and the Jacksonian Democracy held in its
+ranks the mass of the ignorance of the country.
+Besides this such an organization requires, in
+order that it may do its most effective work, to
+have as its leader and figure-head a man who
+really has a great hold on the people at large,
+and who yet can be managed by such politicians
+as possess the requisite adroitness; and
+Jackson fulfilled both these conditions. The famous
+Kitchen Cabinet was so called because
+its members held no official positions, and yet
+were known to have Jackson more under their
+influence than was the case with his nominal
+advisers. They stood as the first representatives
+of a type common enough afterwards, and
+of which Thurlow Weed was perhaps the best
+example. They were men who held no public
+position, and yet devoted their whole time to
+politics, and pulled the strings in obedience to
+which the apparent public leaders moved.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[186]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Jackson liked Van Buren because the latter
+had served him both personally and politically&mdash;indeed
+Jackson was incapable of distinguishing
+between a political and a personal service.
+This liking, however, would not alone have advanced
+Van Buren's interests, if the latter, who
+was himself a master in the New York state
+machine, had not also succeeded in enlisting the
+good-will and self-interest of the members of
+the Kitchen Cabinet and the other intimate advisers
+of the president. These first got Jackson
+himself thoroughly committed to Van
+Buren, and then used his name and enormous
+influence with the masses, coupled with their
+own mastery of machine methods, to bring
+about the New Yorker's nomination. In both
+these moves they had been helped, and Van
+Buren's chances had been immensely improved,
+by an incident that had seemed at the time very
+unfortunate for the latter. When he was secretary
+of state, in carrying on negotiations with
+Great Britain relative to the West India trade,
+he had so far forgotten what was due to the dignity
+of the nation as to allude disparagingly,
+while thus communicating with a foreign power,
+to the course pursued by the previous administration.
+This extension of party lines into our
+foreign diplomacy was discreditable to the
+whole country. The anti-administration men<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[187]</a></span>
+bitterly resented it, and emphasized their resentment
+by rejecting the nomination of Van Buren
+when Jackson wished to make him minister to
+England. Their action was perfectly proper,
+and Van Buren, by right, should have suffered
+for his undignified and unpatriotic conduct.
+But instead of this, and in accordance with the
+eternal unfitness of things, what really happened
+was that his rejection by the Senate actually
+helped him; for Jackson promptly made the
+quarrel his own, and the masses blindly followed
+their idol. Benton exultingly and truthfully
+said that the president's foes had succeeded in
+breaking a minister only to make a president.</p>
+
+<p>Van Buren faithfully served the mammon of
+unrighteousness, both in his own state and, later
+on, at Washington; and he had his reward,
+for he was advanced to the highest offices in the
+gift of the nation. He had no reason to blame
+his own conduct for his final downfall; he got
+just as far along as he could possibly get; he
+succeeded because of, and not in spite of, his
+moral shortcomings; if he had always governed
+his actions by a high moral standard he would
+probably never have been heard of. Still, there
+is some comfort in reflecting that, exactly as he
+was made president for no virtue of his own,
+but simply on account of being Jackson's heir,
+so he was turned out of the office, not for personal<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[188]</a></span>
+failure, but because he was taken as
+scapegoat, and had the sins of his political
+fathers visited on his own head.</p>
+
+<p>The opposition to the election of Van Buren
+was very much disorganized, the Whig party
+not yet having solidified,&mdash;indeed it always
+remained a somewhat fluid body. The election
+did not have the slightest sectional significance,
+slavery not entering into it, and both Northern
+and Southern States voting without the least
+reference to the geographical belongings of the
+candidates. He was the last true Jacksonian
+Democrat&mdash;Union Democrat&mdash;who became
+president; the South Carolina separatists and
+many of their fellows refused to vote for him.
+The Democrats who came after him, on the
+contrary, all had leanings to the separatist element
+which so soon obtained absolute control
+of the party, to the fierce indignation of men
+like Benton, Houston, and the other old Jacksonians,
+whose sincere devotion to the Union
+will always entitle them to the gratitude of
+every true American. As far as slavery was
+concerned, however, the Southerners had hitherto
+had nothing whatever to complain of in
+Van Buren's attitude. He was careful to inform
+them in his inaugural address that he
+would not sanction any attempt to interfere
+with the institution, whether by abolishing it in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[189]</a></span>
+the District of Columbia or in any other way
+distasteful to the South. He also expressed a
+general hope that he would be able throughout
+to follow in the footsteps of Jackson.</p>
+
+<p>He had hardly been elected before the ruinous
+financial policy to which he had been party, but
+of which the effects, it must in justice be said,
+were aggravated by many of the actions of the
+Whigs, began to bear fruit after its kind. The
+use made of the surplus was bad enough, but
+the withdrawal of the United States deposits
+from one responsible bank and their distribution
+among scores of others, many of which
+were in the most rickety condition, was a step
+better calculated than any other to bring about
+a financial crash. It gave a stimulus to extravagance,
+and evoked the wildest spirit of speculation
+that the country had yet seen. The local
+banks, to whom the custody of the public moneys
+had been intrusted, used them as funds
+which they and their customers could hazard
+for the chance of gain; and the gambling spirit,
+always existent in the American mercantile
+community, was galvanized into furious life.
+The public dues were payable in the paper of
+these deposit banks and of the countless others
+that were even more irresponsible. The deposit
+banks thus became filled up with a motley
+mass of more or less worthless bank paper,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[190]</a></span>
+which thus formed the "surplus," of which the
+distribution had caused Congress so much worry.
+Their condition was desperate, as they had been
+managed with the most reckless disregard for
+the morrow. Many of them had hardly kept
+as much specie in hand as would amount to
+one fiftieth of the aggregate of their deposits
+and other immediate liabilities.</p>
+
+<p>The people themselves were of course primarily
+responsible for the then existing state of
+affairs; but the government had done all in its
+power to make matters worse. Panics were
+certain to occur more or less often in so speculative
+and venturesome a mercantile community,
+where there was such heedless trust in the
+future and such recklessness in the use of
+credit. But the government, by its actions, immensely
+increased the severity of this particular
+panic, and became the prime factor in precipitating
+its advent. Benton tried to throw
+the blame mainly on the bankers and politicians,
+who, he alleged, had formed an alliance
+for the overthrow of the administration; but
+he made the plea more half-heartedly than
+usual, and probably in his secret soul acknowledged
+its puerility.</p>
+
+<p>The mass of the people were still happy in
+the belief that all things were working well,
+and that their show of unexampled prosperity<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[191]</a></span>
+and business activity denoted a permanent and
+healthy condition. Yet all the signs pointed
+to a general collapse at no distant date; an era
+of general bank suspensions, of depreciated
+currency, and of insolvency of the federal treasury
+was at hand. No one but Benton, however,
+seemed able to read the signs aright, and
+his foreboding utterances were laughed at or
+treated with scorn by his fellow statesmen.
+He recalled the memory of the times of 1818-19,
+when the treasury reports of one year
+showed a superfluity of revenue of which there
+was no want, and those of the next showed a
+deficit which required to be relieved by a loan;
+and he foretold an infinitely worse result from
+the inflation of the paper system, saying:&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>Are we not at this moment, and from the same
+cause, realizing the first part&mdash;the elusive and
+treacherous part&mdash;of this picture? and must not the
+other, the sad and real sequel, speedily follow? The
+day of revulsion in its effects may be more or less
+disastrous; but come it must. The present bloat in
+the paper system cannot continue; violent contraction
+must follow enormous expansion; a scene of distress
+and suffering must ensue&mdash;to come of itself out
+of the present state of things, without being stimulated
+and helped on by our unwise legislation.... <i>I</i> am
+one of those who <i>promised</i> gold, not paper; <i>I did
+not join in putting down the Bank of the United</i><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[192]</a></span>
+<i>States to put up a wilderness of local banks. I did
+not join in putting down the currency of a national
+bank to put up a national paper currency of a thousand
+local banks.</i> I did not strike Cæsar to make
+Antony master of Rome.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>These last sentences referred to the passage
+of the act repealing the specie circular and
+making the notes of the banks receivable in payment
+of federal dues. The act was most mischievous,
+and Benton's criticisms both of it and
+of the great Whig senator who pressed it were
+perfectly just; but they apply with quite as
+much weight to Jackson's dealings with the deposits,
+which Benton had defended.</p>
+
+<p>Benton foresaw the coming of the panic so
+clearly, and was so particularly uneasy about the
+immediate effects upon the governmental treasury,
+that he not only spoke publicly on the matter
+in the Senate, but even broached the subject
+in the course of a private conversation with the
+president-elect, to get him to try to make what
+preparations he could. Van Buren, cool, skillful,
+and far-sighted politician though he was, on
+this occasion showed that he was infected with
+the common delusion as to the solidity of the
+country's business prosperity. He was very
+friendly with Benton, and was trying to get
+him to take a position in his cabinet, which the
+latter refused, preferring service in the Senate;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[193]</a></span>
+but now he listened with scant courtesy to the
+warning, and paid no heed to it. Benton, an intensely
+proud man, would not speak again; and
+everything went on as before. The law distributing
+the surplus among the states began to take
+effect; under its operations drafts for millions
+of dollars were made on the banks containing
+the deposits, and these banks, already sinking,
+were utterly unable to honor them. It would
+have been impossible, under any circumstances,
+for the president to ward off the blow, but he
+might at least, by a little forethought and preparation,
+have saved the government from some
+galling humiliations. Had Benton's advice been
+followed, the moneys called for by the appropriation
+acts might have been drawn from the
+banks, and the disbursing officers might have
+been prevented from depositing in them the
+sums which they drew from the treasury to
+provide for their ordinary expenses; thus the
+government would have been spared the disgrace
+of being obliged to stop the actual daily
+payments to the public servants; and the nation
+would not have seen such a spectacle as its
+rulers presented when they had not a dollar
+with which to pay even a day laborer, while at
+the same time a law was standing on the statute-book
+providing for the distribution of forty
+millions of nominal surplus.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[194]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>No effort was made to stave off even so much
+of the impending disaster as was at that late
+date preventable; and a few days after Van
+Buren's inauguration the country was in the
+throes of the worst and most widespread financial
+panic it has ever seen. The distress was
+fairly appalling both in its intensity and in its
+universal distribution. All the banks stopped
+payment, and bankruptcy was universal. Bank
+paper depreciated with frightful rapidity, especially
+in the West; specie increased in value so
+that all the coin in the country, down to the
+lowest denomination, was almost immediately
+taken out of circulation, being either hoarded,
+or gathered for shipment abroad as bullion.
+For small change every kind of device was made
+use of,&mdash;tokens, bank-bills for a few cents each,
+or brass and iron counters.</p>
+
+<p>Benton and others pretended to believe that
+the panic was the result of a deep-laid plot on
+the part of the rich classes, who controlled the
+banks, to excite popular hostility against the
+Jacksonian Democracy, on account of the caste
+antagonism which these same richer classes were
+supposed to feel towards the much-vaunted
+"party of the people;" and as Benton's mental
+vision was singularly warped in regard to some
+subjects, it is possible that the belief was not altogether
+a pretense. It is entirely unnecessary<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[195]</a></span>
+now seriously to discuss the proposition that it
+would be possible to drag the commercial classes
+into so widespread and profoundly secret a conspiracy,
+with such a vague end in view, and
+with the certainty that they themselves would
+be, from a business stand-point, the main sufferers.</p>
+
+<p>The efforts made by Benton and the other
+Jacksonians to stem the tide of public feeling
+and direct it through the well-worn channel of
+suspicious fear of, and anger at, the banks, as
+the true authors of the general wretchedness,
+were unavailing; the stream swelled into a torrent
+and ran like a mill-race in the opposite
+way. The popular clamor against the administration
+was deafening; and if much of it was
+based on good grounds, much of it was also unreasonable.
+But a very few years before the
+Jacksonians had appealed to a senseless public
+dislike of the so-called "money power," in order
+to help themselves to victory; and now they
+had the chagrin of seeing an only less irrational
+outcry raised against themselves in turn, and
+used to oust them from their places, with the
+same effectiveness which had previously attended
+their own frothy and loud-mouthed declamations.
+The people were more than ready
+to listen to any one who could point out, or
+pretend to point out, the authors of, and the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[196]</a></span>
+reasons for, the calamities that had befallen
+them. Their condition was pitiable; and this
+was especially true in the newer and Western
+states, where in many places there was absolutely
+no money at all in circulation, even the
+men of means not being able to get enough coin
+or its equivalent to make the most ordinary purchases.
+Trade was at a complete stand-still;
+laborers were thrown out of employment and left
+almost starving; farmers, merchants, mechanics,
+craftsmen of every sort,&mdash;all alike were in the
+direst distress. They naturally, in seeking relief,
+turned to the government, it being almost
+always the case that the existing administration
+receives more credit if the country is prosperous,
+and greater blame if it is not, than in either
+case it is rightfully entitled to. The Democracy
+was now held to strict reckoning, not only for
+some of its numerous real sins but also for a
+good many imaginary ones; and the change in
+the political aspect of many of the commonwealths
+was astounding. Jackson's own home
+State of Tennessee became strongly Whig; and
+Van Buren had the mortification of seeing New
+York follow suit; two stinging blows to the
+president and the ex-president. The distress
+was a godsend to the Whig politicians. They
+fairly raved in their anger against the administration,
+and denounced all its acts, good and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[197]</a></span>
+bad alike, with fluent and incoherent impartiality.
+Indeed, in their speeches, and in the
+petitions which they circulated and then sent to
+the president, they used language that was to
+the last degree absurd in its violence and exaggeration,
+and drew descriptions of the iniquities
+of the rulers of the country which were so
+overwrought as to be merely ridiculous. The
+speeches about the panic, and in reference to
+the proposed laws to alleviate it, were remarkable
+for their inflation, even in that age of windy
+oratory.</p>
+
+<p>Van Buren, Benton, and their associates stood
+bravely up against the storm of indignation
+which swept over the whole country, and lost
+neither head nor nerve. They needed both to
+extricate themselves with any credit from the
+position in which they were placed. In deference
+to the urgent wish of almost all the people
+an extra session of Congress was called especially
+to deal with the panic. Van Buren's message to
+this body was a really statesmanlike document,
+going exhaustively into the subject of the national
+finances. The Democrats still held the
+majority in both houses, but there was so large
+a floating vote, and the margins were so narrow,
+as to make the administration feel that its
+hold was precarious.</p>
+
+<p>The first thing to be done was to provide for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[198]</a></span>
+the immediate wants of the government, which
+had not enough money to pay even its most
+necessary running expenses. To make this
+temporary provision two plans were proposed.
+The fourth instalment of the surplus&mdash;ten
+millions&mdash;was due to the states. As there was
+really no surplus, but a deficit instead, it was
+proposed to repeal the deposit law so far as it
+affected their fourth payment; and treasury
+notes were to be issued to provide for immediate
+and pressing needs.</p>
+
+<p>The Whigs frantically attacked the president's
+proposals, and held him and his party
+accountable for all the evils of the panic; and
+in truth it was right enough to hold them so accountable
+for part; but, after all, the harm was
+largely due to causes existing throughout the
+civilized world, and especially to the speculative
+folly rife among the whole American people.
+But it is always an easy and a comfortable
+thing to hold others responsible for what
+is primarily our own fault.</p>
+
+<p>Benton did not believe, as a matter of principle,
+in the issue of treasury notes, but supported
+the bill for that purpose on account of
+the sore straits the administration was in, and
+its dire need of assistance from any source. He
+treated it as a disagreeable but temporary
+makeshift, only allowable on the ground of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[199]</a></span>
+sternest and most grinding necessity, He stated
+that he supported the issue only because the
+treasury notes were made out in such a form
+that they could not become currency; they
+were merely loan notes. Their chief characteristic
+was that they bore interest; they were
+transferable only by indorsement; were payable
+at a fixed time; were not reissuable, nor of
+small denominations; and were to be canceled
+when paid. Such being the case he favored
+their issue, but expressly stated that he only
+did so on account of the urgency of the governmental
+wants; and that he disapproved of any
+such issue until the ordinary resources of taxes
+and loans had been tried to the utmost and
+failed. "I distrust, dislike, and would fain eschew
+this treasury-note resource; I prefer the
+direct loans of 1820-21. I could only bring
+myself to support this present measure when it
+was urged that there was not time to carry a
+loan through in its forms; nor even then would
+I consent to it until every feature of a currency
+character had been eradicated from the bill."</p>
+
+<p>A sharp struggle took place over the bill
+brought in by the friends of the administration
+and advocated by Benton, to repeal the obligation
+to deposit the fourth instalment of the surplus
+with the states. This scheme of a distribution,
+thinly disguised under the name of deposit<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[200]</a></span>
+to soothe the feelings of Calhoun and the other
+strict constructionist pundits, had worked nothing
+but mischief from the start; and now that
+there was no surplus to distribute, it would seem
+incredible that there should have been opposition
+to its partial repeal. Yet Webster, Clay,
+and their followers strenuously opposed even
+such repeal. It is possible that their motives
+were honest, but much more probable that they
+were actuated by partisan hostility to the administration,
+or that they believed they would
+increase their own popularity by favoring a plan
+that seemingly distributed money as a gift
+among the states. The bill was finally amended
+so as to make it imperative to pay this fourth
+instalment in a couple of years; yet it was not
+then paid, since on the date appointed the national
+treasury was bankrupt and the states could
+therefore never get the money,&mdash;which was the
+only satisfactory incident in the whole proceeding.
+The financial theories of Jackson and
+Benton were crude and vicious, it is true, but
+Webster, Clay, and most other public men of
+the day seem to have held ideas on the subject
+that were almost, if not quite, as mischievous.</p>
+
+<p>The great financial measures advocated by the
+administration of Van Buren, and championed
+with especial zeal by Benton, were those providing
+for an independent treasury and for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[201]</a></span>
+hard-money payments; that is, providing that
+the government should receive nothing but gold
+and silver for its revenues, and that this gold
+and silver should be kept by its own officers in
+real, not constructive, treasuries,&mdash;in strong
+buildings, with special officers to hold the keys.
+The treasury was to be at Washington, with
+branches or sub-treasuries at the principal points
+of collection and disbursement.</p>
+
+<p>These measures, if successful, meant that
+there would be a total separation of the federal
+government from all banks; in the political
+language of the times they became known as
+those for the divorce of bank and state. Hitherto
+the local banks chosen by Jackson to receive
+the deposits had been actively hostile to
+Biddle's great bank and to its friends; but self-interest
+now united them all in violent opposition
+to the new scheme. Webster, Clay, and the
+Whigs generally fought it bitterly in the Senate;
+but Calhoun now left his recent allies and
+joined with Benton in securing its passage.
+However, it was for the time being defeated in
+the House of Representatives. Most of the opposition
+to it was characterized by sheer loud-mouthed
+demagogy&mdash;cries that the government
+was too aristocratic to accept the money
+that was thought good enough for the people,
+and similar claptrap. Benton made a very<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[202]</a></span>
+earnest plea for hard money, and especially denounced
+the doctrine that it was the government's
+duty to interfere in any way in private
+business; for, as usual in times of general distress,
+a good many people had a vague idea that
+in some way the government ought to step in
+and relieve them from the consequences of their
+own folly.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile the banks had been endeavoring
+to resume specie payment. Those of New York
+had taken steps in that direction but little more
+than three months after the suspension. Their
+weaker Western neighbors, however, were not
+yet in condition to follow suit; and the great
+bank at Philadelphia also at first refused to
+come in with them. But the New York banks
+persisted in their purpose, resumed payment a
+year after they had suspended, and eventually
+the others had to fall into line; the reluctance
+to do so being of course attributed by Benton
+to "the factious and wicked machinations" of
+a "powerful combined political and moneyed
+confederation"&mdash;a shadowy and spectral creation
+of vivid Jacksonian imaginations, in the
+existence of which he persisted in believing.</p>
+
+<p>Clay, always active as the friend of the banks,
+introduced a resolution, nominally to quicken
+the approach of resumption, but really to help
+out precisely those weak banks which did not<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[203]</a></span>
+deserve help, making the notes of the resuming
+banks receivable in payment of all dues to the
+federal government. This was offered after
+the banks of New York had resumed, and when
+all the other solvent banks were on the point
+of resuming also; so its nominal purpose was
+already accomplished, as Benton, in a caustic
+speech, pointed out. He then tore the resolution
+to shreds, showing that it would be of especial
+benefit to the insolvent and unsound banks,
+and would insure a repetition of the worst evils
+under which the country was already suffering.
+He made it clear that the proposition practically
+was to force the government to receive paper
+promises to pay from banks that were certain
+to fail, and therefore to force the government
+in turn to pay out this worthless paper to its
+honest creditors. Benton's speech was an excellent
+one, and Clay's resolution was defeated.</p>
+
+<p>All through this bank controversy, and the
+other controversies relating to it, Benton took
+the leading part, as mouthpiece of the administration.
+He heartily supported the suggestion
+of the president, that a stringent bankrupt
+law against the banks should be passed. Webster
+stood out as the principal opponent of this
+measure, basing his objections mainly upon constitutional
+grounds; that is, questioning the
+right, rather than the expediency, of the proposed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[204]</a></span>
+remedy. Benton answered him at length
+in a speech showing an immense amount of careful
+and painstaking study and a wide range of
+historical reading and legal knowledge; he replied
+point by point, and more than held his
+own with his great antagonist. His speech was
+an exhaustive study of the history and scope
+of bankruptcy laws against corporations. Benton's
+capacity for work was at all times immense;
+he delighted in it for its own sake, and
+took a most justifiable pride in his wide reading,
+and especially in his full acquaintance with history,
+both ancient and modern. He was very
+fond of illustrating his speeches on American
+affairs with continual allusions and references
+to events in foreign countries or in old times,
+which he considered to be more or less parallel
+to those he was discussing; and indeed he often
+dragged in these comparisons when there was
+no particular need for such a display of his
+knowledge. He could fairly be called a learned
+man, for he had studied very many subjects
+deeply and thoroughly; and though he was too
+self-conscious and pompous in his utterances
+not to incur more than the suspicion of pedantry,
+yet the fact remains that hardly any other
+man has ever sat in the Senate whose range of
+information was as wide as his.</p>
+
+<p>He made another powerful and carefully<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[205]</a></span>
+wrought speech in favor of what he called the
+act to provide for the divorce of bank and
+state. This bill, as finally drawn, consisted of
+two distinct parts, one portion making provision
+for the keeping of the public moneys in an independent
+treasury, and the other for the hard-money
+currency, which was all that the government
+was to accept in payment of revenue dues.
+This last provision, however, was struck out, and
+the bill thereby lost the support of Calhoun,
+who, with Webster, Clay, and the other Whigs,
+voted against it; but, mainly through Benton's
+efforts, it passed the Senate, although by a very
+slender majority. Benton, in his speech, dwelt
+with especial admiration on the working of the
+monetary system of France, and held it up as
+well worthy to be copied by us. Most of the
+points he made were certainly good ones, although
+he overestimated the beneficent results
+that would spring from the adoption of the proposed
+system, believing that it would put an
+end for the future to all panics and commercial
+convulsions. In reality it would have removed
+only one of the many causes which go to produce
+the latter, leaving the others free to work
+as before; the people at large, not the government,
+were mainly to blame, and even with
+them it was in some respects their misfortune
+as much as their fault. Benton's error, however,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[206]</a></span>
+was natural; like most other men he was
+unable fully to realize that hardly any phenomenon,
+even the most simple, can be said to spring
+from one cause only, and not from a complex
+and interwoven tissue of causation&mdash;and a
+panic is one of the least simple and most complex
+of mercantile phenomena. Benton's deep-rooted
+distrust of and hostility to such banking
+as then existed in the United States certainly
+had good grounds for existence.</p>
+
+<p>This distrust was shown again when the bill
+for the re-charter of the district banks came up.
+The specie basis of many of them had been allowed
+to become altogether too low; and Benton
+showed himself more keenly alive than any
+other public man to the danger of such a state
+of things, and argued strongly that a basis of
+specie amounting to one third the total of liabilities
+was the only safe proportion, and should
+be enforced by law. He made a most forcible
+argument, using numerous and apt illustrations
+to show the need of his amendment.</p>
+
+<p>Nor was the tireless Missouri senator satisfied
+even yet; for he introduced a resolution asking
+leave to bring in a bill to tax the circulation of
+banks and bankers, and of all corporations, companies,
+or individuals, issuing paper currency.
+One object of the bill was to raise revenue;
+but even more he aimed at the regulation of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[207]</a></span>
+currency by the suppression of small notes; and
+for this end the tax was proposed to be made
+heaviest on notes under twenty dollars, and to be
+annually augmented until it had accomplished
+its object and they had been driven out of circulation.
+In advocating his measure he used,
+as was perhaps unavoidable, some arguments
+that savored strongly of demagogy; but on the
+whole he made a strong appeal, using as precedents
+for the law he wished to see enacted both
+the then existing banking laws in England and
+those that had obtained previously in the history
+of the United States.</p>
+
+<p>Taken altogether, while the Jacksonians,
+during the period of Van Buren's presidency,
+rightly suffered for their previous financial misdeeds,
+yet so far as their actions at the time were
+concerned, they showed to greater advantage
+than the Whigs. Nor did they waver in their
+purpose even when the tide of popular feeling
+changed. The great financial measure of the
+administration, in which Benton was most interested,
+the independent treasury bill, he succeeded
+in getting through the Senate twice; the
+first time it was lost in the House of Representatives;
+but on the second occasion, towards
+the close of Van Buren's term, firmness and perseverance
+met their reward. The bill passed
+the Senate by an increased majority, scraped<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[208]</a></span>
+through the House after a bitter contest, and
+became a law. It developed the system known
+as that of the sub-Treasury, which has proved
+satisfactory to the present day.</p>
+
+<p>It was during Van Buren's term that Biddle's
+great bank, so long the pivot on which turned
+the fortunes of political parties, finally tottered
+to its fall. It was ruined by unwise and reckless
+management; and Benton sang a pæan over
+its downfall, exulting in its fate as a justification
+of all that he had said and done. Yet there can
+be little doubt that its mismanagement became
+gross only after all connection with the national
+government had ceased; and its end, attributable
+to causes not originally existent or likely to
+exist, can hardly be rightly considered in passing
+judgment upon the actions of the Jacksonians
+in reference to it.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[209]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_X" id="CHAPTER_X"></a>CHAPTER X.</h2>
+
+<h3>LAST DAYS OF THE JACKSONIAN DEMOCRACY.</h3>
+
+
+<p>The difficulty and duration of a war with an
+Indian tribe depend less upon the numbers of
+the tribe itself than upon the nature of the
+ground it inhabits. The two Indian tribes that
+have caused the most irritating and prolonged
+struggle are the Apaches, who live in the vast,
+waterless, mountainous deserts of Arizona and
+New Mexico, and whom we are at this present
+moment engaged in subduing, and the Seminoles,
+who, from among the impenetrable
+swamps of Florida, bade the whole United
+States army defiance for seven long years; and
+this although neither Seminoles nor Apaches
+ever brought much force into the field, nor inflicted
+such defeats upon us as have other Indian
+tribes, like the Creeks and Sioux.</p>
+
+<p>The conflict with the Seminoles was one of
+the legacies left by Jackson to Van Buren; it
+lasted as long as the Revolutionary War, cost
+thirty millions of dollars, and baffled the efforts
+of several generals and numerous troops, who<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[210]</a></span>
+had previously shown themselves equal to any
+in the world. The expense, length, and ill-success
+of the struggle, and a strong feeling that
+the Seminoles had been wronged, made it a
+great handle for attack on the administration;
+and the defense was taken up by Benton, who
+always accepted completely the Western estimate
+of any form of the Indian question.</p>
+
+<p>As is usually the case in Indian wars there
+had been much wrong done by each side; but
+in this instance we were the more to blame, although
+the Indians themselves were far from
+being merely harmless and suffering innocents.
+The Seminoles were being deprived of their
+lands in pursuance of the general policy of removing
+all the Indians west of the Mississippi.
+They had agreed to go, under pressure, and influenced,
+probably, by fraudulent representations;
+but they declined to fulfill their agreement.
+If they had been treated wisely and
+firmly they might probably have been allowed
+to remain without serious injury to the surrounding
+whites. But no such treatment was
+attempted, and as a result we were plunged in
+one of the most harassing Indian wars we ever
+waged. In their gloomy, tangled swamps, and
+among the unknown and untrodden recesses of
+the everglades the Indians found a secure asylum;
+and they issued from their haunts to burn<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[211]</a></span>
+and ravage almost all the settled part of Florida,
+fairly depopulating five counties; while the soldiers
+could rarely overtake them, and when they
+did, were placed at such a disadvantage that the
+Indians repulsed or cut off detachment after
+detachment, generally making a merciless and
+complete slaughter of each. The great Seminole
+leader, Osceola, was captured only by deliberate
+treachery and breach of faith on our
+part, and the Indians were worn out rather than
+conquered. This was partly owing to their remarkable
+capacities as bush-fighters, but infinitely
+more to the nature of their territory.</p>
+
+<p>Our troops generally fought with great
+bravery; but there is very little else in the
+struggle, either as regards its origin or the
+manner in which it was carried on, to which an
+American can look back with any satisfaction.
+We usually group all our Indian wars together,
+in speaking of their justice or injustice; and
+thereby show flagrant ignorance. The Sioux
+and Cheyennes, for instance, have more often
+been sinning than sinned against; for example,
+the so-called Chivington or Sandy Creek Massacre,
+in spite of certain most objectionable details,
+was on the whole as righteous and beneficial
+a deed as ever took place on the frontier.
+On the other hand, the most cruel wrongs
+have been perpetrated by whites upon perfectly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[212]</a></span>
+peaceable and unoffending tribes like those of
+California, or the Nez Perçés. Yet the emasculated
+professional humanitarians mourn as much
+over one set of Indians as over the other&mdash;and
+indeed, on all points connected with Indian
+management, are as untrustworthy and unsafe
+leaders as would be an equal number of the
+most brutal white borderers. But the Seminole
+War was one of those where the Eastern,
+or humanitarian view was more nearly correct
+than was any other; although even here the
+case was far from being entirely one-sided.</p>
+
+<p>Benton made an elaborate but not always
+candid defense of the administration, both as to
+the origin and as to the prosecution of the war.
+He attempted to show that the Seminoles had
+agreed to go West, had broken their treaty
+without any reason, had perpetrated causeless
+massacres, had followed up their successes with
+merciless butcheries, which last statement was
+true; and that Osceola had forfeited all claim
+or right to have a flag of truce protect him.
+There was a certain justice in his position even
+on these questions, and when he came to defend
+the conduct of our soldiers he had the right entirely
+with him. They were led by the same
+commander, and belonged to the same regiments,
+that in Canada had shown themselves
+equal to the famous British infantry; they had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[213]</a></span>
+to contend with the country, rather than with
+their enemies, as the sweltering heat, the stagnant
+lagoons, the quaking morasses, and the
+dense forests of Florida made it almost impossible
+for an army to carry on a successful campaign.
+Moreover, the Seminoles were well
+armed; and many tribes of North American
+Indians show themselves, when with good weapons
+and on their own ground, more dangerous
+antagonists than would be an equal number of
+the best European troops. Indeed, under such
+conditions they can only be contended with on
+equal terms if the opposing white force is made
+up of frontiersmen who are as good woodsmen
+and riflemen as themselves, and who, moreover,
+have been drilled by some man like Jackson,
+who knows how to handle them to the best advantage,
+both in disciplining their lawless courage
+and in forcing them to act under orders
+and together,&mdash;the lack of which discipline and
+power of supporting each other has often rendered
+an assemblage of formidable individual
+border-fighters a mere disorderly mob when
+brought into the field.</p>
+
+<p>The war dragged on tediously. The troops&mdash;regulars,
+volunteers, and militia alike&mdash;fought
+the Indians again and again; there were pitched
+battles, surprises, ambuscades, and assaults on
+places of unknown strength; hundreds of soldiers<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[214]</a></span>
+were slain in battle or by treachery,
+hundreds of settlers were slaughtered in their
+homes, or as they fled from them; the bloody
+Indian forays reached even to the outskirts of
+Tallahatchee and to within sight of the walls of
+quaint old St. Augustine. Little by little, however,
+the power of the Seminoles was broken;
+their war bands were scattered and driven from
+the field, hundreds of their number were slain
+in fight, and five times as many surrendered
+and were taken west of the Mississippi. The
+white troops marched through Florida down to
+and into the everglades, and crossed it backwards
+and forwards, from the Gulf of Mexico
+to the Atlantic Ocean; they hunted their foes
+from morass to morass and from hummock to
+hummock; they mapped out the whole hitherto
+unknown country; they established numerous
+posts; opened hundreds of miles of wagon road;
+and built very many causeways and bridges.
+But they could not end the war. The bands of
+Indians broke up and entirely ceased to offer
+resistance to bodies of armed whites; but as
+individuals they continued as dangerous to the
+settlers as ever, prowling out at night like wild
+beasts from their fastnesses in the dark and
+fetid swamps, murdering, burning, and ravaging
+in all the outlying settlements, and destroying
+every lonely farm-house or homestead.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[215]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>There was but one way in which the war
+could be finally ended, and that was to have
+the territory occupied by armed settlers; in
+other words, to have it won and held exactly
+as almost all the land of the United States has
+been in the beginning. Benton introduced a
+bill to bring this about, giving to every such
+settler a good inheritance in the soil as a reward
+for his enterprise, toil, and danger; and the
+war was finished only by the adoption of this
+method. He supported his bill in a very effective
+speech, showing that the proposed way was
+the only one by which a permanent conquest
+could be effected; he himself had, when young,
+seen it put into execution in Tennessee and
+Kentucky, where the armed settlers, with their
+homesteads in the soil, formed the vanguard of
+the white advance: where the rifle-bearing
+backwoodsmen went forth to fight and to cultivate,
+living in assemblages of block-houses at
+first and separating into individual settlements
+afterwards. The work had to be done with axe,
+spade, and rifle alike. Benton rightly insisted
+that there was no longer need of a large army
+in Florida:&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>Why, the men who are there now can find nobody
+to fight! It is two years since a fight has been had.
+Ten men who will avoid surprises and ambuscades can
+now go from one end of Florida to the other. As<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[216]</a></span>
+warriors, these Indians no longer appear; it is only
+as assassins, as robbers, as incendiaries, that they lurk
+about. What is now wanted is not an army to fight,
+but settlers and cultivators to take possession and
+keep possession; and the armed cultivator is the man
+for that. The block-house is the first house to be
+built in an Indian country; the stockade the first
+fence to be put up. Within that block-house, or
+within a hollow square of block-houses, two miles
+long on each side, two hundred yards apart, and inclosing
+a good field, safe habitations are to be found
+for families. Cultivation and defense then go hand in
+hand. The heart of the Indian sickens when he hears
+the crowing of the cock, the barking of the dog, the
+sound of the axe, and the crack of the rifle. These
+are the true evidences of the dominion of the white
+man; these are the proofs that the owner has come
+and means to stay, and then the Indians feel it to be
+time for them to go. While soldiers alone are in
+the country they feel their presence to be temporary;
+that they are mere sojourners in the land, and sooner
+or later must go away. It is the settler alone, the
+armed settler, whose presence announces the dominion,
+the permanent dominion, of the white man.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Benton's ideas were right, and were acted
+upon. It is impossible even to subdue an
+Indian tribe by the army alone; the latter can
+only pave the way for and partially protect
+the armed settlers who are to hold the soil.</p>
+
+<p>Benton continued to take a great interest in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[217]</a></span>
+the disposal of the public lands, as was natural
+in a senator from the West, where the bulk of
+these lands lay. He was always a great advocate
+of a homestead law. During Van Buren's
+administration, he succeeded in getting two or
+three bills on the subject through the Senate.
+One of these allowed lands that had been five
+years in the market to be reduced in price to a
+dollar an acre, and if they stood five years longer
+to go down to seventy-five cents. The bill was
+greatly to the interest of the Western farmer in
+the newer, although not necessarily the newest,
+parts of the country. The man who went on
+the newest land was in turn provided for by the
+preëmption bill, which secured the privilege of
+first purchase to the actual settler on any lands
+to which the Indian title had been extinguished;
+to be paid for at the minimum price of public
+lands at the time. An effort was made to confine
+the benefits of this proposed law to citizens
+of the United States, excluding unnaturalized
+foreigners from its action. Benton, as
+representing the new states, who desired immigrants
+of every kind, whether foreign or native,
+successfully opposed this. He pointed out that
+there was no question of conferring political
+rights, which involved the management of the
+government, and which should not be conferred
+until the foreigner had become a naturalized<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[218]</a></span>
+citizen; it was merely a question of allowing the
+alien a right to maintain himself and to support
+his family. He especially opposed the amendment
+on account of the class of foreigners it
+would affect. Aliens who wished to take up
+public lands were not paupers or criminals, and
+did not belong to the shiftless and squalid foreign
+mob that drifted into the great cities of the
+sea-board and the interior; but on the contrary
+were among our most enterprising, hardy, and
+thrifty citizens, who had struck out for themselves
+into the remote parts of the new states
+and had there begun to bring the wilderness
+into subjection. Such men deserved to be encouraged
+in every way, and should receive from
+the preëmption laws the same benefits that
+would enure to native-born citizens. The third
+bill introduced, which passed the Senate but
+failed in the House, was one to permit the public
+lands sold to be immediately taxed by the
+states in which they lay. Originally these lands
+had been sold upon credit, the total amount not
+being paid, nor the title passed, until five years
+after the sale; and during this time it would
+have been unjust to tax them, as failure in paying
+the installments to the government would
+have let the lands revert to the latter; but
+when the cash system was substituted for credit
+Benton believed that there was no longer reason<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[219]</a></span>
+why the new lands should not bear their share
+of the state burdens.</p>
+
+<p>During Van Buren's administration the standard
+of public honesty, which had been lowering
+with frightful rapidity ever since, with Adams,
+the men of high moral tone had gone out of
+power, went almost as far down as it could go;
+although things certainly did not change for the
+better under Tyler and Polk. Not only was
+there the most impudent and unblushing rascality
+among the public servants of the nation, but
+the people themselves, through their representatives
+in the state legislatures, went to work to
+swindle their honest creditors. Many states,
+in the rage for public improvements, had contracted
+debts which they now refused to pay;
+in many cases they were unable, or at least so
+professed themselves, even to pay the annual
+interest. The debts of the states were largely
+held abroad; they had been converted into
+stock and held in shares, which had gone into
+a great number of hands, and now, of course,
+became greatly depreciated in value. It is a
+painful and shameful page in our history; and
+every man connected with the repudiation of
+the states' debts ought, if remembered at all, to
+be remembered only with scorn and contempt.
+However, time has gradually shrouded from our
+sight both the names of the leaders in the repudiation<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">[220]</a></span>
+and the names of the victims whom
+they swindled. Two alone, one in each class,
+will always be kept in mind. Before Jefferson
+Davis took his place among the arch-traitors in
+our annals he had already long been known as
+one of the chief repudiators; it was not unnatural
+that to dishonesty towards the creditors of
+the public he should afterwards add treachery
+towards the public itself. The one most prominent
+victim was described by Benton himself:
+"The Reverend Sydney Smith, of witty memory,
+but amiable withal, was accustomed to lose all
+his amiability, but no part of his wit, when he
+spoke of his Pennsylvania bonds&mdash;which, in
+fact, was very often."</p>
+
+<p>Many of the bond-holders, however, did not
+manifest their grief by caustic wit, but looked
+to more substantial relief; and did their best to
+bring about the assumption of the state debts,
+in some form, whether open or disguised, by the
+federal government. The British capitalists
+united with many American capitalists to work
+for some such action; and there were plenty of
+people in the states willing enough to see it
+done. Of course it would have been criminal
+folly on the part of the federal government to
+take any such step; and Benton determined to
+meet and check the effort at the very beginning.
+The London Bankers' Circular had contained<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">[221]</a></span>
+a proposition recommending that the Congress
+of the United States should guarantee, or otherwise
+provide for, the ultimate payment of the
+debts which the states had contracted for state
+or local purposes. Benton introduced a series
+of resolutions declaring utter opposition to the
+proposal, both on the ground of expediency and
+on that of constitutionality. The resolutions
+were perfectly proper in their purpose, but were
+disfigured by that cheap species of demagogy
+which consists in denouncing purely supposititious
+foreign interference, complicated by an
+allusion to Benton's especial pet terror, the inevitable
+money power. As he put it: "Foreign
+interference and influence are far more dangerous
+in the invidious intervention of the moneyed
+power than in the forcible invasions of
+fleets and armies."</p>
+
+<p>An attempt was made directly to reverse the
+effect of the resolutions by amending them so as
+to provide that the public land revenue should
+be divided among the states, to help them in
+the payment of these debts. Both Webster and
+Clay supported this amendment, but it was fortunately
+beaten by a large vote.</p>
+
+<p>Benton's speech, like the resolutions in support
+of which he spoke, was right in its purpose,
+but contained much matter that was beside the
+mark. He had worked himself into such a condition<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">[222]</a></span>
+over the supposititious intrigues of the
+"money power"&mdash;an attack on which is almost
+always sure to be popular&mdash;that he was
+very certain to discover evidence of their existence
+on all, even the most unlikely, occasions;
+and it is difficult to think that he was not himself
+aware how overdrawn was his prophecy of
+the probable interference of foreign powers in
+our affairs, if the resolutions he had presented
+were not adopted.</p>
+
+<p>The tariff had once more begun to give
+trouble, and the South was again complaining
+of its workings, aware that she was falling always
+more to the rear in the race for prosperity,
+and blindly attributing her failure to everything
+but the true reason,&mdash;the existence of slavery.
+Even Benton himself showed a curiously pathetic
+eagerness to prove both to others and himself
+that the cause of the increasing disparity in
+growth, and incompatibility in interest between
+the two sections, must be due to some temporary
+and artificial cause, and endeavored to hide
+from all eyes, even from his own, the fact that
+the existence of slavery was working, slowly
+but surely, and with steadily increasing rapidity,
+to rend in sunder the Union which he loved
+and served with such heartfelt devotion. He
+tried to prove that the main cause of discontent
+was to be found in the tariff and other laws,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[223]</a></span>
+which favored the North at the expense of the
+South. At the same time he entered an eloquent
+plea for a warmer feeling between the
+sections, and pointed out the absolute hopelessness
+of attempting to better the situation in
+any way by disunion. The great Missourian
+could look back with fond pride and regret to
+the condition of the South as it was during and
+immediately after the colonial days, when it
+was the seat of wealth, power, high living, and
+free-handed hospitality, and was filled to overflowing
+with the abounding life of its eager and
+turbulent sons. The change for the worse in
+its relative condition was real and great. He
+reproved his fellow-Southerners for attributing
+this change to a single cause, the unequal working
+of the federal government, "which gave all
+the benefits of the Union to the South and all
+its burdens to the North;" he claimed that it
+was due to many other causes as well. Yet
+those whom he rebuked were as near right as
+he was; for the change <i>was</i> due in the main to
+only one cause&mdash;but that cause was slavery.
+It is almost pitiful to see the strong, stern, self-reliant
+statesman refusing, with nervous and
+passionate willfulness, to look the danger in
+the face, and, instead thereof, trying to persuade
+himself into the belief that "the remedy
+lies in the right working of the Constitution;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">[224]</a></span>
+in the cessation of unequal legislation; in the
+reduction of the inordinate expenses of the government;
+in its return to the simple, limited,
+and economical machine it was intended to be;
+and in the revival of fraternal feelings and respect
+for each other's rights and just complaints."
+Like many another man he thought,
+or tried to think, that by sweeping the dust
+from the door-sill he could somehow stave off
+the whirling rush of the sand-storm.</p>
+
+<p>The compromise tariff of 1833 had abolished
+all specific duties, establishing <i>ad valorem</i> ones
+in their place; and the result had been great
+uncertainty and injustice in its working. Now
+whether a protective tariff is right or wrong
+may be open to question; but if it exists at
+all, it should work as simply and with as much
+certainty and exactitude as possible; if its interpretation
+varies, or if it is continually meddled
+with by Congress, great damage ensues.
+It is in reality of far less importance that a law
+should be ideally right than that it should be
+certain and steady in its workings. Even supposing
+that a high tariff is all wrong, it would
+work infinitely better for the country than would
+a series of changes between high and low duties.
+Benton strongly advocated a return to specific
+duties, as being simpler, surer, and better on
+every account. In commenting on the <i>ad valorem</i><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">[225]</a></span>
+duties, he showed how they had been
+adopted blindly and without discussion by the
+frightened, silent multitude of congressmen and
+senators, who jumped at Clay's compromise bill
+in 1833 as giving them a loop-hole of escape
+from a situation where they would have had to
+face evil consequences, no matter what stand
+they took. Benton's comment on men of this
+stamp deserves chronicling, from its justice and
+biting severity: "It (the compromise act) was
+passed by the aid of the votes of those&mdash;always
+a considerable <i>per centum</i> in every public body&mdash;to
+whom the name of compromise is an irresistible
+attraction; amiable men, who would do
+no wrong of themselves, and without whom the
+designing could also do but little wrong."</p>
+
+<p>He not only devoted himself to the general
+subject of the tariff in relation to specific duties,
+but he also took up several prominent abuses.
+One subject, on which he was never tired of
+harping with monotonous persistency, was the
+duty on salt. The idea of making salt free had
+become one which he was almost as fond of
+bringing into every discussion, no matter how
+inappropiate to the matter in hand, as he was
+of making irrelevant and abusive allusions to
+his much-enduring and long-suffering hobby,
+the iniquitous "money power." Benton had all
+the tenacity of a snapping turtle, and was as<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226">[226]</a></span>
+firm a believer in the policy of "continuous
+hammering" as Grant himself. His tenacity and
+his pertinacious refusal to abandon any contest,
+no matter what the odds were against him, and
+no matter how often he had to return to the
+charge, formed two of his most invaluable qualities,
+and when called into play on behalf of
+such an object as the preservation of the Union,
+cannot receive too high praise at our hands; for
+they did the country services so great and lasting
+that they should never be forgotten. It
+would have been fortunate indeed if Clay and
+Webster had possessed the fearless, aggressive
+courage and iron will of the rugged Missourian,
+who was so often pitted against them in the
+political arena. But when Benton's attention
+was firmly fixed on the accomplishment of something
+comparatively trivial, his dogged, stubborn,
+and unyielding earnestness drew him into
+making efforts of which the disproportion to
+the result aimed at was rather droll. Nothing
+could thwart him or turn him aside; and though
+slow to take up an idea, yet, if it was once in
+his head, to drive it out was a simply hopeless
+task. These qualities were of such invaluable
+use to the state on so many great occasions that
+we can well afford to treat them merely with a
+good-humored laugh, when we see them exercised
+on behalf of such a piece of foolishness
+as, for example, the expunging resolution.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">[227]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The repeal of the salt tax, then, was a particular
+favorite in Benton's rather numerous stable
+of hobbies, because it gave free scope for the
+use of sentimental as well as of economic arguments.
+He had the right of the question, and
+was not in the least daunted by his numerous
+rebuffs and the unvarying ill success of his efforts.
+Speaking in 1840, he stated that he had
+been urging the repeal for twelve years; and
+for the purpose of furnishing data with which
+to compare such a period of time, and without
+the least suspicion that there was anything out
+of the way in the comparison, he added, in a
+solemn parenthesis, that this was two years
+longer than the siege of Troy lasted. In the
+same speech was a still choicer morsel of eloquence
+about salt: "The Supreme Ruler of the
+Universe has done everything to supply his
+creatures with it; man, the fleeting shadow of
+an instant, invested with his little brief authority,
+has done much to deprive them of it."
+After which he went on to show a really extensive
+acquaintance with the history of salt
+taxes and monopolies, and with the uses and
+physical structure and surroundings of the mineral
+itself&mdash;all which might have taught his
+hearers that a man may combine much erudition
+with a total lack of the sense of humor.
+The salt tax is dragged, neck and heels, into<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">[228]</a></span>
+many of Benton's speeches much as Cooper
+manages, on all possible occasions, throughout
+his novels, to show the unlikeness of the Bay
+of Naples to the Bay of New York&mdash;not the
+only point of resemblance, by the way, between
+the characters of the Missouri statesman and
+the New York novelist. Whether the subject
+under discussion was the taxation of bank-notes,
+or the abolition of slavery, made very little difference
+to Benton as to introducing an allusion
+to the salt monopoly. One of his happy arguments
+in favor of the repeal, which was addressed
+to an exceedingly practical and commonplace
+Congress, was that the early Christian
+disciples had been known as the salt of
+the earth&mdash;a biblical metaphor, which Benton
+kindly assured his hearers was very expressive;
+and added that a salt tax was morally as well
+as politically wrong, and in fact "was a species
+of impiety."</p>
+
+<p>But in attacking some of the abuses which
+had developed out of the tariff of 1833 Benton
+made a very shrewd and practical speech, without
+permitting himself to indulge in any such
+intellectual pranks as accompanied his salt orations.
+He especially aimed at reducing the
+drawbacks on sugar, molasses, and one or two
+other articles. In accordance with our whole
+clumsy, hap-hazard system of dealing with the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">[229]</a></span>
+tariff we had originally put very high duties on
+the articles in question, and then had allowed
+correspondingly heavy drawbacks; and yet,
+when in 1833, by Clay's famous compromise
+tariff bill, the duties were reduced to a fractional
+part of what they had previously been,
+no parallel reduction was made in the drawbacks,
+although Benton (supported by Webster)
+made a vain effort even then, while the
+compromise bill was on its passage, to have the
+injustice remedied. As a consequence, the exporters
+of sugar and rum, instead of drawing
+back the exact amounts paid into the treasury,
+drew back several times as much; and the ridiculous
+result was that certain exporters were
+paid a naked bounty out of the treasury, and
+received pay for doing and suffering nothing.
+In 1839 the drawback paid on the exportation
+of refined sugar exceeded the amount of revenue
+derived from imported sugar by over twenty
+thousand dollars. Benton showed this clearly,
+by unimpeachable statistics, and went on to
+prove that in that year the whole amount of
+the revenue from brown and clayed sugar, plus
+the above-mentioned twenty thousand dollars,
+was paid over to twenty-nine sugar refiners;
+and that these men thus "drew back" from
+the treasury what they had never put into it.
+Abuses equally gross existed in relation to various<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230">[230]</a></span>
+other articles. But in spite of the clear
+justice of his case Benton was able at first to
+make but little impression on Congress; and
+it was some time before matters were straightened
+out, as all the protective interests felt
+obliged to make common cause with each other,
+no matter what evils might be perpetrated by
+their taking such action.</p>
+
+<p>Towards the close of Van Buren's administration,
+when he was being assailed on every side,
+as well for what Jackson as for what he himself
+had done or left undone, one of the chief accusations
+brought against him was that he had
+squandered the public money, and that, since
+Adams had been ousted from the presidency,
+the expenses of running the government had
+increased out of all proportion to what was
+proper. There was good ground for their complaint,
+as the waste and peculation in some of
+the departments had been very great; but Benton,
+in an elaborate defense of both Jackson
+and Van Buren, succeeded in showing that at
+least certain of the accusations were unfounded&mdash;although
+he had to stretch a point or two in
+trying to make good his claim that the administration
+was really economical, being reduced
+to the rather lame expedient of ruling out about
+two thirds of the expenditures on the ground
+that they were "extraordinary."<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_231" id="Page_231">[231]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The charge of extravagance was one of the
+least of the charges urged against the Jacksonian
+Democrats during the last days of their rule.
+While they had been in power the character of
+the public service had deteriorated frightfully,
+both as regarded its efficiency and infinitely
+more as regarded its honesty; and under Van
+Buren the amount of money stolen by the public
+officers, compared to the amount handed in
+to the treasury, was greater than ever before
+or since. For this the Jacksonians were solely
+and absolutely responsible; they drove out the
+merit system of making appointments, and introduced
+the "spoils" system in its place; and
+under the latter they chose a peculiarly dishonest
+and incapable set of officers, whose sole
+recommendation was to be found in the knavish
+trickery and low cunning that enabled them
+to manage the ignorant voters who formed the
+backbone of Jackson's party. The statesmen
+of the Democracy in after days forgot the good
+deeds of the Jacksonians; they lost their attachment
+to the Union, and abandoned their
+championship of hard money; but they never
+ceased to cling to the worst legacy their predecessors
+had left them. The engrafting of the
+"spoils" system on our government was, of all
+the results of Jacksonian rule, the one which
+was most permanent in its effects.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232">[232]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>All these causes&mdash;the corruption of the public
+officials, the extravagance of the government,
+and the widespread distress, which might
+be regarded as the aftermath of its ruinous
+financial policy&mdash;combined with others that
+were as little to the discredit of the Jacksonians
+as they were to the credit of the Whigs,
+brought about the overthrow of the former.
+There was much poetic justice in the fact that
+the presidential election which decided their
+fate was conducted on as purely irrational principles,
+and was as merely one of sound and
+fury, as had been the case in the election twelve
+years previously, when they came into power.
+The Whigs, having exhausted their language
+in denouncing their opponents for nominating
+a man like Andrew Jackson, proceeded to look
+about in their own party to find one who should
+come as near him as possible in all the attributes
+that had given him so deep a hold on
+the people; and they succeeded perfectly when
+they pitched on the old Indian fighter, Harrison.
+"Tippecanoe" proved quite as effective a war-cry
+in bringing about the downfall of the Jacksonians
+as "Old Hickory" had shown itself to
+be a dozen years previously in raising them up.
+General Harrison had already shown himself to
+be a good soldier, and a loyal and honest public
+servant, although by no means standing in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233">[233]</a></span>
+the first rank either as regards war-craft or
+state-craft; but the mass of his supporters apparently
+considered the facts, or supposed facts,
+that he lived in a log-cabin the walls of which
+were decorated with coon-skins, and that he
+drank hard cider from a gourd, as being more
+important than his capacity as a statesman or
+his past services to the nation.</p>
+
+<p>The Whigs having thus taken a shaft from
+the Jacksonians' quiver, it was rather amusing
+to see the latter, in their turn, hold up their
+hands in horror at the iniquity of what would
+now be called a "hurrah" canvass; blandly ignoring
+the fact that it was simply a copy of
+their own successful proceedings. Says Benton,
+with amusing gravity: "The class of inducements
+addressed to the passions and imaginations
+of the people was such as history
+blushes to record," a remark that provokes criticism,
+when it is remembered that Benton had
+been himself a prominent actor on the Jacksonian
+side in the campaigns of '28 and '32,
+when it was exclusively to "the passions and
+imaginations of the people" that all arguments
+were addressed.</p>
+
+<p>The Democrats did not long remain out of
+power; and they kept the control of the governmental
+policy in their hands pretty steadily
+until the time of the civil war; nevertheless it<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">[234]</a></span>
+is true that with the defeat of Van Buren the
+Jacksonian Democracy, as such, lost forever
+its grip on the direction of national affairs.
+When, under Polk, the Democrats came back,
+they came under the lead of the very men
+whom the original Jacksonians had opposed
+and kept down. With all their faults, Jackson
+and Benton were strong Union men, and
+under them their party was a Union party.
+Calhoun and South Carolina, and the disunionists
+in the other Southern States were their bitter
+foes. But the disunion and extreme slavery
+elements within the Democratic ranks were
+increasing rapidly all the time; and they had
+obtained complete and final control when the
+party reappeared as victors after their defeat in
+1840. Until Van Buren's overthrow the nationalists
+had held the upper hand in shaping
+Democratic policy; but after that event the
+leadership of the party passed completely into
+the hands of the separatists.</p>
+
+<p>The defeat of Van Buren marks an era in
+more ways than one. During his administration
+slavery played a less prominent part in
+politics than did many other matters; this was
+never so again. His administration was the
+last in which this question, or the question
+springing from it, did not overtop and dwarf in
+importance all others. Again, the presidential<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">[235]</a></span>
+election of 1840 was the last into which slavery
+did not enter as a most important, and in fact
+as the vital and determining factor. In the
+contest between Van Buren and Harrison it did
+not have the least influence upon the result.
+Moreover, Van Buren was the last Democratic
+president who ruled over a Union of states; all
+his successors, up to the time of Lincoln's election,
+merely held sway over a Union of sections.
+The spirit of separation had identified
+itself with the maintenance of slavery, and the
+South was rapidly uniting into a compact array
+of states with interests that were hostile to the
+North on the point most vitally affecting the
+welfare of the whole country.</p>
+
+<p>No great question involving the existence
+of slavery was brought before the attention of
+Congress during Van Buren's term of office;
+nor was the matter mooted except in the eternal
+wrangles over receiving the abolitionist petitions.
+Benton kept silent in these discussions,
+although voting to receive the petitions. As
+he grew older he continually grew wiser, and
+better able to do good legislative work on all
+subjects; but he was not yet able to realize
+that the slavery question was one which could
+not be kept down, and which was bound to
+force itself into the sphere of national politics.
+He still insisted that it was only dragged before<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236">[236]</a></span>
+Congress by a few fanatics at the North,
+and that in the South it was made the instrument
+by which designing and unscrupulous men
+wished to break up the federal republic. His
+devotion to the Union, ever with him the chief
+and overmastering thought, made him regard
+with horror and aversion any man, at the North
+or at the South, who brought forward a question
+so fraught with peril to its continuance.
+He kept trying to delude himself into the belief
+that the discussion and the danger would
+alike gradually die away, and the former state
+of peaceful harmony between the sections, and
+freedom from disunion excitement, would return.</p>
+
+<p>But the time for such an ending already
+lay in the past; thereafter the outlook was to
+grow steadily darker year by year. Slavery
+lowered like a thunder-storm on the horizon;
+and though sometimes it might seem for a
+moment to break away, yet in reality it had
+reached that stage when, until the final all-engulfing
+outburst took place, the clouds were
+bound for evermore to return after the rain.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237">[237]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XI" id="CHAPTER_XI"></a>CHAPTER XI.</h2>
+
+<h3>THE PRESIDENT WITHOUT A PARTY.</h3>
+
+
+<p>The Whigs in 1840 completely overthrew
+the Democrats, and for the first time elected
+a president and held the majority in both
+houses of Congress. Yet, as it turned out, all
+that they really accomplished was to elect a
+president without a party, for Harrison died
+when he had hardly more than sat in the presidential
+chair, and was succeeded by the vice-president,
+Tyler of Virginia.</p>
+
+<p>Harrison was a true Whig; he was, when
+nominated, a prominent member of the Whig
+party, although of course not to be compared
+with its great leader, Henry Clay, or with its
+most mighty intellectual chief and champion
+in the Northeast, Daniel Webster, whose mutual
+rivalry had done much to make his nomination
+possible. Tyler, however, could hardly
+be called a Whig at all; on the contrary, he
+belonged rightfully in the ranks of those extreme
+Democrats who were farthest removed
+from the Whig standard, and who were as<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238">[238]</a></span>
+much displeased with the Union sentiments
+of the Jacksonians as they were with the personal
+tyranny of Jackson himself. He was
+properly nothing but a dissatisfied Democrat,
+who hated the Jacksonians, and had been
+nominated only because the Whig politicians
+wished to strengthen their ticket and insure
+its election by bidding for the votes of the discontented
+in the ranks of their foes. Now a
+chance stroke of death put the presidency in
+the hands of one who represented this, the
+smallest, element in the coalition that overthrew
+Van Buren.</p>
+
+<p>The principles of the Whigs were hazily outlined
+at the best, and the party was never a
+very creditable organization; indeed, throughout
+its career, it could be most easily defined as
+the opposition to the Democracy. It was a free
+constructionist party, believing in giving a liberal
+interpretation to the doctrines of the Constitution;
+otherwise, its principles were purely
+economic, as it favored a high tariff, internal
+improvements, a bank, and kindred schemes;
+and its leaders, however they might quarrel
+among themselves, agreed thoroughly in their
+devout hatred of Jackson and all his works.</p>
+
+<p>It was on this last point only that Tyler
+came in. His principles had originally been
+ultra-Democratic. He had been an extreme<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239">[239]</a></span>
+strict constructionist, had belonged to that wing
+of the Democracy which inclined more and
+more towards separation, and had thus, on several
+grounds, found himself opposed to Jackson,
+Benton, and their followers. Indeed, he
+went into opposition to his original party for
+reasons akin to those that influenced Calhoun;
+and Seward's famous remark about the "ill-starred
+coalition between Whigs and Nullifiers"
+might with certain changes have been
+applied to the presidential election of 1840
+quite as well as to the senatorial struggles to
+which it had reference.</p>
+
+<p>Tyler, however, had little else in common
+with Calhoun, and least of all his intellect.
+He has been called a mediocre man; but this
+is unwarranted flattery. He was a politician
+of monumental littleness. Owing to the nicely-divided
+condition of parties, and to the sheer
+accident which threw him into a position of
+such prominence that it allowed him to hold
+the balance of power between them, he was enabled
+to turn politics completely topsy-turvy;
+but his chief mental and moral attributes were
+peevishness, fretful obstinacy, inconsistency, incapacity
+to make up his own mind, and the
+ability to quibble indefinitely over the most microscopic
+and hair-splitting plays upon words,
+together with an inordinate vanity that so<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240">[240]</a></span>
+blinded him to all outside feeling as to make
+him really think that he stood a chance to be
+renominated for the presidency.</p>
+
+<p>The Whigs, especially in the Senate, under
+Henry Clay, prepared at once to push through
+various measures that should undo the work of
+the Jacksonians. Clay was boastfully and domineeringly
+sure of the necessity of applying to
+actual governmental work the economic theories
+that formed the chief stock in trade of
+his party. But it was precisely on these economic
+theories that Tyler split off from the
+Whigs. The result was that very shortly the
+real leader of the dominant party, backed by
+almost all his fellow party men in both houses
+of Congress, was at daggers drawn with the
+nominal Whig president, who in his turn was
+supported only by a "corporal's guard" of followers
+in the House of Representatives, by all
+the office-holders whom fear of removal reduced
+to obsequious subserviency, and by a
+knot of obscure politicians who used him for
+their own ends, and worked alternately on his
+vanity and on his fears. The Democrats, led
+by Benton, played out their own game, and
+were the only parties to the three-cornered
+fight who came out of it with profit. The details
+now offer rather dry reading, as the economic
+theories of all the contestants were more<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">[241]</a></span>
+or less crude, the results of the conflict indecisive,
+and the effects upon our history ephemeral.</p>
+
+<p>Clay began by a heated revival of one of
+Jackson's worst ideas, namely, that when the
+people elect a president they thereby mark
+with the seal of their approval any and every
+measure with which that favored mortal or his
+advisers may consider themselves identified,
+and indorse all his and their previous actions.
+He at once declared that the people had shown,
+by the size of Harrison's majority, that they
+demanded the repeal of the independent treasury
+act, and the passage of various other laws
+in accordance with some of his own favorite
+hobbies, two out of three voters, as a matter
+of fact, probably never having given a second
+thought to any of them. Accordingly he proceeded
+to introduce a whole batch of bills,
+which he alleged that it was only yielding due
+respect to the spirit of Democracy to pass forthwith.</p>
+
+<p>Benton, however, even outdid Clay in paying
+homage to what he was pleased to call the
+"democratic idea." At this time he speaks of
+the last session of the Twenty-Sixth Congress
+as being "barren of measures, and necessarily
+so, as being the last of an administration superseded
+by the popular voice and soon to expire;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242">[242]</a></span>
+and therefore restricted by a sense of propriety,
+during the brief remainder of its existence, to the
+details of business and the routine of service."
+According to this theory an interregnum of
+some sixteen weeks would intervene between
+the terms of service of every two presidents.
+He also speaks of Tyler as having, when the
+legislature of Virginia disapproved of a course
+he wished to follow, resigned his seat "in obedience
+to the democratic principle," which, according
+to his views, thus completely nullified
+the section of the Constitution providing for a
+six years' term of service in the Senate. In
+truth Benton, like most other Jacksonian and
+Jeffersonian leaders, became both foolish and
+illogical when he began to talk of the bundle of
+vague abstractions, which he knew collectively
+as the "democratic principle." Although not
+so bad as many of his school he had yet gradually
+worked himself up to a belief that it was
+almost impious to pay anything but servile heed
+to the "will of the majority;" and was quite
+unconscious that to surrender one's own manhood
+and judgment to a belief in the divine right of
+kings was only one degree more ignoble, and
+was not a shadow more logical, and but little
+more defensible, than it was blindly to deify a
+majority&mdash;not of the whole people, but merely
+of a small fraction consisting of those who happened<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243">[243]</a></span>
+to be of a certain sex, to have reached a
+certain age, to belong to a certain race, and to
+fulfill some other conditions. In fact there is
+no natural or divine law in the matter at all;
+how large a portion of the population should
+be trusted with the control of the government
+is a question of expediency merely. In any
+purely native American community manhood
+suffrage works infinitely better than would any
+other system of government, and throughout
+our country at large, in spite of the large number
+of ignorant foreign-born or colored voters,
+it is probably preferable as it stands to any
+modification of it; but there is no more "natural
+right" why a white man over twenty-one
+should vote than there is why a negro woman
+under eighteen should not. "Civil rights" and
+"personal freedom" are not terms that necessarily
+imply the right to vote. People make
+mistakes when governing themselves, exactly as
+they make mistakes when governing others;
+all that can be said is, that in the former case
+their self-interest is on the side of good government,
+whereas in the latter it always may be,
+and often must be, the reverse; so that, when
+any people reaches a certain stage of mental
+development and of capacity to take care of its
+own concerns, it is far better that it should itself
+take the reins. The distinctive features of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244">[244]</a></span>
+the American system are its guarantees of personal
+independence and individual freedom;
+that is, as far as possible, it guarantees to each
+man his right to live as he chooses and to regulate
+his own private affairs as he wishes, without
+being interfered with or tyrannized over by
+an individual, or by an oligarchic minority, or
+by a democratic majority; while, when the interests
+of the whole community are at stake, it
+is found best in the long run to let them be managed
+in accordance with the wishes of the majority
+of those presumably concerned.</p>
+
+<p>Clay's flourish of trumpets foreboded trouble
+and disturbance to the Jacksonian camp. At
+last he stood at the head of a party controlling
+both branches of the legislative body, and devoted
+to his behests; and, if a little doubtful
+about the president, he still believed he could
+frighten him into doing as he was bid. He
+had long been in the minority, and had seen
+his foes ride roughshod over all he most believed
+in; and now he prepared to pay them back in
+their own coin and to leave a heavy balance on
+his side of the reckoning. Nor could any Jacksonian
+have shown himself more domineering
+and influenced by a more insolent disregard for
+the rights of others than Clay did in his hour
+of triumph. On the other side, Benton braced
+himself with dogged determination for the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245">[245]</a></span>
+struggle; for he was one of those men who
+fight a losing or a winning battle with equal
+resolution.</p>
+
+<p>Tyler's first message to Congress read like a
+pretty good Whig document. It did not display
+any especial signs of his former strict construction
+theories, and gave little hope to the
+Democrats. The leader of the latter, indeed,
+Benton, commented upon both it and its author
+with rather grandiloquent severity, on account
+of its latitudinarian bias, and of its recommendation
+of a bank of some sort. However, the
+ink with which the message was written could
+hardly have been dry before the president's
+mind began to change. He himself probably
+had very little idea what he intended to do, and
+so contrived to give the Whigs the impression
+that he would act in accordance with their
+wishes; but the leaven had already begun
+working in his mind, and, not having much to
+work on, soon changed it so completely that he
+was willing practically to eat his own words.</p>
+
+<p>Shortly after Tyler had sent in his message
+outlining what legislation he deemed proper, he
+being by virtue of his position the nominal and
+titular leader of the Whigs, Clay, who was their
+real and very positive chief, and who was, moreover,
+determined to assert his chieftainship, in
+his turn laid down a programme for his party to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246">[246]</a></span>
+follow, introducing a series of resolutions declaring
+it necessary to pass a bill to repeal the
+sub-treasury act, another to establish a bank,
+another to distribute the proceeds of the public
+land sales, and one or two more, to which was
+afterwards added a bankruptcy measure.</p>
+
+<p>The sub-treasury bill was first taken up and
+promptly passed and signed. Benton, of course,
+led the hopeless fight against it, making a long
+and elaborate speech, insisting that the finances
+were in excellent shape, as they were, showing
+the advantages of hard money, and denouncing
+the bill on account of the extreme suddenness
+with which it took effect, and because it made
+no provision for any substitute. He also alluded
+caustically to the curious and anomalous
+bank bill, which was then being patched up by
+the Whig leaders so as to get it into some
+such shape that the president would sign it.</p>
+
+<p>The other three important measures, that is,
+the bank, distribution, and bankruptcy bills,
+were all passed nearly together; as Benton
+pointed out, they were got through only by a
+species of bargain and sale, the chief supporters
+of each agreeing to support the other, so as to
+get their own pet measure through. "All
+must go together or fall together. This is the
+decree out of doors. When the sun dips below
+the horizon a private congress is held; the fate<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247">[247]</a></span>
+of the measures is decided; a bundle is tied
+together; and while one goes ahead as a bait,
+another is held back as a rod."</p>
+
+<p>The bankruptcy bill went through and was
+signed. It was urged by all the large debtor
+class, whose ranks had been filled to overflowing
+by the years of wild speculation and general
+bank suspension and insolvency. These debtors
+were quite numerous enough to constitute an
+important factor in politics, but Benton disregarded
+them nevertheless, and fought the bill
+as stoutly as he did its companions, alleging
+that it was a gross outrage on honesty and on
+the rights of property, and was not a bankrupt
+law at all, but practically an insolvent law for
+the abolition of debts at the will of the debtor.
+He pointed out grave and numerous defects of
+detail, and gave an exhaustive abstract of bankruptcy
+legislation in general; the speech gave
+evidence of the tireless industry and wide range
+of learning for which Benton was preëminently
+distinguished.</p>
+
+<p>The third bill to be taken up and passed was
+that providing for the distribution of the public
+lands revenue, and thus indirectly for assuming
+the debts of the states. Tyler, in his message,
+had characteristically stated that, though it
+would be wholly unconstitutional for the federal
+government to assume the debts of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_248" id="Page_248">[248]</a></span>
+states, yet it would be highly proper for it to
+give the latter money wherewith to pay them.
+Clay had always been an enthusiastic advocate
+of a distribution bill; and accordingly one was
+now passed and signed with the least possible
+delay. It was an absolutely indefensible measure.
+The treasury was empty, and loan and
+tax bills were pending at the very moment, in
+order to supply money for the actual running
+of the government. As Benton pointed out,
+Congress had been called together (a special
+session having been summoned by Harrison before
+his death) to raise revenue, and the first
+thing done was to squander it. The distribution
+took place when the treasury reports
+showed a deficit of sixteen millions of dollars.
+The bill was pushed through mainly by the
+states which had repudiated their debts in
+whole or in part; and as these debts were
+largely owed abroad, many prominent foreign
+banking-houses and individuals took an active
+part in lobbying for the bill. Benton was emphatically
+right in his opposition to the measure,
+but he was very wrong in some of the grounds
+he took. Thus he inveighed vigorously against
+the foreign capitalists who had come to help
+push the bill through Congress; but he did not
+have anything to say against the scoundrelly
+dishonesty displayed by certain states towards<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_249" id="Page_249">[249]</a></span>
+their creditors, which had forced these capitalists
+into the endeavor to protect themselves.
+He also incidentally condemned the original
+assumption by the national government of the
+debts of the states, at the time of the formation
+of the Constitution, which was an absolute necessity;
+and his constitutional views throughout
+seem rather strained. But he was right
+beyond cavil on the main point. It was criminal
+folly to give the states the impression that
+they would be allowed to create debts over
+which Congress could have no control, yet
+which Congress in the end would give them
+the money to pay. To reward a state for repudiating
+a debt by giving her the wherewithal
+to pay it was a direct and unequivocal encouragement
+of dishonesty. In every respect the
+bill was wholly improper; and Benton's attitude
+towards it and towards similar schemes
+was incomparably better than the position of
+Clay, Webster, and the other Whigs.</p>
+
+<p>Both the bankrupt bill and the distribution
+bill were repealed very shortly; the latter before
+it had time to take effect. This was an
+emphatic indorsement by the public of Benton's
+views, and a humiliating rebuke to the Whig
+authors of the measures. Indeed, the whole
+legislation of the session was almost absolutely
+fruitless in its results.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_250" id="Page_250">[250]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>One feature of the struggle was an attempt
+by Clay, promptly and successfully resisted by
+Benton and Calhoun, to institute the hour limit
+for speeches in the Senate. There was a good
+deal of excuse for Clay's motion. The House
+could cut off debate by the previous question,
+which the Senate could not, and nevertheless
+had found it necessary to establish the hour
+limit in addition. Of course it is highly undesirable
+that there should not be proper freedom
+of debate in Congress; but it is quite as hurtful
+to allow a minority to exercise their privileges
+improperly. The previous question is often
+abused and used tyrannically; but on the whole
+it is a most invaluable aid to legislation. Benton,
+however, waxed hot and wrathful over the
+proposed change in the Senate rules. He, with
+Calhoun and their followers, had been consuming
+an immense amount of time in speech-making
+against the Whig measures, and in offering
+amendments; not with any hopes of bettering
+the bills, but for outside effect, and to annoy
+their opponents. He gives an amusingly naive
+account of their course of action, and the reasons
+for it, substantially as follows:&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>The Democratic senators acted upon a system, and
+with a thorough organization and a perfect understanding.
+Being a minority, and able to do nothing,
+they became assailants, and attacked incessantly; not<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_251" id="Page_251">[251]</a></span>
+by formal orations against the whole body of a measure,
+but by sudden, short, and pungent speeches directed
+against the vulnerable parts, and pointed by
+proffered amendments. Amendments were continually
+offered&mdash;a great number being prepared every
+night and placed in suitable hands for use the next
+day&mdash;always commendably calculated to expose an
+evil and to present a remedy. Near forty propositions
+of amendment were offered to the first fiscal
+agent bill alone&mdash;the yeas and nays were taken upon
+them seven and thirty times. All the other prominent
+bills&mdash;distribution, bankrupt, fiscal corporation,
+new tariff act, called revenue&mdash;were served the same
+way; every proposed amendment made an issue.
+There were but twenty-two of us, but every one was
+a speaker and effective. The "Globe" newspaper
+was a powerful ally, setting out all we did to the best
+advantage in strong editorials, and carrying out our
+speeches, fresh and hot, to the people; and we felt
+victorious in the midst of unbroken defeats.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>It is no wonder that such rank filibustering,
+coupled with the exasperating self-complacency
+of its originators, should have excited in Whig
+bosoms every desperate emotion short of homicidal
+mania.</p>
+
+<p>Clay, to cut off such useless talk, gave notice
+that he would move to have the time for debate
+for each individual restricted; remarking very
+truthfully that he did not believe the people
+at large would complain of the abridgment of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_252" id="Page_252">[252]</a></span>
+speeches in Congress. But the Democratic senators,
+all rather fond of windy orations, fairly
+foamed at the mouth at what they affected to
+deem such an infringement of their liberties;
+and actually took the inexcusable resolution of
+bidding defiance to the rule if it was adopted,
+and refusing to obey it, no matter what degree
+of violence their conduct might bring about,&mdash;a
+resolution that was wholly unpardonable.
+Benton was selected to voice their views upon
+the matter, which he did in a long, and not
+very wise speech; while Calhoun was quite as
+emphatic in his threats of what would happen
+if attempt should be made to enforce the proposed
+rule. Clay was always much bolder in
+opening a campaign than in carrying it through;
+and when it came to putting his words into
+deeds, he wholly lacked the nerve which would
+have enabled him to contend with two such
+men as the senators from Missouri and South
+Carolina. Had he possessed a temperament
+like that of either of his opponents, he would
+have gone on and have simply forced acquiescence;
+for any legislative body can certainly
+enforce what rules it may choose to make as to
+the conduct of its own members in addressing
+it; but his courage failed him, and he withdrew
+from the contest, leaving the victory with
+Democrats.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_253" id="Page_253">[253]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>When the question of the re-charter of the
+district banks came up, it of course gave Benton
+another chance to attack his favorite foe. He
+offered a very proper amendment, which was
+voted down, to prohibit the banks from issuing
+a currency of small notes, fixing upon twenty
+dollars as being the lowest limit. This he supported
+in a strong speech, wherein he once
+again argued at length in favor of a gold and
+silver currency, and showed the evil effects of
+small bank-notes, which might not be, and often
+were not, redeemable at par. He very properly
+pointed out that to have a sound currency, especially
+in all the smaller denominations, was
+really of greater interest to the working men
+than to any one else.</p>
+
+<p>The great measure of the session, however,
+and the one that was intended to be the final
+crown and glory of the Whig triumph, was the
+bill to establish a new national bank. Among
+the political theories to which Clay clung most
+closely, only the belief in a bank ranked higher
+in his estimation than his devotion to a protective
+tariff. The establishment of a national
+bank seemed to him to be the chief object of a
+Whig success; and that it would work immediate
+and immense benefit to the country was
+with him an article of faith. With both houses
+of Congress under his control, he at once prepared<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_254" id="Page_254">[254]</a></span>
+to push his pet measure through, impatiently
+brushing aside all resistance.</p>
+
+<p>But at the very outset difficulty was feared
+from the action of the president. Tyler could
+not at first make up his mind what to do; or
+rather, he made it up in half a dozen different
+ways every day. His peevishness, vacillation,
+ambitious vanity, and sheer puzzle-headedness
+made him incline first to the side of his new
+friends and present supporters, the Whigs, and
+then to that of his old democratic allies, whose
+views on the bank, as on most other questions,
+he had so often openly expressed himself as
+sharing. But though his mind oscillated like
+a pendulum, yet each time it swung farther
+and farther over to the side of the Democracy,
+and it began to look as if he would certainly
+in the end come to a halt in the camp of the
+enemies of the Whigs; his approach to this
+destination was merely hastened by Clay's overbearing
+violence and injudicious taunts.</p>
+
+<p>However, at first Tyler did not dare to come
+out openly against any and all bank laws, but
+tried to search round for some compromise
+measure; and as he could not invent a compromise
+in fact, he came to the conclusion that
+one in words would do just as well. He said
+that his conscience would not permit him to
+sign a bill to establish a bank that was called<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_255" id="Page_255">[255]</a></span>
+a bank, but that he was willing to sign a bill
+establishing such an institution provided that it
+was called something else, though it should possess
+all the properties of a bank. Such a proposal
+opened a wide field for the endless quibbling
+in which his soul delighted.</p>
+
+<p>The secretary of the treasury, in response to
+a call from the Senate, furnished a plan for a
+bank, having modeled it studiously so as to
+overcome the president's scruples; and a select
+committee of the Senate at once shaped a bill
+in accordance with the plans. Said Benton:
+"Even the title was made ridiculous to please
+the president, though not so much so as he
+wished. He objected to the name of bank
+either in the title or the body of the charter,
+and proposed to style it 'Fiscal Institute;' and
+afterwards the 'Fiscal Agent,' and finally the
+'Fiscal Corporation.'" Such preposterous folly
+on the president's part was more than the hot-blooded
+and overbearing Kentuckian could
+stand; and, in spite of his absorbing desire for
+the success of his measure, and of the vital necessity
+for conciliating Tyler, Clay could not
+bring himself to adopt such a ludicrous title,
+even though he had seen that the charter provided
+that the institution, whatever it might be
+styled in form, should in fact have all the properties
+of a bank. After a while, however, a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_256" id="Page_256">[256]</a></span>
+compromise title was agreed on, but only a
+shadow less imbecile than the original one proposed
+by the president; and it was agreed to
+call the measure the "Fiscal Bank" bill.</p>
+
+<p>The president vetoed it, but stated that he
+was ready to approve any similar bill that
+should be free from the objections he named.
+Clay could not resist reading Tyler a lecture on
+his misconduct, during the course of a speech in
+the Senate; but the Whigs generally smothered
+their resentment, and set about preparing something
+which the president would sign, and this
+time concluded that they would humor him to
+the top of his bent, even by choosing a title as
+ridiculous as he wished; so they styled their
+bill one to establish a "Fiscal Corporation."
+Benton held the title up to well-deserved derision,
+and showed that, though there had been
+quite an elaborate effort to disguise the form of
+the measure, and to make it purport to establish
+a bank that should have the properties of a
+treasury, yet that in reality it was simply a revival
+of the old scheme under another name.
+The Whigs swallowed the sneers of their opponents
+as best they could, and passed their bill.</p>
+
+<p>The president again interposed his veto. An
+intrigue was going on among a few unimportant
+congressmen and obscure office-holders to
+form a new party with Tyler at its head; and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_257" id="Page_257">[257]</a></span>
+the latter willingly entered into the plan, his
+mind, which was not robust at the best, being
+completely dazzled by his sudden elevation and
+his wild hopes that he could continue to keep
+the place which he had reached. He had given
+the Whigs reason to expect that he would sign
+the bill, and had taken none of his cabinet into
+his confidence. So, when his veto came in, it
+raised a perfect whirlwind of wrath and bitter
+disappointment. His cabinet all resigned, except
+Webster, who stayed to finish the treaty
+with Great Britain; and the Whigs formally
+read him out of the party. The Democrats
+looked on with huge enjoyment, and patted
+Tyler on the back, for they could see that he
+was bringing their foes to ruin; but nevertheless
+they despised him heartily, and abandoned
+him wholly when he had served their turn.
+Left without any support among the regulars
+of either side, and his own proposed third party
+turning out a still-born abortion, he simply
+played out his puny part until his term ended,
+and then dropped noiselessly out of sight. It is
+only the position he filled, and not in the least
+his ability, for either good or bad, in filling it,
+that prevents his name from sinking into merciful
+oblivion.</p>
+
+<p>There was yet one more brief spasm over the
+bank, however; the president sending in a plan<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_258" id="Page_258">[258]</a></span>
+for a "Fiscal Agent," to be called a Board of
+Exchequer. Congress contemptuously refused
+to pay any attention to the proposition, Benton
+showing its utter unworthiness in an excellent
+speech, one of the best that he made on the
+whole financial question.</p>
+
+<p>Largely owing to the cross purposes at which
+the president and his party were working, the
+condition of the treasury became very bad. It
+sought to provide for its immediate wants by
+the issue of treasury notes, differing from former
+notes of the kind in that they were made
+reissuable. Benton at once, and very properly,
+attacked this proceeding. He had a check
+drawn for a few days' compensation as senator,
+demanded payment in hard money, and when
+he was given treasury notes instead, made a
+most emphatic protest in the Senate, which was
+entirely effectual, the practically compulsory
+tender of the paper money being forthwith
+stopped.</p>
+
+<p>It was at this time, also, that bills to subsidize
+steamship lines were first passed, and that
+the enlarging and abuse of the pension system
+began, which in our own day threatens to become
+a really crying evil. Benton opposed both
+sets of measures; and in regard to the pension
+matter showed that he would not let himself,
+by any specious plea of exceptional suffering or<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_259" id="Page_259">[259]</a></span>
+need for charity, be led into vicious special legislation,
+sure in the end to bring about the breaking
+down of some of the most important principles
+of government.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_260" id="Page_260">[260]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XII" id="CHAPTER_XII"></a>CHAPTER XII.</h2>
+
+<h3>BOUNDARY TROUBLES WITH ENGLAND.</h3>
+
+
+<p>Two important controversies with foreign
+powers became prominent during Tyler's presidency;
+but he had little to do with the settlement
+of either, beyond successively placing in
+his cabinet the two great statesmen who dealt
+with them. Webster, while secretary of state,
+brought certain of the negotiations with England
+to a close; and later on, Calhoun, while
+holding the same office, took up Webster's work
+and also grappled with&mdash;indeed partly caused&mdash;the
+troubles on the Mexican border, and
+turned them to the advantage of the South and
+slavery.</p>
+
+<p>Our boundaries were still very ill-defined, except
+where they were formed by the Gulf and
+the Ocean, the Great Lakes, and the river St.
+John. Even in the Northeast, where huge
+stretches of unbroken forest-land separated the
+inhabited portions of Canada from those of New
+England, it was not yet decided how much of
+this wilderness belonged to us and how much<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_261" id="Page_261">[261]</a></span>
+to the Canadians; and in the vast, unsettled
+regions of the far West our claims came into
+direct conflict with those of Mexico and of
+Great Britain. The ownership of these little
+known and badly mapped regions could with
+great difficulty be decided on grounds of absolute
+and abstract right; the title of each contestant
+to the land was more or less plausible, and at the
+same time more or less defective. The matter
+was sure to be decided in favor of the strongest;
+and, say what we will about the justice and
+right of the various claims, the honest truth is,
+that the comparative might of the different nations,
+and not the comparative righteousness of
+their several causes, was the determining factor
+in the settlement. Mexico lost her northern
+provinces by no law of right, but simply by the
+law of the longest sword&mdash;the same law that
+gave India to England. In both instances the
+result was greatly to the benefit of the conquered
+peoples and of every one else; though
+there is this wide difference between the two
+cases: that whereas the English rule in India,
+while it may last for decades or even for centuries,
+must eventually come to an end and leave
+little trace of its existence; on the other hand
+our conquests from Mexico determined for all
+time the blood, speech, and law of the men who
+should fill the lands we won.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_262" id="Page_262">[262]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The questions between Great Britain and ourselves
+were compromised by each side accepting
+about half what it claimed, only because
+neither was willing to push the other to extremities.
+Englishmen like Palmerston might hector
+and ruffle, and Americans like Benton might
+swagger and bully; but when it came to be a
+question of actual fighting each people recognized
+the power of the other, and preferred to
+follow the more cautious and peaceful, not to
+say timid, lead of such statesmen as Webster
+and Lord Melbourne. Had we been no stronger
+than the Sikhs, Oregon and Washington would
+at present be British possessions; and if Great
+Britain had been as weak as Mexico, she would
+not now hold a foot of territory on the Pacific
+coast. Either nation might perhaps have refused
+to commit a gross and entirely unprovoked
+and uncalled-for act of aggression; but
+each, under altered conditions, would have
+readily found excuses for showing much less regard
+for the claims of the other than actually
+was shown. It would be untrue to say that
+nations have not at times proved themselves
+capable of acting with great disinterestedness
+and generosity towards other peoples; but such
+conduct is not very common at the best, and
+although it often may be desirable, it certainly
+is not always so. If the matter in dispute is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_263" id="Page_263">[263]</a></span>
+of great importance, and if there is a doubt as
+to which side is right, then the strongest party
+to the controversy is pretty sure to give itself
+the benefit of that doubt; and international
+morality will have to take tremendous strides
+in advance before this ceases to be the case.</p>
+
+<p>It is difficult to exaggerate the importance of
+the treaties and wars by means of which we
+finally gave definite bounds to our territory beyond
+the Mississippi. Contemporary political
+writers and students, of the lesser sort, are always
+painfully deficient in the sense of historic
+perspective; and to such the struggles for the
+possession of the unknown and dimly outlined
+western wastes seemed of small consequence
+compared to similar European contests for territorial
+aggrandizement. Yet, in reality, when
+we look at the far-reaching nature of the results,
+the questions as to what kingdom should receive
+the fealty of Holstein or Lorraine, of Savoy or
+the Dobrudscha, seem of absolutely trivial importance
+compared to the infinitely more momentous
+ones as to the future race settlement
+and national ownership of the then lonely and
+unpeopled lands of Texas, California, and Oregon.</p>
+
+<p>Benton, greatly to the credit of his foresight,
+and largely in consequence of his strong nationalist
+feeling, thoroughly appreciated the importance<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_264" id="Page_264">[264]</a></span>
+of our geographical extensions. He was
+the great champion of the West and of western
+development, and a furious partisan of every
+movement in the direction of the enlargement
+of our western boundaries. Many of his expressions,
+when talking of the greatness of our
+country and of the magnitude of the interests
+which were being decided, not only were grandiloquent
+in manner, but also seem exaggerated
+and overwrought even as regards matter. But
+when we think of the interests for which he
+contended, as they were to become, and not as
+they at the moment were, the appearance of exaggeration
+is lost, and the intense feeling of his
+speeches no longer seems out of place or disproportionate
+to the importance of the subject
+with which he dealt. Without clearly formulating
+his opinions, even to himself, and while
+sometimes prone to attribute to his country at
+the moment a greatness she was not to possess
+for two or three generations to come, he, nevertheless,
+had engrained in his very marrow and
+fibre the knowledge that inevitably, and beyond
+all doubt, the coming years were to be hers.
+He knew that, while other nations held the
+past, and shared with his own the present, yet
+that to her belonged the still formless and unshaped
+future. More clearly than almost any
+other statesman he beheld the grandeur of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_265" id="Page_265">[265]</a></span>
+nation loom up, vast and shadowy, through the
+advancing years.</p>
+
+<p>He was keenly alive to the need of our having
+free chance to spread towards the northwest;
+he very early grasped the idea that in that direction
+we ought to have room for continental
+development. In his earliest years, to be sure,
+when the Mississippi seemed a river of the
+remote western border, when nobody, not even
+the hardiest trapper, had penetrated the boundless
+and treeless plains that stretch to the foot-hills
+of the Rockies, and when the boldest
+thinkers had not dared to suppose that we could
+ever hold together as a people, when once scattered
+over so wide a territory, he had stated in
+a public speech that he considered the mountains
+to be our natural frontier line to the west,
+and the barrier beyond which we ought not to
+pass, and had expressed his trust that on the
+Pacific coast there would grow up a kindred
+and friendly Republic. But very soon, as the
+seemingly impossible became the actual, he himself
+changed, and ever afterwards held that we
+should have, wherever possible, no boundaries
+but the two Oceans.</p>
+
+<p>Benton's violent and aggressive patriotism
+undoubtedly led him to assume positions towards
+foreign powers that were very repugnant
+to the quiet, peaceable, and order-loving portion<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_266" id="Page_266">[266]</a></span>
+of the community, especially when he gave vent
+to the spirit of jealous antagonism which he felt
+towards Great Britain, the power that held
+sway over the wilderness bordering us on the
+north. Yet the arrogant attitude he assumed
+was more than justified by the destiny of the
+great Republic; and it would have been well
+for all America if we had insisted even more
+than we did upon the extension northward of
+our boundaries. Not only the Columbia but
+also the Red River of the North&mdash;and the Saskatchewan
+and Frazer as well&mdash;should lie
+wholly within our limits, less for our own sake
+than for the sake of the men who dwell along
+their banks. Columbia, Saskatchewan, and
+Manitoba would, as states of the American
+Union, hold positions incomparably more important,
+grander, and more dignified than they can
+ever hope to reach either as independent communities
+or as provincial dependencies of a foreign
+power that regards them with a kindly tolerance
+somewhat akin to contemptuous indifference.
+Of course no one would wish to see these,
+or any other settled communities, now added to
+our domain by force; we want no unwilling citizens
+to enter our Union; the time to have taken
+the lands was before settlers came into them.
+European nations war for the possession of
+thickly settled districts which, if conquered, will<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_267" id="Page_267">[267]</a></span>
+for centuries remain alien and hostile to the
+conquerors; we, wiser in our generation, have
+seized the waste solitudes that lay near us, the
+limitless forests and never ending plains, and
+the valleys of the great, lonely rivers; and have
+thrust our own sons into them to take possession;
+and a score of years after each conquest
+we see the conquered land teeming with a people
+that is one with ourselves.</p>
+
+<p>Benton felt that all the unoccupied land to
+the northwest was by right our heritage, and
+he was willing to do battle for it if necessary.
+He was a perfect type of western American
+statesmanship in his way of looking at our foreign
+relations; he was always unwilling to compromise,
+being of that happy temperament
+which is absolutely certain that its claims are
+just and righteous in their entirety, and that it
+would be wrong to accept anything less than
+all that is demanded; he was willing to bully
+if our rights, as he deemed them, were not
+granted us; and he was perfectly ready to fight
+if the bullying was unsuccessful. True, he did
+not consistently carry through all his theories
+to their logical consequences; but it may well
+be questioned whether, after all, his original
+attitude towards Great Britain was not wiser,
+looking to its probable remote results, than that
+which was finally taken by the national government,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_268" id="Page_268">[268]</a></span>
+whose policy was on this point largely
+shaped by the feeling among the richer and
+more educated classes of the Northeast. These
+classes have always been more cautious and
+timid than any others in the Union, especially
+in their way of looking at possible foreign
+wars, and have never felt much of the spirit
+which made the West stretch out impatiently
+for new lands. Fortunately they have rarely
+been able to control our territorial growth.</p>
+
+<p>No foot of soil to which we had any title in
+the Northwest should have been given up; we
+were the people who could use it best, and we
+ought to have taken it all. The prize was well
+worth winning, and would warrant a good deal
+of risk being run. We had even then grown
+to be so strong that we were almost sure eventually
+to win in any American contest for continental
+supremacy. We were near by, our
+foes far away&mdash;for the contest over the Columbia
+would have been settled in Canada.
+We should have had hard fighting to be sure,
+but sooner or later the result would have been
+in our favor. There were no better soldiers in
+the world than the men of Balaclava and Inkerman,
+but the victors of Buena Vista and Chapultepec
+were as good. Scott and Taylor were
+not great generals, but they were, at least, the
+equals of Lord Raglan; and we did not have in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_269" id="Page_269">[269]</a></span>
+our service any such examples of abnormal military
+inaptitude as Lords Lucan and Cardigan
+and their kind.</p>
+
+<p>It was of course to be expected that men
+like Benton would bitterly oppose the famous
+Ashburton treaty, which was Webster's crowning
+work while secretary of state, and the only
+conspicuous success of Tyler's administration.
+The Ashburton treaty was essentially a compromise
+between the extreme claims of the two
+contestants, as was natural where the claims
+were based on very unsubstantial grounds and
+the contestants were of somewhat the same
+strength. It was most beneficial in its immediate
+effects; and that it was a perfectly dignified
+and proper treaty for America to make is best
+proved by the virulent hostility with which
+Palmerston and his followers assailed it as a
+"surrender" on the part of England, while
+Englishmen of the same stamp are to this day
+never tired of lamenting the fact that they have
+allowed our western boundaries to be pushed
+so far to the north. But there appears to be
+much excuse for Benton's attitude, when we
+look at the treaty as one in a chain of incidents,
+and with regard to its future results. Our territorial
+quarrels with Great Britain were not
+like those between most other powers. It
+was for the interest of the whole western hemisphere<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_270" id="Page_270">[270]</a></span>
+that no European nation should have
+extensive possessions between the Atlantic and
+the Pacific; and by right we should have given
+ourselves the benefit of every doubt in all
+territorial questions, and have shown ourselves
+ready to make prompt appeal to the sword
+whenever it became necessary as a last resort.</p>
+
+<p>Still, as regards the Ashburton treaty itself,
+it must be admitted that much of Benton's
+opposition was merely factious and partisan,
+on account of its being a Whig measure; and
+his speeches on the subject contain a number
+of arguments that are not very creditable to
+him.</p>
+
+<p>Some of his remarks referred to a matter
+which had been already a cause of great excitement
+during Van Buren's administration, and
+on which he had spoken more than once. This
+was the destruction of the steamer Caroline by
+the British during the abortive Canadian insurrection
+of 1837. Much sympathy had been
+felt for the rebels by the Americans along the
+border, and some of them had employed the
+Caroline in conveying stores to the insurgents;
+and in revenge a party of British troops surprised
+and destroyed her one night while she
+was lying in an American port. This was a
+gross and flagrant violation of our rights, and
+was promptly resented by Van Buren, who had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_271" id="Page_271">[271]</a></span>
+done what he could to maintain order along the
+border, and had been successful in his efforts.
+Benton had supported the president in preventing
+a breach of neutrality on our part, and
+was fiercely indignant when the breach was
+committed by the other side. Reparation was
+demanded forthwith. The British government
+at first made evasive replies. After a while a
+very foolish personage named McLeod, a British
+subject, who boasted that he had taken part
+in the affair, ventured into New York and was
+promptly imprisoned by the state authorities.
+His boastings, fortunately for him, proved to be
+totally unfounded, and he was acquitted by the
+jury before whom he was taken, after a detention
+of several months in prison. But meanwhile
+the British government demanded his
+release&mdash;adopting a very different tone with
+Tyler and the Whigs from that which they had
+been using towards Van Buren, who still could
+conjure with Jackson's terrible name. The
+United States agreed to release McLeod, but
+New York refused to deliver him up; and before
+the question was decided he was acquitted,
+as said above. It was clearly wrong for a state
+to interfere in a disagreement between the nation
+and a foreign power; and on the other
+hand the federal authorities did not show as
+much firmness in their dealings with England<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_272" id="Page_272">[272]</a></span>
+as they should have shown. Benton, true to
+certain of his states-rights theories and in pursuance
+of his policy of antagonism to Great
+Britain, warmly supported the attitude of New
+York, alleging that the United States had no
+right to interfere with her disposal of McLeod;
+and asserting that while if the citizens
+of one country committed an outrage upon another
+it was necessary to apply to the sovereign
+for redress, yet that if the wrong-doers
+came into the country which had been aggrieved
+they might be seized and punished; and he
+exultingly referred to Jackson's conduct at the
+time of the first Seminole War, when he hung
+off-hand two British subjects whom he accused
+of inciting the Indians against us, Great Britain
+not making any protest. The Caroline matter
+was finally settled in the Ashburton treaty, the
+British making a formal but very guarded apology
+for her destruction,&mdash;an apology which did
+not satisfy Benton in the least.</p>
+
+<p>It is little to Benton's credit, however, that,
+while thus courting foreign wars, he yet opposed
+the efforts of the Whigs to give us a better
+navy. Our navy was then good of its kind, but
+altogether too small. Benton's opposition to its
+increase seems to have proceeded partly from
+mere bitter partisanship, partly from sheer ignorance,
+and partly from the doctrinaire dread<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_273" id="Page_273">[273]</a></span>
+of any kind of standing military or naval force,
+which he had inherited, with a good many similar
+ideas, from the Jeffersonians.</p>
+
+<p>He attacked the whole treaty, article by article,
+when it came up for ratification in the Senate,
+making an extremely lengthy and elaborate
+speech, or rather set of speeches, against
+it. Much of his objection, especially to the
+part compromising the territorial claims of the
+two governments, was well founded; but much
+was also factious and groundless. The most
+important point of all that was in controversy,
+the ownership of Oregon, was left unsettled;
+but, as will be shown farther on, this was wise.
+He made this omission a base or pretext for the
+charge that the treaty was gotten up in the
+interests of the East,&mdash;although with frank
+lack of logic he also opposed it because it sacrificed
+the interests of Maine,&mdash;and that it was
+detrimental to the South and West; and he did
+his best to excite sectional feeling against it.
+He also protested against the omission of all
+reference to the impressment of American sailors
+by British vessels; and this was a valid
+ground of opposition,&mdash;although Webster had
+really settled the matter by writing a formal
+note to the British government, in which he
+practically gave official notice that any attempt
+to revive the practice would be repelled by force
+of arms.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_274" id="Page_274">[274]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Benton occupied a much less tenable position
+when he came to the question of slavery, and
+inveighed against the treaty because it did not
+provide for the return of fugitive slaves, or of
+slaves taken from American coasting vessels
+when the latter happened to be obliged to put
+into West Indian ports, and because it did contain
+a provision that we ourselves should keep
+in commission a squadron on the coast of Africa
+to coöperate with the British in the suppression
+of the slave-trade. Benton's object in attacking
+the treaty on this point was to excite the
+South to a degree that would make the senators
+from that section refuse to join in ratifying it;
+but the attempt was a flat failure. It is hardly
+to be supposed that he himself was as indignant
+over this question as he pretended to be. He
+must have realized that, so long as we had among
+ourselves an institution so wholly barbarous
+and out of date as slavery, just so long we
+should have to expect foreign powers to treat us
+rather cavalierly on that one point. Whatever
+we might say among ourselves as to the rights
+of property or the necessity of preserving the
+Union by refraining from the disturbance of
+slavery, it was certain that foreign nations
+would place the manhood and liberty of the
+slave above the vested interest of the master&mdash;all
+the more readily because they were jealous<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_275" id="Page_275">[275]</a></span>
+of the Union and anxious to see it break up,
+and were naturally delighted to take the side of
+abstract justice and humanity, when to do so
+was at the expense of outsiders and redounded
+to their own credit, without causing them the
+least pecuniary loss or personal inconvenience.
+The attitude of slave-holders towards freedom
+in the abstract was grotesque in its lack of logic;
+but the attitude of many other classes of men,
+both abroad and at home, towards it was equally
+full of a grimly unconscious humor. The southern
+planters, who loudly sympathized with Kossuth
+and the Hungarians, were entirely unconscious
+that their tyranny over their own black
+bondsmen made their attacks upon Austria's
+despotism absurd; and Germans, who were
+shocked at our holding the blacks in slavery,
+could not think of freedom in their own country
+without a shudder. On one night the Democrats
+of the Northern States would hold a mass
+meeting to further the cause of Irish freedom,
+on the next night the same men would break
+up another meeting held to help along the freeing
+of the negroes; while the English aristocracy
+held up its hands in horror at American
+slavery and set its face like a flint against all
+efforts to do Ireland tardy and incomplete justice.</p>
+
+<p>Again, in his opposition to the extradition<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_276" id="Page_276">[276]</a></span>
+clause of the treaty, Benton was certainly
+wrong. Nothing is clearer than that nations
+ought to combine to prevent criminals from
+escaping punishment merely by fleeing over an
+imaginary line; the crime is against all society,
+and society should unite to punish it. Especially
+is there need of the most stringent extradition
+laws between countries whose people
+have the same speech and legal system, as with
+the United States and Great Britain. Indeed,
+it is a pity that our extradition laws are not
+more stringent. But Benton saw, or affected
+to see, in the extradition clause, a menace to
+political refugees, and based his opposition to it
+mainly on this ground. He also quoted on his
+side the inevitable Jefferson; for Jefferson, or
+rather the highly idealized conception of what
+Jefferson had been, shared with the "demos
+krateo principle" the honor of being one of
+the twin fetiches to which Benton, in common
+with most of his fellow-Democrats, especially
+delighted to bow down.</p>
+
+<p>But when he came to the parts of the treaty
+that defined our northeastern boundary and so
+much of our northwestern boundary as lay near
+the Great Lakes, Benton occupied far more
+defensible ground; and the parts of his speech
+referring to these questions were very strong indeed.
+He attempted to show that in the matter<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_277" id="Page_277">[277]</a></span>
+of the Maine frontier we had surrendered very
+much more than there was any need of our doing,
+and that the British claim was unfounded;
+and there seems now to be good reason for
+thinking him right, although it must be admitted
+that in agreeing to the original line in
+earlier treaties the British had acted entirely
+under a misapprehension as to where it would
+go. Benton was also able to make a good
+point against Webster for finally agreeing to
+surrender so much of Maine's claim by showing
+the opposition the latter had made, while in the
+Senate, to a similar but less objectionable clause
+in a treaty which Jackson's administration had
+then been trying to get through. Again Webster
+had, in defending the surrender of certain
+of our claims along the boundary west of Lake
+Superior, stated that the country was not very
+valuable, as it was useless for agricultural purposes;
+and Benton had taken him up sharply
+on this point, saying that we wanted the land
+anyhow, whether it produced corn and potatoes
+or only furs and lumber. The amounts of territory
+as to which our claims were compromised
+were not very large compared to the extent of
+the Pacific coast lands which were still left in
+dispute; and it was perhaps well that the
+treaty was ratified; but certainly there is much
+to be said on Benton's side so far as his opposition
+to the proposed frontier was concerned.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_278" id="Page_278">[278]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>However, he was only able to rally eight
+other senators to his support, and the treaty
+went through the Senate triumphantly. It encountered
+an even more bitter opposition in
+Parliament, where Palmerston headed a series
+of furious attacks upon it, for reasons the precise
+opposite of those which Benton alleged,
+arguing that England received much less, instead
+of much more, than her due, and thereby
+showing Webster's position in a very much
+better light than that in which it would otherwise
+have appeared. Eventually the British
+government ratified the treaty.</p>
+
+<p>The Ashburton treaty did not touch on the
+Oregon matter at all; nor was this dealt with
+by Webster while he was secretary of state.
+But it came before the Senate at that time,
+and later on Calhoun took it up, when filling
+Webster's place in the cabinet, although a final
+decision was not reached until during Polk's
+presidency. Webster did not appreciate the
+importance of Oregon in the least, and moreover
+came from a section of the country that
+was not inclined to insist on territorial expansion
+at the hazard of a war, in which the merchants
+of the sea-board would be the chief sufferers.
+Calhoun, it is true, came from a peculiarly
+militant and bellicose state, but on the
+other hand from a section that was not very<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_279" id="Page_279">[279]</a></span>
+anxious to see the free North acquire new territory.
+So it happened that neither of Tyler's
+two great secretaries felt called upon to insist
+too vehemently upon going to extremes in defense
+of our rights, or supposed rights, along
+the Pacific coast; and though in the end the
+balance was struck pretty evenly between our
+claims and those of our neighbor, yet it is to be
+regretted that we did not stand out stiffly for
+the whole of our demand. Our title was certainly
+not perfect, but it was to the full as good
+as, or better than, Great Britain's; and it would
+have been better in the end had we insisted
+upon the whole territory being given to us, no
+matter what price we had to pay.</p>
+
+<p>The politico-social line of division between
+the East and the West had been gradually
+growing fainter as that between the North
+and South grew deeper; but on the Oregon
+question it again became prominent. Southeastern
+Democrats, like the Carolinian McDuffie,
+spoke as slightingly of the value of Oregon,
+and were as little inclined to risk a war for its
+possession, as the most peace-loving Whigs of
+New England; while the intense western feeling
+against giving up any of our rights on the
+Pacific coast was best expressed by the two
+senators from the slave state of Missouri. Benton
+was not restrained in his desire to add to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_280" id="Page_280">[280]</a></span>
+the might of the Union by any fear of the possible
+future effect upon the political power of
+the Slave States. Although a slave-holder and
+the representative of slave-holders, he was fully
+alive to the evils of slavery, though as yet not
+seeing clearly how all-important a question it
+had become. The preservation and extension of
+the Union and obedience to the spirit of Democracy
+were the chief articles of his political
+creed, and to these he always subordinated all
+others. When, in speaking of slavery, he made
+use, as he sometimes did, of expressions that
+were not far removed from those of men really
+devoted to the slave interests, it was almost
+always because he had some ulterior object in
+view, or for factional ends; for unfortunately
+his standard of political propriety was not sufficiently
+high to prevent his trying to make
+use of any weapon, good or bad, with which to
+overturn his political foes. In protesting against
+the Ashburton treaty, he outdid even such slavery
+champions as Calhoun in the extravagance
+of his ideas as to what we should demand of
+foreign powers in reference to their treatment
+of our "peculiar institution"; but he seems
+to have done this merely because thereby he
+got an additional handle of attack against the
+Whig measures. The same thing was true
+earlier of his fulmination against Clay's proposed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_281" id="Page_281">[281]</a></span>
+Panama Congress; and even before that,
+in attacking Adams for his supposed part in the
+treaty whereby we established the line of our
+Spanish frontier, he dragged slavery into the
+question, not, apparently, because he really particularly
+wished to see our slave territory extended,
+but because he thought that he might
+use the slavery cry to excite in one other section
+of the country a feeling as strong as that which
+the West already felt in regard to territorial
+expansion generally. Indeed, his whole conduct
+throughout the Oregon controversy, especially
+when taken in connection with the fact that
+he stood out for Maine's frontier rights more
+stoutly than the Maine representatives themselves,
+shows how free from sectional bias was
+his way of looking at our geographical growth.</p>
+
+<p>The territory along the Pacific coast lying
+between California on the south and Alaska on
+the north&mdash;"Oregon," as it was comprehensively
+called&mdash;had been a source of dispute
+for some time between the United States and
+Great Britain. After some negotiations both
+had agreed with Russia to recognize the line of
+54° 40' as the southern boundary of the latter's
+possessions; and Mexico's undisputed possession
+of California gave an equally well marked
+southern limit, at the forty-second parallel.
+All between was in dispute. The British had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_282" id="Page_282">[282]</a></span>
+trading posts at the mouth of the Columbia,
+which they emphatically asserted to be theirs;
+we, on the other hand, claimed an absolutely
+clear title up to the forty-ninth parallel, a
+couple of hundred miles north of the mouth of
+the Columbia, and asserted that for all the balance
+of the territory up to the Russian possessions
+our title was at any rate better than that
+of the British. In 1818 a treaty had been made
+providing for the joint occupation of the territory
+by the two powers, as neither was willing
+to give up its claim to the whole, or at the time
+at all understood the value of the possession,
+then entirely unpeopled. This treaty of joint
+occupancy had remained in force ever since.
+Under it the British had built great trading
+stations, and used the whole country in the interests
+of certain fur companies. The Americans,
+in spite of some vain efforts, were unable
+to compete with them in this line; but, what
+was infinitely more important, had begun, even
+prior to 1840, to establish actual settlers along
+the banks of the rivers, some missionaries being
+the first to come in. As long, however, as
+the territory remained sparsely settled, and the
+communication with it chiefly by sea, the hold
+of Great Britain gave promise of being the
+stronger. But the aspect of affairs was totally
+changed when in 1842 a huge caravan of over<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_283" id="Page_283">[283]</a></span>
+a thousand Americans made the journey overland
+from the frontiers of Missouri, taking with
+them their wives and their children, their flocks
+and herds, carrying their long rifles on their
+shoulders, and their axes and spades in the great
+canvas-topped wagons. The next year, two
+thousand more settlers of the same sort in their
+turn crossed the vast plains, wound their way
+among the Rocky Mountains through the pass
+explored by Fremont, Benton's son-in-law, and
+after suffering every kind of hardship and danger,
+and warding off the attacks of hostile
+Indians, descended the western slope of the
+great water-shed to join their fellows by the
+banks of the Columbia. When American settlers
+were once in actual possession of the disputed
+territory, it became evident that the
+period of Great Britain's undisputed sway was
+over.</p>
+
+<p>The government of the United States, meanwhile,
+was so far from helping these settlers
+that it on the contrary rather threw obstacles in
+their way. As usual with us, the individual activity
+of the citizens themselves, who all acted
+independently and with that peculiar self-reliance
+that is the chief American characteristic,
+outstripped the activity of their representatives,
+who were obliged all to act together, and who
+were therefore held back by each other,&mdash;our<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_284" id="Page_284">[284]</a></span>
+Constitution, while giving free scope for individual
+freedom, wisely providing such checks as to
+make our governmental system eminently conservative
+in its workings. Tyler's administration
+did not wish to embroil itself with England;
+so it refused any aid to the settlers, and
+declined to give them grants of land, as under
+the joint occupancy treaty that would have
+given England offense and cause for complaint.
+But Benton and the other Westerners were
+perfectly willing to offend England, if by so doing
+they could help America to obtain Oregon,
+and were too rash and headstrong to count the
+cost of their actions. Accordingly, a bill was
+introduced providing for the settlement of Oregon,
+and giving each settler six hundred and
+forty acres, and additional land if he had a family;
+so that every inducement was held out to
+the emigrants, the West wanting to protect and
+encourage them by all the means in its power.
+The laws and jurisdiction of the Territory of
+Iowa were to be extended to all the settlers on
+the Pacific coast, who hitherto had governed
+themselves merely by a system of mutual agreements.</p>
+
+<p>The bill was, of course, strongly opposed, especially
+on account of the clause giving land to
+the settlers. It passed the Senate by a close
+vote, but failed in the House. Naturally Benton<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_285" id="Page_285">[285]</a></span>
+was one of its chief supporters, and spoke at
+length in its favor. He seized the kernel of the
+matter when, in advocating the granting of land,
+he spoke of immigration as "the only thing
+which can save the country from the British,
+acting through their powerful agent, the Hudson's
+Bay Company." He then blew a lusty
+note of defiance to Great Britain herself:&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>I think she will take offense, do what we may in
+relation to this territory. She wants it herself, and
+means to quarrel for it, if she does not fight for it....
+I grant that she will take offense, but that is
+not the question with me. Has she a <i>right</i> to take
+offense? That is my question! And this being decided
+in the negative, I neither fear nor calculate consequences....
+Courage will keep her off, fear will
+bring her upon us. The assertion of our rights will
+command her respect; the fear to assert them will
+bring us her contempt.... Neither nations nor individuals
+ever escaped danger by fearing it. They
+must face it and defy it. An abandonment of a right
+for fear of bringing on an attack, instead of keeping
+it off, will inevitably bring on the outrage that is
+dreaded.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>He was right enough in his disposition to resent
+the hectoring spirit which, at that time,
+characterized Great Britain's foreign policy;
+but he was all wrong in condemning delay, and
+stating that if things were left as they were
+time would work against us, and not for us.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_286" id="Page_286">[286]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>In this respect Calhoun, who opposed the bill,
+was much wiser. He advocated a policy of
+"masterly inactivity," foreseeing that time was
+everything to us, inasmuch as the land was sure
+in the end to belong to that nation whose people
+had settled in it, and we alone were able to
+furnish a constantly increasing stream of immigrants.
+Later on, however, Calhoun abandoned
+this policy, probably mainly influenced by fear
+of the extension of free territory, and consented
+to a compromise with Great Britain. The true
+course to have pursued would have been to have
+combined the ideas of both Benton and Calhoun,
+and to have gone farther than either; that is, we
+should have allowed the question to remain unsettled
+as long as was possible, because every
+year saw an increasing American population in
+the coveted lands, and rendered the ultimate
+decision surer to be for us. When it was impossible
+to postpone the question longer, we
+should have insisted upon its being settled
+entirely in our favor, no matter at what cost.
+The unsuccessful attempts, made by Benton and
+his supporters, to persuade the Senate to pass a
+resolution, requiring that notice of the termination
+of the joint occupancy treaty should forthwith
+be given, were certainly ill-advised.</p>
+
+<p>However, even Benton was not willing to go
+to the length to which certain Western men<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_287" id="Page_287">[287]</a></span>
+went, who insisted upon all or nothing. He had
+become alarmed and angry over the intrigue for
+the admission of Texas and the proposed forcible
+taking away of Mexican territory. The
+Northwestern Democrats wanted all Texas and
+all Oregon; the Southeastern ones wished all
+the former and part of the latter. Benton
+then concluded that it would be best to take
+part of each; for, although no friend to compromises,
+yet he was unwilling to jeopardize the
+safety of the Union as it was by seeking to make
+it still larger. Accordingly, he sympathized
+with the effort made by Calhoun while secretary
+of state to get the British to accept the line of
+49° as the frontier; but the British government
+then rejected this proposition. In 1844 the
+Democrats made their campaign upon the issue
+of "fifty-four forty or fight;" and Polk, when
+elected, felt obliged to insist upon this campaign
+boundary. To this, however, Great Britain naturally
+would not consent; it was, indeed, idle
+to expect her to do so, unless things should be
+kept as they were until a fairly large American
+population had grown up along the Pacific coast,
+and had thus put her in a position where she
+could hardly do anything else. Polk's administration
+was neither capable nor warlike, however
+well disposed to bluster; and the secretary
+of state, the timid, shifty, and selfish politician,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_288" id="Page_288">[288]</a></span>
+Buchanan, naturally fond of facing both ways,
+was the last man to wish to force a quarrel on a
+high-spirited and determined antagonist like
+England. Accordingly, he made up his mind
+to back down and try for the line of 49°, as proposed
+by Calhoun, when in Tyler's cabinet; and
+the English, for all their affected indifference,
+had been so much impressed by the warlike
+demonstrations in the United States, that they
+in turn were delighted, singing in a much lower
+key than before the "fifty-four forty" cry had
+been raised; accordingly they withdrew their
+former pretensions to the Columbia River and
+accepted the offered compromise. Now, however,
+came the question of getting the treaty
+through the Senate; and Buchanan sounded
+Benton, to see if he would undertake this task.</p>
+
+<p>Benton, worried over the Texas matter, was
+willing to recede somewhat from the very high
+ground he had taken,&mdash;although, of course, he
+insisted that he had been perfectly consistent
+throughout, and that the 49th parallel was the
+line he had all along been striving for. Under
+his lead the proposal for a treaty on the basis
+indicated was carried through the Senate, and
+the line in consequence ultimately became our
+frontier, in spite of the frantic opposition of
+the Northwestern Democrats, the latter hurling
+every sort of charge of bad faith and treachery<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_289" id="Page_289">[289]</a></span>
+at their Southern associates, who had joined with
+the Whigs in defeating them. Benton's speech
+in support of the proposal was pitched much
+lower than had been his previous ones; and, a
+little forgetful of some of his own remarks, he
+was especially severe upon those members who
+denounced England and held up a picture of her
+real or supposed designs to excite and frighten
+the people into needless opposition to her.</p>
+
+<p>In its immediate effects the adoption of the
+49th parallel as the dividing line between the
+two countries was excellent, and entailed no loss
+of dignity on either. Yet, as there was no particular
+reason why we should show any generosity
+in our diplomatic dealings with England,
+it may well be questioned whether it would not
+have been better to have left things as they were
+until we could have taken all. Wars are, of
+course, as a rule to be avoided; but they are
+far better than certain kinds of peace. Every
+war in which we have been engaged, except
+the one with Mexico, has been justifiable in its
+origin; and each one, without any exception
+whatever, has left us better off, taking both
+moral and material considerations into account,
+than we should have been if we had not waged
+it.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_290" id="Page_290">[290]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XIII" id="CHAPTER_XIII"></a>CHAPTER XIII.</h2>
+
+<h3>THE ABOLITIONISTS DANCE TO THE SLAVE
+BARONS' PIPING.</h3>
+
+
+<p>In 1844 the Whig candidate for the Presidency,
+Henry Clay, was defeated by a Mr. Polk,
+the nominee of the Democracy. The majorities
+in several of the states were very small; this
+was the case, for example in New York, the
+change in whose electoral vote would have also
+changed the entire result.</p>
+
+<p>Up to 1860 there were very few political contests
+in which the dividing lines between right
+and wrong so nearly coincided with those drawn
+between the two opposing parties as in that of
+1844. The Democrats favored the annexation of
+Texas, and the addition of new slave territory to
+the Union; the Whigs did not. Almost every
+good element in the country stood behind Clay;
+the vast majority of intelligent, high-minded,
+upright men supported him. Polk was backed
+by rabid Southern fire-eaters and slavery extensionists,
+who had deified negro bondage and exalted
+it beyond the Union, the Constitution, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_291" id="Page_291">[291]</a></span>
+everything else; by the almost solid foreign
+vote, still unfit for the duties of American
+citizenship; by the vicious and criminal classes
+in all the great cities of the North and in New
+Orleans; by the corrupt politicians, who found
+ignorance and viciousness tools ready forged to
+their hands, wherewith to perpetrate the gigantic
+frauds without which the election would
+have been lost; and, lastly, he was also backed
+indirectly but most powerfully by the political
+Abolitionists.</p>
+
+<p>These Abolitionists had formed themselves
+into the Liberty party, and ran Birney for
+president; and though they polled but little
+over sixty thousand votes, yet as these were
+drawn almost entirely from the ranks of Clay's
+supporters, they were primarily responsible for
+his defeat; for the defections were sufficiently
+large to turn the scale in certain pivotal and
+closely contested states, notably New York.
+Their action in this case was wholly evil, alike
+in its immediate and its remote results; they
+simply played into the hands of the extreme
+slavery men like Calhoun, and became, for the
+time being, the willing accomplices of the latter.
+Yet they would have accomplished nothing had
+it not been for the frauds and outrages perpetrated
+by the gangs of native and foreign-born
+ruffians in the great cities, under the leadership
+of such brutal rowdies as Isaiah Rynders.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_292" id="Page_292">[292]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>These three men, Calhoun, Birney, and Isaiah
+Rynders, may be taken as types of the classes
+that were chiefly instrumental in the election of
+Polk, and that must, therefore, bear the responsibility
+for all the evils attendant thereon, including
+among them the bloody and unrighteous
+war with Mexico. With the purpose of advancing
+the cause of abstract right, but with the result
+of sacrificing all that was best, most honest,
+and most high-principled in national politics,
+the Abolitionists joined hands with Northern
+roughs and Southern slavocrats to elect the man
+who was, excepting Tyler, the very smallest of
+the line of small presidents who came in between
+Jackson and Lincoln.</p>
+
+<p>Owing to a variety of causes, the Abolitionists
+have received an immense amount of hysterical
+praise, which they do not deserve, and have
+been credited with deeds done by other men,
+whom they in reality hampered and opposed
+rather than aided. After 1840 the professed
+Abolitionists formed but a small and comparatively
+unimportant portion of the forces that
+were working towards the restriction and ultimate
+destruction of slavery; and much of what
+they did was positively harmful to the cause for
+which they were fighting. Those of their number
+who considered the Constitution as a league
+with death and hell, and who therefore advocated<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_293" id="Page_293">[293]</a></span>
+a dissolution of the Union, acted as rationally
+as would anti-polygamists nowadays if, to show
+their disapproval of Mormonism, they should
+advocate that Utah should be allowed to form
+a separate nation. The only hope of ultimately
+suppressing slavery lay in the preservation of
+the Union, and every Abolitionist who argued
+or signed a petition for its dissolution was doing
+as much to perpetuate the evil he complained
+of as if he had been a slave-holder. The Liberty
+party, in running Birney, simply committed
+a political crime, evil in almost all its consequences;
+they in no sense paved the way for
+the Republican party, or helped forward the
+anti-slavery cause, or hurt the existing organizations.
+Their effect on the Democracy was
+<i>nil</i>; and all they were able to accomplish with
+the Whigs was to make them put forward for
+the ensuing campaign a slave-holder from Louisiana,
+with whom they were successful. Such
+were the remote results of their conduct; the
+immediate evils they produced have already
+been alluded to. They bore considerable resemblance&mdash;except
+that, after all, they really
+did have a principle to contend for&mdash;to the
+political prohibitionists of the present day, who
+go into the third party organizations, and are,
+not even excepting the saloon-keepers themselves,
+the most efficient allies on whom intemperance
+and the liquor traffic can count.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_294" id="Page_294">[294]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Anti-slavery men like Giddings, who supported
+Clay, were doing a thousand-fold more
+effective work for the cause they had at heart
+than all the voters who supported Birney; or,
+to speak more accurately, they were doing all
+they could to advance the cause, and the others
+were doing all they could to hold it back. Lincoln
+in 1860 occupied more nearly the ground
+held by Clay than that held by Birney; and
+the men who supported the latter in 1844 were
+the prototypes of those who wished to oppose
+Lincoln in 1860, and only worked less hard because
+they had less chance. The ultra Abolitionists
+discarded expediency, and claimed to
+act for abstract right, on principle, no matter
+what the results might be; in consequence they
+accomplished very little, and that as much for
+harm as for good, until they ate their words,
+went counter to their previous course, thereby
+acknowledging it to be bad, and supported in
+the Republican party the men and principles
+they had so fiercely condemned. The Liberty
+party was not in any sense the precursor of the
+Republican party, which was based as much on
+expediency as on abstract right, and was therefore
+able to accomplish good instead of harm.
+To say that the extreme Abolitionists triumphed
+in Republican success and were causes of it, is
+as absurd as it would be to call prohibitionists<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_295" id="Page_295">[295]</a></span>
+successful if, after countless futile efforts totally
+to prohibit the liquor traffic, and after savage
+denunciation of those who try to regulate it,
+they should then turn round and form a comparatively
+insignificant portion of a victorious
+high-license party.</p>
+
+<p>Many people in speaking of the Abolitionists
+apparently forget that the national government,
+even under Republican rule, would never have
+meddled with slavery in the various states unless
+as a war measure, made necessary by the
+rebellion into which the South was led by a
+variety of causes, of which slavery was chief,
+but among which there were others that were
+also prominent; such as the separatist spirit of
+certain of the communities and the unscrupulous,
+treacherous ambition of such men as Davis,
+Floyd, and the rest. The Abolitionists' political
+organizations, such as the Liberty party,
+generally produced very little effect either way,
+and were scarcely thought of during the contests
+waged for freedom in Congress. The men
+who took a great and effective part in the fight
+against slavery were the men who remained
+within their respective parties; like the Democrats
+Benton and Wilmot, or the Whigs Seward
+and Stevens. When a new party with more
+clearly defined principles was formed, they, for
+the most part, went into it; but, like all other<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_296" id="Page_296">[296]</a></span>
+men who have ever had a really great influence,
+whether for good or bad, on American politics,
+they did not act independently of parties, but
+on the contrary kept within party lines,&mdash;although,
+of course, none of them were mere blind
+and unreasoning partisans.</p>
+
+<p>The plea that slavery was a question of principle,
+on which no compromise could be accepted,
+might have been made and could still be made
+on twenty other points,&mdash;woman suffrage, for
+instance. Of course, to give women their just
+rights does not by any means imply that they
+should necessarily be allowed to vote, any more
+than the bestowal of the rights of citizenship
+upon blacks and aliens must of necessity carry
+with it the same privilege. But there were until
+lately, and in some states there are now, laws on
+the statute-book in reference to women that
+are in principle as unjust, and that are quite as
+much the remnants of archaic barbarism as was
+the old slave code; and though it is true that
+they do not work anything like the evil of
+the latter, they yet certainly work evil enough.
+The same laws that in one Southern state gave
+a master a right to whip a slave also allowed
+him to whip his wife, provided he used a stick
+no thicker than his little finger; the legal permission
+to do the latter was even more outrageous
+than that to do the former, yet no one considered<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_297" id="Page_297">[297]</a></span>
+it a ground for wishing a dissolution of
+the Union or for declaring against the existing
+parties. The folly of voting the Liberty ticket
+in 1844 differed in degree, but not at all in kind,
+from the folly of voting the Woman Suffrage
+ticket in 1884.</p>
+
+<p>The intrigue for the annexation of Texas,
+and for thereby extending the slave territory
+of the Union, had taken shape towards the
+close of Tyler's term of office, while Calhoun
+was secretary of state. Benton, as an aggressive
+Western man, desirous of seeing our territorial
+possessions extended in any direction,
+north or south, always hoped that in the end
+Texas might be admitted into the Union; but
+he disliked seeing any premature steps taken,
+and was no party to the scheme of forcing
+an immediate annexation in the interests of
+slavery. Such immediate annexation was certain,
+among other things, to bring us into grave
+difficulties not only with Mexico, but also with
+England, which was strongly inclined to take
+much interest of a practical sort in the fate of
+Texas, and would, of course, have done all it
+could to bring about the abolition of slavery
+in that state. The Southerners, desirous of
+increasing the slave domain, and always in a
+state of fierce alarm over the proximity of any
+free state that might excite a servile insurrection,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_298" id="Page_298">[298]</a></span>
+were impatient to add the Lone Star Republic
+of the Rio Grande to the number of their
+states; the Southwesterners fell in with them,
+influenced, though less strongly, by the same
+motives, and also by the lust for new lands and
+by race hatred towards the Mexicans and traditional
+jealousy of Great Britain; and these
+latter motives induced many Northwesterners
+to follow suit. By a judicious harping on all
+these strings Jackson himself, whose name was
+still a mighty power among the masses, was induced
+to write a letter favoring instant and
+prompt annexation.</p>
+
+<p>This letter was really procured for political
+purposes. Tyler had completely identified himself
+with the Democracy, and especially with
+its extreme separatist wing, to which Calhoun
+also belonged, and which had grown so as to
+be already almost able to take the reins. The
+separatist chiefs were intriguing for the presidency,
+and were using annexation as a cry that
+would help them; and, failing in this attempt,
+many of the leaders were willing to break up
+the Union, and turn the Southern States, together
+with Texas, into a slave-holding confederacy.
+After Benton, the great champion of
+the old-style Union Democrats was Van Buren,
+who was opposed to immediate annexation,
+sharing the feeling that prevailed throughout<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_299" id="Page_299">[299]</a></span>
+the Northeast generally; although in certain
+circles all through the country there were men
+at work in its favor, largely as a mere matter
+of jobbery and from base motives, on account
+of speculations in Texan land and scrip, into
+which various capitalists and adventurers had
+gone rather extensively. Jackson, though a
+Southerner, warmly favored Van Buren, and
+was bitterly opposed to separatists; but the
+latter, by cunningly working on his feelings,
+without showing their own hands, persuaded
+him to write the letter mentioned, and promptly
+used it to destroy the chances of Van Buren,
+who was the man they chiefly feared; and
+though Jackson, at last roused to what was
+going on, immediately announced himself as in
+favor of Van Buren's candidacy, it was too late
+to undo the mischief.</p>
+
+<p>Benton showed on this, as on many other occasions,
+much keener political ideas than his
+great political chief. He was approached by a
+politician, who himself was either one of those
+concerned in the presidential intrigues, or else
+one of their dupes, and who tried to win him
+over to take the lead on their side, complimenting
+him upon his former services to the cause
+of territorial expansion towards the southwest.
+Ordinarily the great Missourian was susceptible
+enough to such flattery; but on this occasion,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_300" id="Page_300">[300]</a></span>
+preoccupied with the idea of an intrigue
+for the presidency, and indignant that there
+should be an effort made to implicate him in
+it, especially as it was mixed up with schemes
+of stock-jobbing and of disloyalty to the Union,
+he took fire at once, and answered with hot
+indignation, in words afterwards highly resented
+by his questioner, "that it was on the
+part of some an intrigue for the presidency,
+and a plot to dissolve the Union; on the part of
+others, a Texas scrip and land speculation; and
+that he was against it." The answer was
+published in the papers, and brought about a
+total break between Benton and the annexation
+party.</p>
+
+<p>He was now thoroughly on the alert, and
+actively opposed at all points the schemes of
+those whom he regarded as concerned in or instigating
+the intrigue. He commented harshly
+on Tyler's annual message, which made a strong
+plea for annexation, even at the cost of a war
+both with Great Britain and Mexico; also on
+Calhoun's letter to Lord Aberdeen, which was
+certainly a remarkable diplomatic document,&mdash;being
+a thesis on slavery and the benefits resulting
+from it. Tyler's object was to prepare
+the way for a secret treaty, which should secure
+the desired object. Benton, in the course of
+some severe strictures on his acts, said, very<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_301" id="Page_301">[301]</a></span>
+truly, that it was evidently the intention to
+keep the whole matter as secret as possible
+until the treaty was concluded, "and then to
+force its adoption for the purpose of increasing
+the area of slave territory, or to make its rejection
+a cause for the secession of the Southern
+States; and in either event and in all cases to
+make the question of annexation a controlling
+one in the nomination of presidential candidates,
+and also in the election itself."</p>
+
+<p>When the treaty proposed by the administration
+was rejected, and when it became evident
+that neither Tyler nor Calhoun, the two most
+prominent champions of the extreme separatists,
+had any chance for the Democratic nomination,
+the disunion side of the intrigue was
+brought to the front in many of the Southern
+States, beginning of course with South Carolina.
+A movement was made for a convention
+of the Southern States, to be held in the interest
+of the scheme; the key-note being struck in
+the cry of "Texas or disunion!" But this convention
+was given up, on account of the strong
+opposition it excited in the so-called "Border
+States,"&mdash;an opposition largely stirred up and
+led by Benton. Once more the haughty slave
+leaders of the Southeast had found that in the
+Missouri Senator they had an opponent whose
+fearlessness quite equaled their own, and whose<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_302" id="Page_302">[302]</a></span>
+stubborn temper and strength of purpose made
+him at least a match for themselves, in spite of
+all their dash and fiery impetuosity. It must
+have sounded strange, indeed, to Northern ears,
+accustomed to the harsh railings and insolent
+threats of the South Carolina senators, to hear
+one of the latter complaining that Benton's tone
+in the debate was arrogant, overbearing, and
+dictatorial towards those who were opposed to
+him. This same Senator, McDuffie, had been
+speaking of the proposed Southern meeting at
+Nashville; and Benton warned him that such
+a meeting would never take place, and that he
+had mistaken the temper of the Tennesseans;
+and also reminded him that General Jackson
+was still alive, and that the South Carolinians
+in particular must needs be careful if they
+hoped to agree with his followers, whose name
+was still legion, because he would certainly
+take the same position towards a disunion
+movement in the interests of slavery that he
+had already taken towards a nullification movement
+in the interests of free trade. "Preservation
+of the federal Union is as strong in the
+old Roman's heart now as ever; and while, as
+a Christian, he forgives all that is past (if it
+were past), yet no old tricks under new names!
+Texas disunion will be to him the same as
+tariff disunion; and if he detects a Texas disunionist<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_303" id="Page_303">[303]</a></span>
+nestling into his bed, I say again: Woe
+unto the luckless wight!" Boldly and forcibly
+he went on to paint the real motives of the promoters
+of the scheme, and the real character of
+the scheme itself; stating that, though mixed
+up with various speculative enterprises and
+with other intrigues, yet disunion was at the
+bottom of it all, and that already the cry had
+become, "Texas without the Union, rather
+than the Union without Texas!" "Under the
+pretext of getting Texas into the Union the
+scheme is to get the South out of it. A
+Southern Confederacy stretching from the Atlantic
+to the Californias ... is the cherished
+vision of disappointed ambition." He bitterly
+condemned secession, as simply disunion begat
+by nullification, and went on to speak of his
+own attitude in apparently opposing the admission
+of Texas, which he had always desired to
+see become a part of the Union, and which he
+had always insisted rightfully belonged to us,
+and to have been given away by Monroe's treaty
+with Spain. "All that is intended and foreseen.
+The intrigue for the presidency was the first act
+in the drama; the dissolution of the Union the
+second. And I, who hate intrigue and love the
+Union, can only speak of the intriguers and disunionists
+with warmth and indignation. The
+oldest advocate for the recovery of Texas, I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_304" id="Page_304">[304]</a></span>
+must be allowed to speak in just terms of the
+criminal politicians who prostituted the question
+of its recovery to their own base purposes,
+and delayed its success by degrading and disgracing
+it. A Western man, and coming from
+a state more than any other interested in the
+recovery of this country, so unaccountably
+thrown away by the treaty of 1819, I must be
+allowed to feel indignant at seeing Atlantic
+politicians seizing upon it, and making it a sectional
+question for the purposes of ambition
+and disunion. I have spoken warmly of these
+plotters and intriguers; but I have not permitted
+their conduct to alter my own, or to relax
+my zeal for the recovery of the sacrificed
+country. I have helped to reject the disunion
+treaty; and that obstacle being removed, I have
+brought in the bill which will insure the recovery
+of Texas, with peace and honor, and with
+the Union."</p>
+
+<p>It is important to remember, in speaking of
+his afterwards voting to admit Texas, that this
+was what he had all along favored, and that he
+now opposed it only on account of special circumstances.
+In both cases he was right; for,
+slavery or no slavery, it would have been a
+most unfortunate thing for us, and still worse
+for the Texans, if the latter had been allowed
+to develop into an independent nation. Benton<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_305" id="Page_305">[305]</a></span>
+deserves the greatest credit for the way in
+which he withstood the ignorant popular feeling
+of his own section in regard to Tyler's proposed
+treaty; and not only did he show himself
+able to withstand pressure from behind him,
+but also prompt in resenting threats made by
+outsiders. When McDuffie told him that the
+remembrance of his attitude on the bill would,
+to his harm, meet him on some future day, like
+the ghost that appeared to Brutus at Philippi,
+he answered:&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>I can promise the ghost and his backers that if the
+fight goes against me at this new Philippi, with which
+I am threatened, and the enemies of the American
+Union triumph over me as the enemies of Roman liberty
+triumphed over Brutus and Cassius, I shall not
+fall upon my sword, as Brutus did, though Cassius be
+killed, and run it through my own body; but I shall
+save it and save myself for another day and another
+use,&mdash;for the day when the battle of the disunion of
+these states is to be fought, not with words but with
+iron, and for the hearts of the traitors who appear in
+arms against their country.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Such a stern, defiant, almost prophetic warning
+did more to help the Union cause than volumes
+of elaborate constitutional argument, and
+it would have been well for the Northern States
+had they possessed men as capable of uttering
+it as was the iron Westerner. Benton always<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_306" id="Page_306">[306]</a></span>
+showed at his best when the honor or integrity
+of the nation was menaced, whether by foes from
+without or by foes from within. On such occasions
+his metal always rang true. When there
+was any question of breaking faith with the
+Union, or of treachery towards it, his figure always
+loomed up as one of the chief in the ranks
+of its defenders; and his follies and weaknesses
+sink out of sight when we think of the tremendous
+debt which the country owes him for his
+sorely tried and unswerving loyalty.</p>
+
+<p>The treaty alluded to by Benton in his speech
+against the abortive secession movement was
+the one made with Texas while Calhoun was
+secretary of state, and submitted to the Senate
+by Tyler, with a message as extraordinary as
+some of his secretary's utterances. The treaty
+was preposterously unjust and iniquitous. It
+provided for the annexation of Texas, and also
+of a very large portion of Mexico, to which
+Texas had no possible title, and this without
+consulting Mexico in any way whatever; Calhoun
+advancing the plea that it was necessary
+to act immediately on account of the danger
+that Texas was in of falling under the control of
+England, and therefore having slavery abolished
+within its borders; while Tyler blandly announced
+that we had acquired title to the ceded
+territory&mdash;which belonged to one power and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_307" id="Page_307">[307]</a></span>
+was ceded to us by another&mdash;through his signature
+to the treaty, and that, pending its ratification
+by the Senate, he had dispatched troops
+to the scene of action to protect the ceded land
+"from invasion,"&mdash;the territory to be thus
+protected from Mexican invasion being then
+and always having been part and parcel of
+Mexico.</p>
+
+<p>Benton opposed the ratification of the treaty
+in a very strong speech, during which he mercilessly
+assailed both Tyler and Calhoun. The
+conduct of the former he dismissed with the contemptuous
+remark that he had committed "a
+caper about equal to the mad freaks with which
+the unfortunate Emperor Paul, of Russia, was
+accustomed to astonish Europe;" and roughly
+warned him to be careful how he tried to imitate
+Jackson's methods, because in heroic imitations
+there was no middle ground, and if he
+failed to fill the rôle of hero he would then perforce
+find himself playing that of harlequin.
+Calhoun received more attention, for he was far
+more worthy of a foeman's steel than was his
+nominal superior, and Benton exposed at length
+the willful exaggeration and the perversion of
+the truth of which the Carolinian had been
+guilty in trying to raise the alarm of English
+interference in Texas, for the purpose of excusing
+the haste with which the treaty was carried
+through.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_308" id="Page_308">[308]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>He showed at length the outrage we should
+inflict upon Mexico by seizing "two thousand
+miles of her territory, without a word of explanation
+with her, and by virtue of a treaty with
+Texas to which she was no party;" and he
+conclusively proved, making use of his own
+extensive acquaintance with history, especially
+American history, that the old Texas, the only
+territory that the Texans themselves or we
+could claim with any shadow of right, made
+but a fraction of the territory now "ceded" to
+us. He laughed at the idea of calling the territory
+Texas, and speaking of its forcible cutting
+off as re-annexation, "Humboldt calls it
+New Mexico, Chihuahua, Coahuila and Nuevo
+Santander; and the civilized world may qualify
+this <i>re</i>-annexation by some odious and terrible
+epithet ... robbery;" then he went on to draw
+a biting contrast between our treatment of Mexico
+and our treatment of England. "Would
+we take two thousand miles of Canada in the
+same way? I presume not. And why not?
+Why not treat Great Britain and Mexico alike?
+Why not march up to 'fifty-four forty' as courageously
+as we march upon the Rio Grande?
+Because Great Britain is powerful and Mexico
+weak,&mdash;a reason which may fail in policy as
+much as in morals." Also he ridiculed the flurry
+of fear into which the Southern slave-holders<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_309" id="Page_309">[309]</a></span>
+affected to be cast by the dread of England's
+hostility to slavery, when they had just acquiesced
+in making a treaty with her by which we
+bound ourselves to help to put down the slave-trade.
+He then stated his own position, showing
+why he wished us to have the original
+Texan lands, if we could get them honorably,
+and without robbing Mexico of new territory;
+and at the same time sneered at Calhoun and
+Tyler because they had formerly favored the
+Monroe treaty, by which we abandoned our
+claims to them:&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>We want Texas, that is to say, the Texas of La
+Salle; and we want it for great natural reasons,
+obvious as day, and permanent as nature. We want
+it because it is geographically appurtenant to our
+division of North America, essential to our political,
+commercial, and social system, and because it would
+be detrimental and injurious to us to have it fall into
+the hands or sink under the domination of any foreign
+power. For these reasons I was against sacrificing
+the country when it was thrown away,&mdash;and
+thrown away by those who are now so suddenly possessed
+of a fury to get it back. For these reasons I
+am for getting it back whenever it can be done with
+peace and honor, or even at the price of just war
+against any intrusive European power; but I am
+against all disguise and artifice,&mdash;against all pretexts,&mdash;and
+especially against weak and groundless
+pretexts, discreditable to ourselves and offensive to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_310" id="Page_310">[310]</a></span>
+others, too thin and shallow not to be seen through
+by every beholder, and merely invented to cover unworthy
+purposes.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The treaty was rejected by an overwhelming
+vote, although Buchanan led a few of his timeserving
+comrades from the North to the support
+of the extreme Southern element. Benton
+then tried, but failed, to get through a bill providing
+for a joint agreement between Mexico,
+Texas, and the United States to settle definitely
+all boundary questions. Meanwhile the presidential
+election occurred, with the result already
+mentioned. The separatist and annexationist
+Democrats, the extreme slavery wing of the
+party, defeated Van Buren and nominated Polk,
+who was their man; the Whigs nominated Clay,
+who was heartily opposed to all the schemes of
+the disunion and extreme slavery men, and who,
+if elected, while he might very properly have
+consented to the admission of Texas with its
+old boundaries, would never have brought on a
+war nor have attempted to add a vast extent of
+new slave territory to the Union. Clay would
+have been elected, and the slavery disunionists
+defeated, if in the very nick of time the Abolitionists
+had not stepped in to support the latter,
+and by their blindness in supporting Birney
+given the triumph to their own most bitter opponents.
+Then the Abolitionists, having played<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_311" id="Page_311">[311]</a></span>
+their only card, and played it badly, had to sit
+still and see what evil their acts had produced;
+they had accomplished just as much as men
+generally do accomplish when they dance to the
+tune that their worst foes play.</p>
+
+<p>Polk's election gave an enormous impulse to
+the annexation movement, and made it doubly
+and trebly difficult for any one to withstand it.
+The extreme disunion and slavery men, of course,
+hated Benton, himself a Southwesterner from a
+slave-holding state, with peculiar venom, on account
+of his attitude, very justly regarding him
+as the main obstacle in their path; and the din
+and outcry raised against all who opposed the
+schemes of the intriguers was directed with
+especial fury against the Missourian. He was
+accused of being allied to the Whigs, of wishing
+to break up the Democracy, and of many other
+things. Indeed, Benton's own people were very
+largely against him, and it must always be remembered
+that whereas Northeastern statesmen
+were certain to be on the popular side in taking
+a stand against the extreme pro-slavery men,
+Benton's position was often just the reverse.
+With them it was politic to do right; with
+him it was not; and for this reason the praise
+awarded the latter should be beyond measure
+greater than that awarded to the former.</p>
+
+<p>Still, there can be little question that he was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_312" id="Page_312">[312]</a></span>
+somewhat, even although only slightly, influenced
+by the storm of which he had to bear
+the brunt; indeed, he would have been more
+than human if he had not been; and probably
+this outside pressure was one among the causes
+that induced him to accept a compromise in the
+matter, which took effect just before Polk was
+inaugurated. The House of Representatives had
+passed a resolution giving the consent of Congress
+to the admission of Texas as a state, and
+allowing it the privilege of forming four additional
+states out of its territory, whenever it
+should see fit. The line of the Missouri Compromise,
+36° 30', was run through this new territory,
+slavery being prohibited in the lands lying
+north of it, and permissible or not, according to
+the will of the state seeking admission, in those
+lying south of it. Benton meanwhile had introduced
+a bill merely providing that negotiations
+should be entered into with Texas for its admission,
+the proposed treaty or articles of agreement
+to be submitted to the Senate or to Congress.
+He thereby kept the control in the hands of the
+legislature, which the joint resolution did not;
+and moreover, as he said in his speech, he wished
+to provide for due consideration being shown
+Mexico in the arrangement of the boundary, and
+for the matter being settled by commissioners.</p>
+
+<p>Neither resolution nor bill could get through<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_313" id="Page_313">[313]</a></span>
+by itself; and accordingly it was proposed to
+combine both into one measure, leaving the
+president free to choose either plan. To this
+proposition Benton finally consented, it being
+understood that, as only three days of Tyler's
+term remained, the execution of the act would
+be left to the incoming president, and that the
+latter would adopt Benton's plans. The friends
+of the admission of Texas assured the doubtful
+voters that such would be the case. Polk himself
+gave full assurance that he would appoint
+a commission, as provided by Benton's bill, if
+passed, with the House resolution as an alternative;
+and McDuffie, Calhoun's friend, and the
+senator from South Carolina, announced without
+reserve that Calhoun&mdash;for Tyler need not
+be considered in the matter, after it had been
+committed to the great nullifier&mdash;would not
+have the "audacity" to try to take the settlement
+of the question away from the president,
+who was to be inaugurated on the fourth of
+March. On the strength of these assurances,
+which, if made good, would, of course, have rendered
+the "alternative" a merely nominal one,
+Benton supported the measure, which was then
+passed. Contrary to all expectation, Calhoun
+promptly acted upon the legislative clause, and
+Polk made no effort to undo what the former
+had done. This caused intense chagrin and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_314" id="Page_314">[314]</a></span>
+anger to the Bentonians; but they should certainly
+have taken such a contingency into account,
+and though they might with much show
+of reason say that they had been tricked into
+acting as they had done, yet it is probable that
+the immense pressure from behind had made
+Benton too eager to follow any way he could
+find that would take him out of the position
+into which his conscience had led him. No
+amount of pressure would have made him deliberately
+sanction a wrong; but it did render
+him a little less wary in watching to see that
+the right was not infringed upon. It was
+most natural that he should be anxious to find
+a common ground for himself and his constituents
+to stand on; but it is to be regretted that
+this anxiety to find a common ground should
+have made him willing to trust blindly to vague
+pledges and promises, which he ought to have
+known would not be held in the least binding
+by those on whose behalf they were supposed
+to be made.</p>
+
+<p>Acting under this compromise measure Texas
+was admitted, and the foundation for our war
+with Mexico was laid. Calhoun, under whom
+this was done, nevertheless sincerely regretted
+the war itself, and freely condemned Polk's administration
+for bringing it on; his own position
+being that he desired to obtain without a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_315" id="Page_315">[315]</a></span>
+war what it was impossible we should get except
+at the cost of one. Benton, who had all along
+consistently opposed doing a wrong to Mexico,
+attacked the whole war party, and in a strong
+and bitter speech accused Calhoun of being
+the cause of the contest; showing plainly that,
+whatever the ex-secretary of state might say
+in regard to the acts immediately precipitating
+the conflict, he himself was responsible as being
+in truth their original cause. While stating his
+conviction, however, that Calhoun was the real
+author of the war, Benton added that he did not
+believe that war was his object, although an inevitable
+incident of the course he had pursued.</p>
+
+<p>Although heartily opposed to the war in its
+origin, Benton very properly believed in prosecuting
+it with the utmost vigor when once we
+were fairly in; and it was mainly owing to him
+that the proposed policy of a "masterly inactivity"
+was abandoned, and the scheme of pushing
+straight for the city of Mexico adopted in
+its stead. Indeed, it was actually proposed to
+make him lieutenant-general, and therefore the
+commander-in-chief of our forces in Mexico;
+but this was defeated in the Senate, very fortunately,
+as it would have been a great outrage
+upon Scott, Taylor, and every other soldier with
+real military training. It seems extraordinary
+that Benton himself should not have seen the
+absurdity and wrong of such a proposition.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_316" id="Page_316">[316]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The wonderful hardihood and daring shown
+in the various expeditions against Mexico, especially
+in those whereby her northwest territory
+was wrested from her, naturally called forth
+all Benton's sympathy; and one of his best
+speeches was that made to welcome Doniphan's
+victorious volunteers after their return home
+from their famous march to Chihuahua.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_317" id="Page_317">[317]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XIV" id="CHAPTER_XIV"></a>CHAPTER XIV.</h2>
+
+<h3>SLAVERY IN THE NEW TERRITORIES.</h3>
+
+
+<p>Hardly was Polk elected before it became
+evident to Benton and the other Jacksonians
+that the days of the old Union or Nationalist
+Democracy were over, and that the separatist
+and disunion elements within the party had
+obtained the upper hand. The first sign of the
+new order of things was the displacement of
+Blair, editor of the "Globe," the Democratic
+newspaper organ. Blair was a strong Unionist,
+and had been bitterly hostile to Calhoun and
+the Nullifiers. He had also opposed Tyler, the
+representative of those states-rights and separatist
+Democrats, who by their hostility to Jackson
+had been temporarily driven into the Whig
+camp, and who, finding themselves in very uncongenial
+society, and seeing, moreover, that
+their own principles were gradually coming to
+the front in the old party, had begun drifting
+back again into it. Polk's chances of election
+were so precarious that he was most anxious to
+conciliate the Separatists; besides which he at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_318" id="Page_318">[318]</a></span>
+heart sympathized with their views, and had
+himself been brought forward in the Democratic
+convention to beat the National candidate,
+Van Buren. Moreover, Tyler withdrew
+from the contest in his favor; in part payment
+for which help, soon after the election, Blair
+was turned out, and Ritchie of Virginia, a man
+whose views suited the new Democratic leaders,
+was put in his place; to the indignation not
+only of Benton, but also of Jackson himself,
+then almost on his death-bed. Of course the
+break between the two wings was as yet by no
+means complete. Polk needed the Union Democrats,
+and the latter were still in good party
+standing. Benton himself, as has been seen,
+was offered the command of all the forces in
+Mexico, but the governmental policy, and the
+attitude of the party in Congress after 1844,
+were widely different from what they had been
+while Jackson's influence was supreme, or while
+the power he left behind him was wielded by a
+knot of Union men.</p>
+
+<p>From this time the slavery question dwarfed
+all others, and was the one with which Benton,
+as well as other statesmen, had mainly to deal.
+He had been very loath to acknowledge that it
+was ever to become of such overshadowing importance;
+until late in his life he had not
+realized that, interwoven with the disunionist<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_319" id="Page_319">[319]</a></span>
+movement, it had grown so as to become in
+reality the one and only question before the
+people; but, this once thoroughly understood, he
+henceforth devoted his tremendous energies to
+the struggle with it. He possessed such phenomenal
+power of application and of study, and
+his capacity for and his delight in work were
+so extraordinary, that he was able at the same
+time to grapple with many other subjects of
+importance, and to present them in a way that
+showed he had thoroughly mastered them both
+in principle and detail,&mdash;as witness his speech
+in favor of giving the control of the coast survey
+to the navy; but henceforth the importance of
+his actions lay in their relation to the slavery
+extension movements.</p>
+
+<p>He had now entered on what may fairly be
+called the heroic part of his career; for it would
+be difficult to choose any other word to express
+our admiration for the unflinching and defiant
+courage with which, supported only by conscience
+and by his loving loyalty to the Union,
+he battled for the losing side, although by so
+doing he jeopardized and eventually ruined his
+political prospects, being finally, as punishment
+for his boldness in opposing the dominant faction
+of the Missouri Democracy, turned out of
+the Senate, wherein he had passed nearly half his
+life. Indeed, his was one of those natures that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_320" id="Page_320">[320]</a></span>
+show better in defeat than in victory. In his
+career there were many actions that must command
+our unqualified admiration; such were
+his hostility to the Nullifiers, wherein, taking
+into account his geographical location and his
+refusal to compromise, he did better than any
+other public man, not even excepting Jackson
+and Webster; his belief in honest money; and
+his attitude towards all questions involving the
+honor or the maintenance and extension of the
+Union. But in all these matters he was backed
+more or less heartily by his state, and he had
+served four terms in the federal Senate as the
+leading champion and representative, not alone
+of Missouri, but also of the entire West. When,
+however, the slavery question began to enter
+upon its final stage, Benton soon found himself
+opposed to a large and growing faction of the
+Missouri Democracy, which increased so rapidly
+that it soon became dominant. But he never
+for an instant yielded his convictions, even when
+he saw the ground being thus cut from under
+his feet, fighting for the right as sturdily as
+ever, facing his fate fearlessly, and going down
+without a murmur. The contrast between the
+conduct towards the slavery disunionists of this
+Democrat from a slave-holding state, with a
+hostile majority at home against him, and the
+conduct of Webster, a Whig, enthusiastically<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_321" id="Page_321">[321]</a></span>
+backed by his own free state, in the same issue,
+is a painful one for the latter. Indeed, on any
+moral point, Benton need have no cause to fear
+comparison with any of his great rivals in the
+political arena. During his career, the United
+States Senate was perhaps the most influential,
+and certainly the ablest legislative body in the
+world; and after Jackson's presidency came to
+an end the really great statesmen and political
+leaders of the country were to be found in it,
+and not in the executive chair. The period
+during which the great Missourian was so prominent
+a figure in our politics, and which lasted
+up to the time of the Civil War, might very appropriately
+be known in our history as the time
+of the supremacy of the Senate. Such senators
+as Benton, Webster, Clay, and Calhoun, and
+later on Douglas, Seward, and Sumner, fairly
+towered above presidents like the obscure Southerners,
+Tyler and Polk, or the truckling, timeserving
+Northern politicians, Pierce and Buchanan.
+During the long interval coming between
+the two heroic ages of American history,&mdash;the
+age of Washington and Franklin, and the
+age of Lincoln and Grant,&mdash;it was but rarely
+that the nation gave its greatest gift to its best
+or its greatest son.</p>
+
+<p>Benton had come into the Senate at the same
+time that Missouri was admitted into the Union,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_322" id="Page_322">[322]</a></span>
+with thanks, therefore, to the same measure, the
+Missouri Compromise bill. This shut out slavery
+from all territory north of the line of 36° 30',
+and did not make it obligatory even where it was
+permissible; and the immediate cause of Benton's
+downfall was his courage and persistency
+in defending the terms of this compromise from
+the attacks of the Southern slavery extensionists
+and disunionists. The pro-slavery feeling
+was running ever higher and higher throughout
+the South; and his stand on this question
+aroused the most furious anger among a constantly
+increasing number of his constituents,
+and made him the target for bitter and savage
+assaults on the part of his foes, the spirit of hostility
+against him being carried to such length as
+finally almost to involve him in an open brawl
+on the floor of the Senate with one of his colleagues,
+Foote, who, like his fellow fire-eaters,
+found that Benton was not a man who could be
+bullied. Indeed, his iron will and magnificent
+physique both fitted him admirably for such a
+contest against odds, and he seems to have entered
+into it with a positive zest.</p>
+
+<p>The political Abolitionists having put Polk in
+power, their action bore fruit after its kind, and
+very soon the question had to be faced, as to
+what should be done with the immense tracts of
+territory conquered from Mexico. Benton opposed,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_323" id="Page_323">[323]</a></span>
+as being needless and harmful, the Wilmot
+Proviso, which forbade the introduction of
+slavery into any part of the territory so acquired.
+He argued, and produced in evidence the laws
+and Constitution of Mexico, that the soil of California
+and Mexico was already free, and that as
+slavery would certainly never be, and indeed
+could never be, introduced into either territory,
+the agitation of the question could only result
+in harm. Calhoun and the other extreme slavery
+leaders welcomed the discussion over this
+proviso, which led Benton to remark that the
+Abolitionists and the Nullifiers were necessary
+to each other,&mdash;the two blades of a pair of
+shears, neither of which could cut until they
+were joined together.</p>
+
+<p>When Calhoun introduced his famous resolutions
+declaring that Congress had no power
+to interfere with slavery in the territories, and
+therefore no power to prevent the admission
+of new states except on the condition of their
+prohibiting slavery within their limits, Benton
+promptly and strongly opposed them as being
+firebrands needlessly thrown to inflame the passions
+of the extremists, and, moreover, as being
+disunionist in tendency. The following is his
+own account of what then took place: "Mr.
+Calhoun said he had expected the support of
+Mr. Benton 'as the representative of a slave-holding<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_324" id="Page_324">[324]</a></span>
+state.' Mr. Benton answered that it
+was impossible that he could have expected
+such a thing. 'Then,' said Mr. Calhoun, 'I
+shall know where to find that gentleman.' To
+which Mr. Benton said: 'I shall be found in
+the right place,&mdash;on the side of my country
+and the Union.' This answer, given on that day
+and on the spot, is one of the incidents of his life
+which Mr. Benton will wish posterity to remember."
+We can easily pardon the vanity which
+wishes and hopes that such an answer, given
+under such conditions, may be remembered.
+Indeed, Benton's attitude throughout all this
+period should never be forgotten; and the words
+he spoke in answer to Calhoun marked him as
+the leader among those Southerners who held
+the nation above any section thereof, even their
+own, and whose courage and self-sacrifice in the
+cause of the Union entitled them to more praise
+than by right belongs to any equal number of
+Northerners; those Southerners who in the civil
+war furnished Farragut, Thomas, Bristow, and
+countless others as loyal as they were brave.
+The effect of Benton's teachings and the still
+remaining influence of his intense personality
+did more than aught else to keep Missouri
+within the Union, when her sister states went
+out of it.</p>
+
+<p>Benton always regarded much of the slavery<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_325" id="Page_325">[325]</a></span>
+agitation in the South as being political in character,
+and the result of the schemes of ambitious
+and unscrupulous leaders. He believed that
+Calhoun had introduced a set of resolutions that
+were totally uncalled for, simply for the purpose
+of carrying a question to the Slave States on
+which they could be formed into a unit against
+the Free States; and there is much to be said in
+support of his view. Certainly the resolutions
+mark the beginning of the first great slavery
+agitation throughout the Southern States, which
+was engineered and guided for their own ends by
+politicians like Jefferson Davis. These resolutions
+were absolutely inconsistent with many of
+Calhoun's previous declarations; and that fact
+was also sharply commented on by Benton in his
+speeches and writings. He also criticised with
+caustic severity Calhoun's statements that he
+wished to save the Union by forcing the North
+to take a position so agreeable to the South
+as to make the latter willing not to separate.
+He showed that Calhoun's proposed "constitutional"
+and "peaceable" methods of bringing
+this about by prohibiting commercial intercourse
+between the two sections would themselves
+be flagrant breaches of the Constitution
+and acts of disunion,&mdash;all the more so as it was
+proposed to discriminate in favor of the Northwest
+as against the Northeast. Calhoun wished<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_326" id="Page_326">[326]</a></span>
+to bring about a convention of the Southern
+States, in order to secure the necessary unity of
+action; and one of the main obstacles to the
+success of the plan was Missouri's refusal to take
+part in it. Great efforts were made to win her
+over, and to beat down Benton; the extreme
+pro-slavery men honoring him with a hatred
+more intense than that they harbored towards
+any Northerner. Some of Calhoun's recent biographers
+have credited him with being really a
+Union man at heart. It seems absolutely impossible
+that this could have been the case; and
+the supposition is certainly not compatible with
+the belief that he retained his right senses. Benton
+characterizes his system of slavery agitation,
+very truthfully, as being one "to force issues
+upon the North under the pretext of self-defense,
+and to sectionalize the South, preparatory
+to disunion, through the instrumentality of
+sectional conventions, composed wholly of delegates
+from the slave-holding states."</p>
+
+<p>When the question of the admission of Oregon
+came up, Calhoun attempted to apply to it
+a dogma wholly at variance with all his former
+positions on the subject. This was the theory
+of the self-extension of the slavery part of the
+Constitution to the territories; that is, he held
+that the exclusion of slavery from any part of
+the new territory was itself a subversion of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_327" id="Page_327">[327]</a></span>
+Constitution. Such a dogma was so monstrous
+in character, so illogical, so inconsistent with all
+his former theories, and so absolutely incompatible
+with the preservation of the Union, that it
+renders it impossible to believe that his asseverations
+of devotion to the latter were uttered
+honestly or in good faith. Most modern readers
+will agree with Benton that he deliberately
+worked to bring about secession.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile the Missourian had gained an ally
+of his own stamp in the Senate. This was
+Houston, from the new State of Texas, who represented
+in that state, like Andrew Jackson in
+Tennessee, and Benton himself in Missouri, the
+old Nationalist Democracy, which held the
+preservation of the Union dear above all other
+things. Houston was a man after Benton's
+own heart, and was thoroughly Jacksonian in
+type. He was rough, honest, and fearless, a
+devoted friend and a vengeful enemy, and he
+promised that combination of stubborn courage
+and capacity of devotion to an ideal that renders
+a man an invaluable ally in a fight against
+odds for principle.</p>
+
+<p>After much discussion and amendment, the
+Oregon bill, containing a radical anti-slavery
+clause, passed both houses and became a law in
+spite of the violent opposition of some of the
+Southerners, headed by Calhoun, who announced<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_328" id="Page_328">[328]</a></span>
+that the great strife between the North and the
+South was ended, and that the time had come
+for the South to show that, though she prized
+the Union, yet there were matters which she
+regarded as of greater importance than its
+preservation. His ire was most fiercely excited
+by the action of Benton and Houston in supporting
+the bill, and after his return to South
+Carolina he denounced them by name as traitors
+to the South,&mdash;"a denunciation," says Benton,
+"which they took for a distinction; as what he
+called treason to the South they knew to be allegiance
+to the Union." When it was proposed
+to extend by bill the Constitution of the United
+States into the territories, with a view to carrying
+slavery into California, Utah, and New
+Mexico, Benton was again opposed to Calhoun.
+As a matter of course, too, he was the stoutest
+opponent of the Southern convention and other
+similar disunion movements that were beginning
+to take shape throughout the South, instigated
+by the two rank secession states of South
+Carolina and Mississippi.</p>
+
+<p>Most of the momentous questions springing
+out of the war with Mexico were left by Polk
+as legacies to his successor, when the former
+went out of office, after an administration that
+Benton criticised with extreme sharpness, although
+he tried to shield the president by casting<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_329" id="Page_329">[329]</a></span>
+the blame for his actions upon his cabinet
+advisers; characterizing the Mexican War as
+one of "speculation and intrigue," and as the
+"great blot" of his four years' term of office,
+and ridiculing the theory that we were acting
+in self-defense, or that our soil had been invaded.
+In 1848 the Democrats nominated
+Cass, a Northern pro-slavery politician of moderate
+abilities, and the Whigs put up and elected
+old Zachary Taylor, the rough frontier soldier
+and Louisiana slave-holder. The political Abolitionists
+again took a hand in the contest, but
+this time abandoned their abolition theories,
+substituting instead thereof the prohibition of
+slavery in the new territories. They derived
+much additional importance from their alliance
+with a disappointed politician in the pivotal
+State of New York; and in this case, in sharp
+contrast to the result in 1844, their actions
+worked good, and not evil. Van Buren, chagrined
+and angered by the way he was treated
+by the regular Democrats, organized a revolt
+against them, and used the banner of the new
+Free Soil party as one under which to rally his
+adherents. This movement was of consequence
+mainly in New York, and there it soon became
+little more than a mere fight between the two
+sections of the Democracy. Benton himself
+visited this all-important state to try to patch<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_330" id="Page_330">[330]</a></span>
+up matters, but he fortunately failed. The factions
+proved very nearly equal in strength; and
+as a consequence the Whigs carried the state
+and the election, and once more held the reins
+of government.</p>
+
+<p>When a Louisiana slave-holder was thus installed
+in the White House, the extreme Southern
+men may have thought that they were sure
+of him as an ally in their fight against freedom.
+But, if so, they soon found they had reckoned
+without their host, for the election of Taylor
+affords a curious, though not solitary, instance
+in which the American people builded better
+than they knew in choosing a chief executive.
+Nothing whatever was known of his political
+theories, and the Whigs nominated him simply
+because he was a successful soldier, likely to take
+the popular fancy. But once elected he turned
+out to have the very qualities we then most
+needed in a president,&mdash;a stout heart, shrewd
+common sense, and thorough-going devotion to
+the Union. Although with widely different
+training from Benton, and nominally differing
+from him in politics, he was yet of the same
+stamp both in character and principles; both
+were Union Southerners, not in the least afraid
+of openly asserting their opinions, and, if necessary,
+of making them good by their acts. In
+his first and only annual message, Taylor expressed,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_331" id="Page_331">[331]</a></span>
+upon all the important questions of the
+day, views that were exactly similar to those
+advanced before or after by Benton himself in
+the Senate; and he used similar emphasis and
+plainness of speech. He declared the Union to
+be the greatest of blessings, which he would
+maintain in every way against whatever dangers
+might threaten it; he advised the admission
+of California, which wished to come in
+as a free state; he thought that the territories
+of Utah and New Mexico should be left as they
+were; and he warned the Texans, who were
+blustering about certain alleged rights to New
+Mexican soil, and threatening to take them by
+force of arms, that this could not be permitted,
+and that the matter would have to be settled
+by the judicial authority of the United States.
+Benton heartily indorsed the message. Naturally,
+it was bitterly assailed by the disunionists
+under Calhoun; and even Clay, who entirely
+lacked Taylor's backbone, was dissatisfied with
+it as being too extreme in tone, and conflicting
+with his proposed compromise measures. These
+same compromise measures brought the Kentucky
+leader into conflict with Benton also, especially
+on the point of their interfering with
+the immediate admission of California into the
+Union.</p>
+
+<p>This is not the place to discuss Clay's proposed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_332" id="Page_332">[332]</a></span>
+compromise, which was not satisfactory to
+the extreme Southerners, and still less so to the
+Unionists and anti-slavery men. It consisted
+of five different parts, relating to the recovery
+of fugitive slaves, the suppression of the slave-trade
+in the District of Columbia, the admission
+of California as a state, and the territorial
+condition of Utah and New Mexico. Benton
+opposed it as mixing up incongruous measures;
+as being unjust to California, inasmuch as it
+confounded the question of her admission with
+the general slavery agitation in the United
+States; and above all as being a concession or
+capitulation to the spirit of disunion and secession,
+and therefore a repetition of the error of
+1833. Benton always desired to meet and check
+any disunion movement at the very outset, and,
+if he had had his way, would have carried matters
+with a high hand whenever it came to dealing
+with threats of such a proceeding; and
+therein he was perfectly right. In regard to
+the proposed compromise he believed in dealing
+with each question as it arose, beginning with
+the admission of California, and refusing to
+have any compromise at all with those who
+threatened secession.</p>
+
+<p>The slavery extensionists endeavored to have
+the Missouri compromise line stretched on to
+the Pacific. Benton, avowing his belief that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_333" id="Page_333">[333]</a></span>
+slavery was an evil, opposed this, and gave his
+reasons why he did not wish to see the line
+which had been used to divide free and slave
+soil in the French or Louisiana purchase extended
+into the lands won from Mexico. Slavery
+had always existed in Louisiana, while
+it had been long abolished in Mexico. "The
+Missouri compromise line, extending to New
+Mexico and California, though astronomically
+the same as that in Louisiana, would be politically
+directly the opposite. One went through
+a territory all slave, and made one half free;
+the other would go through territory all free,
+and make one half slave." In fact Benton, as
+he grew older, unlike most of his compatriots,
+gained a clearer insight into the effects of slavery.
+This was shown in his comments upon
+Calhoun's statement, made in the latter's last
+speech, in reference to the unequal development
+of the North and South; which, Benton said,
+was partly owing to the existence of "slavery
+itself, which he (Calhoun) was so anxious to
+extend." It was in this same speech that Calhoun
+hinted at his plan for a dual executive,&mdash;one
+president from the Free and one from the
+Slave States,&mdash;a childish proposition, that Benton
+properly treated as a simple absurdity.</p>
+
+<p>In his speech against the compromise, Benton
+discussed it, section by section, with great force,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_334" id="Page_334">[334]</a></span>
+and with his usual blunt truthfulness. His
+main count was the injustice done to California
+by delaying her admittance, and making it dependent
+upon other issues; but he made almost
+as strong a point against the effort to settle the
+claims of Texas to New Mexican territory. The
+Texan threats to use force he treated with
+cavalier indifference, remarking that as long as
+New Mexico was a territory, and therefore belonged
+to the United States, any controversy
+with her was a controversy with the federal
+government, which would know how to play
+her part by "defending her territory from invasion,
+and her people from violence,"&mdash;a
+hint that had a salutary effect upon the Texans;
+in fact the disunionists, generally, were
+not apt to do much more than threaten while a
+Whig like Taylor was backed up by a Democrat
+like Benton. He also pointed out that it was
+not necessary, however desirable, to make a
+compact with Texas about the boundaries, as
+they could always be settled, whether she
+wished it or not, by a suit before the Supreme
+Court; and again intimated that a little show of
+firmness would remove all danger of a collision.
+"As to anything that Texas or New Mexico
+may do in taking or relinquishing possession,
+that is all moonshine. New Mexico is the
+property of the United States, and she cannot<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_335" id="Page_335">[335]</a></span>
+dispose of herself or any part of herself, nor can
+Texas take her or any part of her." He showed
+a thorough acquaintance with New Mexican
+geography and history, and alluded to the bills
+he had already brought in, in 1844 and 1850,
+to establish a divisional line between the territory
+and Texas, on the longitude first of one
+hundred and then of one hundred and two degrees.
+He recalled the fact that before the
+annexation of Texas, and in a bill proposing to
+settle all questions with her, he had inserted a
+provision forever prohibiting slavery in all parts
+of the annexed territory lying west of the hundredth
+degree of longitude. He also took the
+opportunity of formally stating his opposition
+to any form of slavery extension, remarking
+that it was no new idea with him, but dated
+from the time when in 1804, while a law student
+in Tennessee, he had studied Blackstone
+as edited by the learned Virginian, Judge
+Tucker, who, in an appendix, treated of, and
+totally condemned, black slavery in the United
+States. The very difficulty, or, as he deemed
+it, the impossibility, of getting rid of the evil,
+made Benton all the more determined in opposing
+its extension. "The incurability of the
+evil is the greatest objection to the extension
+of slavery. If it is wrong for the legislator to
+inflict an evil which can be cured, how much<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_336" id="Page_336">[336]</a></span>
+more to inflict one that is incurable, and against
+the will of the people who are to endure it forever!
+I quarrel with no one for deeming slavery
+a blessing; I deem it an evil, and would neither
+adopt it nor impose it on others." The solution
+of the problem of disposing of existent slavery,
+he confessed, seemed beyond human wisdom;
+but "there is a wisdom above human, and to
+that we must look. In the mean time, do not
+extend the evil." In justification of his position
+he quoted previous actions of Congress, done
+under the lead of Southern men, in refusing
+again and again, down to 1807, to allow slavery
+to be introduced into Indiana, when that community
+petitioned for it. He also repudiated
+strongly the whole spirit in which Clay had
+gotten up his compromise bill, stating that he
+did not believe in geographical parties; that he
+knew no North and no South, and utterly rejected
+any slavery compromises except those
+to be found in the Constitution. Altogether
+it was a great speech, and his opposition was
+one of the main causes of the defeat of Clay's
+measure.</p>
+
+<p>Benton's position on the Wilmot Proviso is
+worth giving in his own words: "That measure
+was rejected again as heretofore, and by
+the votes of those who were opposed to extending
+slavery into the territories, because it was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_337" id="Page_337">[337]</a></span>
+unnecessary and inoperative,&mdash;irritating to the
+Slave States, without benefit to the Free States,
+a mere work of supererogation, of which the
+fruit was discontent. It was rejected, not on
+the principle of non-intervention; not on the
+principle of leaving to the territories to do as
+they pleased on the question, but because there
+had been intervention; because Mexican law
+and constitution had intervened, had abolished
+slavery by law in those dominions; which law
+would remain in force until repealed by Congress.
+All that the opponents to the extension
+of slavery had to do, then, was to do nothing.
+And they did nothing."</p>
+
+<p>Before California was admitted into the
+Union old Zachary Taylor had died, leaving
+behind him a name that will always be remembered
+among our people. He was neither
+a great statesman nor yet a great commander;
+but he was an able and gallant soldier, a loyal
+and upright public servant, and a most kindly,
+honest, and truthful man. His death was a
+greater loss to the country than perhaps the
+people ever knew.</p>
+
+<p>The bill for the admission of California as
+a free state, heartily sustained by Benton, was
+made a test question by the Southern disunionists;
+but on this occasion they were thoroughly
+beaten. The great struggle was made over a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_338" id="Page_338">[338]</a></span>
+proposition to limit the southern boundary of
+the state to the line of 36° 30', and to extend
+the Missouri line through to the Pacific, so
+as to authorize the existence of slavery in all
+the territory south of that latitude. This was
+defeated by a vote of thirty-two to twenty-four.
+Not only Benton, but also Spruance and
+Wales of Delaware, and Underwood of Kentucky,
+joined with the representatives from
+the Free States in opposing it. Had it not
+been for the action of these four slave-state
+senators in leaving their associates, the vote
+would have been a tie; and their courage and
+patriotism should be remembered. The bill
+was then passed by a vote of thirty-four to
+eighteen, two other Southern senators, Houston
+of Texas, and Bell of Tennessee, voting
+for it, in addition to the four already mentioned.
+After its passage, ten of the senators
+who had voted against it, including, of course,
+Jefferson Davis, and also Benton's own colleague
+from Missouri, Atchison, joined in a
+protest against what had been done, ending
+with a thinly veiled threat of disunion,&mdash;"dissolution
+of the confederacy," as they styled it.
+Benton stoutly and successfully opposed allowing
+this protest to be received or entered upon
+the journal, condemning it, with a frankness
+that very few of his fellow-senators would have<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_339" id="Page_339">[339]</a></span>
+dared to copy, as being sectional and disunion
+in form, and therefore unfit even for preservation
+on the records.</p>
+
+<p>When the Fugitive Slave Act of 1850 was
+passed, through the help of some Northern
+votes, Benton refused to support it; and this
+was the last act of importance that he performed
+as United States Senator. He had risen and
+grown steadily all through his long term of service;
+and during its last period he did greater
+service to the nation than any of his fellow-senators.
+Compare his stand against the slavery
+extremists and disunionists, such as Calhoun,
+with the position of Webster at the time
+of his famous seventh of March speech, or with
+that of Clay when he brought in his compromise
+bill! In fact, as the times grew more
+troublesome, he grew steadily better able to do
+good work in them.</p>
+
+<p>It is this fact of growth that especially marks
+his career. No other American statesman, except
+John Quincy Adams,&mdash;certainly neither
+of his great contemporaries, Webster and Clay,&mdash;kept
+doing continually better work throughout
+his term of public service, or showed himself
+able to rise to a higher level at the very
+end than at the beginning. Yet such was the
+case with Benton. He always rose to meet a
+really great emergency; and his services to the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_340" id="Page_340">[340]</a></span>
+nation grew steadily in importance to the very
+close of his life. Whereas Webster and Clay
+passed their zenith and fell, he kept rising all
+the time.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_341" id="Page_341">[341]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XV" id="CHAPTER_XV"></a>CHAPTER XV.</h2>
+
+<h3>THE LOSING FIGHT.</h3>
+
+
+<p>Benton had now finished his fifth and last
+term in the United States Senate. He had
+been chosen senator from Missouri before she
+was admitted into the Union, and had remained
+such for thirty years. During all that time the
+state had been steadily Democratic, the large
+Whig minority never being able to get control;
+but on the question of the extension of slavery
+the dominant party itself began at this time to
+break into two factions. Hitherto Benton had
+been the undisputed leader of the Democracy,
+but now the pro-slavery and disunionist Democrats
+organized a very powerful opposition to
+him; while he still received the enthusiastic
+support of an almost equally numerous body of
+followers. Although the extension of slavery
+and the preservation of the Union were the two
+chief and vital points on which the factions differed,
+yet the names by which they designated
+each other were adopted in consequence of
+their differing also on a third and only less important<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_342" id="Page_342">[342]</a></span>
+one. Benton was such a firm believer
+in hard money, and a currency of gold and
+silver, as to have received the nickname of
+"Old Bullion," and his followers were called
+"hards;" his opponents were soft money men,
+in addition to being secessionists and pro-slavery
+fanatics, and took the name of "softs." The
+principles of the Bentonians were right, and
+those of their opponents wrong; but for all
+that the latter gradually gained upon the former.
+Finally, in the midst of Benton's fight
+against the extension of slavery into the territories,
+the "softs" carried the Missouri legislature,
+and passed a series of resolutions based
+upon those of Calhoun. These were most truculent
+and disloyal in tone, demanding that slavery
+be permitted to exist in all the new states
+to be admitted, and instructing their senators to
+vote accordingly. These resolutions were presented
+in the senate by Benton's colleague from
+Missouri, Atchison, who was rather hostile to
+him and to every other friend of the Union,
+and later on achieved disreputable notoriety as
+a leader of the "border ruffians" in the affrays
+on the soil of Kansas. Benton at once picked
+up the glove that had been flung down. He
+utterly refused to obey the resolutions, denounced
+them savagely as being treasonable
+and offensive in the highest degree, asserted that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_343" id="Page_343">[343]</a></span>
+they did not express the true opinions of the
+voters of the state, and appealed from the
+Missouri legislature to the Missouri people.</p>
+
+<p>The issue between the two sides was now
+sharply brought out, and, as this took place
+towards the end of Benton's fifth term, the
+struggle to command the legislature which
+should reëlect him or give him a successor
+was most exciting. Benton himself took an
+active part in the preliminary canvass. Neither
+faction was able to get a majority of the
+members, and the deadlock was finally broken
+by the "softs" coming to the support of the
+Whigs, and helping them to elect Benton's
+rival. Thus, after serving his state faithfully
+and ably for thirty years, he was finally turned
+out of the position which he so worthily filled,
+because he had committed the crime of standing
+loyally by the Union.</p>
+
+<p>But the stout old Nationalist was not in the
+least cast down or even shaken by his defeat.
+He kept up the fight as bitterly as ever, though
+now an old man, and in 1852 went to Congress
+as a representative Union Democrat.
+For thirty years he had been the autocrat of
+Missouri politics, and had at one time wielded
+throughout his own state a power as great as
+Calhoun possessed in South Carolina; greater
+than Webster held in Massachusetts, or Clay<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_344" id="Page_344">[344]</a></span>
+in Kentucky. But the tide which had so long
+flowed in his favor now turned, and for the
+few remaining years of his life set as steadily
+against him; yet at no time of his long public
+career did he stand forth as honorably and
+prominently as during his last days, when he
+was showing so stern a front to his victorious
+foes. His love for work was so great that,
+when out of the Senate, he did not find even
+his incessant political occupations enough for
+him. During his contest for the senatorship
+his hands had been full, for he had spoken
+again and again throughout the entire state,
+his carefully prepared speeches showing remarkable
+power, and filled with scathing denunciation
+and invective and biting and caustic
+sarcasm. But so soon as his defeat was assured
+he turned his attention immediately to literature,
+setting to work on his great "Thirty
+Years' View," of which the first volume was
+printed during his congressional term, and was
+quoted on the floor of the House, both by his
+friends and foes, during the debates in which
+he was taking part.</p>
+
+<p>In 1852, when he was elected to Congress
+as a member of the House, he had supported
+Pierce for the presidency against Scott, a good
+general, but otherwise a wholly absurd and
+flatulent personage, who was the Whig nominee.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_345" id="Page_345">[345]</a></span>
+But it soon became evident that Pierce
+was completely under the control of the secession
+wing of the party, and Benton thereafterwards
+treated him with contemptuous hostility,
+despising him, and seeing him exactly
+as he was,&mdash;a small politician, of low capacity
+and mean surroundings, proud to act as the
+servile tool of men worse than himself but
+also stronger and abler. He was ever ready
+to do any work the slavery leaders set him,
+and to act as their attorney in arguing in its
+favor,&mdash;to quote Benton's phrase, with "undaunted
+mendacity, moral callosity [and] mental
+obliquity." His last message to Congress in
+the slavery interest Benton spoke of as characteristic,
+and exemplifying "all the modes of
+conveying untruths which long ages have invented,&mdash;direct
+assertion, fallacious inference,
+equivocal phrase, and false innuendo." As he
+entertained such views of the head of the Democratic
+party, and as this same head was in
+hearty accord with, and a good representative
+of the mass of the rank and file politicians of
+the organization, it is small wonder that Benton
+found himself, on every important question
+that came up while he was in Congress,
+opposed to the mass of his fellow-Democrats.</p>
+
+<p>Although the great questions to which he
+devoted himself, while a representative in Congress,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_346" id="Page_346">[346]</a></span>
+were those relating to the extension of
+slavery, yet he also found time to give to
+certain other subjects, working as usual with
+indomitable energy, and retaining his marvelous
+memory to the last. The idea of desponding
+or giving up, for any cause whatever, simply
+never entered his head. When his house,
+containing all the manuscript and papers of the
+nearly completed second volume of his "Thirty
+Years' View," was burned up, he did not delay
+a minute in recommencing his work, and
+the very next day spoke in Congress as usual.</p>
+
+<p>His speeches were showing a steady improvement;
+they were not masterpieces, even at the
+last, but in every way, especially in style, they
+were infinitely superior to those that he had made
+on his first entrance into public life. Of course, a
+man with his intense pride in his country, and
+characterized by such a desire to see her become
+greater and more united in every way, would
+naturally support the proposal to build a Pacific
+Railroad, and accordingly he argued for it at great
+length and with force and justness, at the same
+time opposing the propositions to build northern
+and southern trans-continental roads as substitutes
+for the proposed central route. He showed
+the character of the land through which the
+road would run, and the easiness of the passes
+across the Rockies, and prophesied a rapid increase<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_347" id="Page_347">[347]</a></span>
+of states as one of the results attendant
+upon its building. At the end of his speech he
+made an elaborate comparison of the courses of
+trade and commerce at different periods of the
+world's history, and showed that, as we had
+reached the Pacific coast, we had finally taken
+a position where our trade with the Oriental
+kingdoms, backed up by our own enormous internal
+development, rendered us more than ever
+independent of Europe.</p>
+
+<p>In another speech he discussed very intelligently,
+and with his usual complete command of
+the facts of the case, some of the contemporary
+Indian uprisings in the far West. He attacked
+our whole Indian policy, showing that the corruption
+of the Indian agents, coupled with astute
+aggressions, were the usual causes of our
+wars. Further, he criticised our regular troops
+as being unfit to cope with the savages, and advocated
+the formation of companies of frontier
+rangers, who should also be settlers, and should
+receive from the government a bounty in land
+as part reward for their service. Many of his
+remarks on our Indian policy apply quite as
+well now as they did then, and our regular soldiers
+are certainly not the proper opponents for
+the Indians; but Benton's military views were,
+as a rule, the reverse of sensible, and we cannot
+accept his denunciations of the army, and especially<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_348" id="Page_348">[348]</a></span>
+of West Point, as being worth serious consideration.
+His belief in the marvelous efficacy
+of a raw militia, especially as regards war with
+European powers, was childish, and much of his
+feeling against the regular army officer was dictated
+by jealousy. He was, by all the peculiarities
+of his habits and education, utterly unfitted
+for military command; and it would have been
+an evil day for his good fame if Polk had succeeded
+in having him made lieutenant-general of
+our forces in Mexico.</p>
+
+<p>His remarks upon our Indian policy were not
+the only ones he made that would bear study
+even yet. Certain of his speeches upon the different
+land-bounty and pension bills, passed
+nominally in the interests of veterans, but really
+through demagogy and the machination of speculators,
+could be read with profit by not a few
+Congressmen at the present time. One of his
+utterances was: "I am a friend to old soldiers
+... but not to old speculators;" and while favoring
+proper pension bills he showed the foolishness
+and criminality of certain others very
+clearly, together with the fact that, when passed
+long after the services have been rendered, they
+always fail to relieve the real sufferers, and
+work in the interests of unworthy outsiders.</p>
+
+<p>But his great speech, and one of the best and
+greatest that he ever made, was the one in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_349" id="Page_349">[349]</a></span>
+opposition to the Kansas-Nebraska bill, which
+was being pushed through Congress by the fire-eaters
+and their Northern pro-slavery followers.
+His own position upon the measure was best
+expressed by the words he used in commenting
+on the remarks of a Georgian member: "He
+votes as a Southern man, and votes sectionally;
+I also am a Southern man, but vote nationally
+on national questions."</p>
+
+<p>The Missouri Compromise of 1820 had expressly
+abolished slavery in the territory out of
+which Kansas and Nebraska were carved. By
+the proposed bill this compromise was to be
+repealed, and the famous doctrine of non-intervention,
+or "squatter sovereignty," was to take
+its place, the people of each territory being
+allowed to choose for themselves whether they
+did or did not wish slavery. Benton attacked
+the proposal with all the strength of his frank,
+open nature as "a bungling attempt to smuggle
+slavery into the territory, and throughout
+all the country, up to the Canada line and out
+to the Rocky Mountains." He showed exhaustively
+the real nature of the original Missouri
+Compromise, which, as he said, was forced by
+the South upon the North, and which the South
+now proposed to repeal, that it might humiliate
+the North still further. The compromise of
+1820 was, he justly contended, right; it was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_350" id="Page_350">[350]</a></span>
+like the original compromises of the Constitution,
+by which the Slave States were admitted
+to the formation of the Union; no greater concession
+of principle was involved in the one case
+than in the other; and, had either compromise
+failed, the Union would not now be in existence.
+But the day when compromises had been necessary,
+or even harmless, had passed. The time
+had come when the extension of slavery was to
+be opposed in every constitutional way; and it
+was an outrage to propose to extend its domain
+by repealing all that part of a compromise
+measure which worked against it, when the
+South had already long taken advantage of such
+parts of the law as worked in its favor. Said
+Benton: "The South divided and took half,
+and now it will not do to claim the other half."
+Exactly as a proposition to destroy the slavery
+compromises of the Constitution would be an
+open attempt to destroy the Union, so, he said,
+the attempt to abrogate the compromise of 1820
+would be a preparation for the same ending.
+"I have stood upon the Missouri Compromise
+for about thirty years, and mean to stand upon
+it to the end of my life ... [it is] a binding
+covenant upon both parties, and the more so
+upon the South, as she imposed it."</p>
+
+<p>The squatter sovereignty theories of Douglas
+he treated with deserved ridicule, laughing at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_351" id="Page_351">[351]</a></span>
+the idea that the territories were not the actual
+property of the nation, to be treated as the latter
+wished, and having none of the rights of
+sovereign states; and he condemned even more
+severely the theory advanced to the effect that
+Congress had no power to legislate on slavery
+in the territories. Thus, he pointed out that
+to admit any such theories was directly to reverse
+the principles upon which we had acted
+for seventy years in regard to the various territories
+that from time to time grew to such size
+as entitled them to come into the Union as
+states. After showing that there was no excuse
+for bringing in the bill on the plea of settling
+the slavery question, since there was not a foot
+of territory in the United States where the subject
+of slavery was not already settled by law,
+he closed with an earnest appeal against such an
+attempt to break up the Union and outrage the
+North by forcing slavery into a land where its
+existence was already forbidden by law. His
+speech exceeded the hour allotted to it, and
+he was allowed to go on only by the courtesy
+of a member from Illinois, who, when some of
+the Southerners protested against his being
+heard farther, gave up part of his own time to
+the grand old Missourian, and asked the House
+to hear him, if only "as the oldest living man
+in Congress, the only man in Congress who was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_352" id="Page_352">[352]</a></span>
+present at the passage of the Missouri Compromise
+bill." Many a man at the North, ashamed
+and indignant at seeing the politicians of his
+own section cower at the crack of the Southern
+whip, felt a glow of sincere gratitude and admiration
+for the rugged Westerner, who so
+boldly bade defiance to the ruling slave party
+that held the reins not only in his own section,
+but also in his own state, and to oppose which
+was almost certain political death.</p>
+
+<p>The Gadsden treaty was also strongly opposed
+and condemned by Benton, who considered it to
+be part of a great scheme or movement in the
+interests of the slavery disunionists, of which
+he also believed the Kansas-Nebraska bill to be
+the first development,&mdash;the "thin end of the
+wedge." He opposed the acquirement even of
+the small piece of territory we were actually
+able to purchase from Mexico; and showed good
+grounds for his belief that the administration,
+acting as usual only in the interest of the secessionists,
+had tried to get enough North-Mexican
+territory to form several new states, and had
+also attempted to purchase Cuba, both efforts
+being for the purpose of enabling the South
+either to become again dominant in the Union
+or else to set up a separate confederacy of her
+own. For it must be kept in mind that Benton
+always believed that the Southern disunion<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_353" id="Page_353">[353]</a></span>
+movements were largely due to conspiracies
+among ambitious politicians, who used the slavery
+question as a handle by which to influence
+the mass of the people. This view has certainly
+more truth in it than it is now the fashion to
+admit. His objection to the actual treaty was
+mainly based on its having been done by the
+executive without the consent of the legislature,
+and he also criticised it for the secrecy with
+which it had been put through. In bringing
+forward the first objection, however, he was
+confronted with Jefferson's conduct in acquiring
+Louisiana, which he endeavored, not very successfully,
+to show had nothing in common with
+the actions of Pierce, who, he said, simply demanded
+a check from the House with which to
+complete a purchase undertaken on his own responsibility.</p>
+
+<p>Throughout his congressional term of service,
+Benton acted so as to deserve well of the Union
+as a whole, and most well of Missouri in particular.
+But he could not stem the tide of folly
+and madness in this state, and was defeated
+when he was a candidate for reëlection. The
+Whigs had now disappeared from the political
+arena, and the Know-nothings were running
+through their short and crooked lease of life;
+they foolishly nominated a third candidate in
+Benton's district, who drew off enough votes<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_354" id="Page_354">[354]</a></span>
+from him to enable his pro-slavery Democratic
+competitor to win.</p>
+
+<p>No sooner had he lost his seat in Congress
+than Benton, indefatigable as ever, set to work
+to finish his "Thirty Years' View," and produced
+the second volume in 1856, the year when
+he made his last attempt to regain his hold in
+politics, and to win Missouri back to the old
+Union standard. Although his own son-in-law,
+Fremont, the daring western explorer, was running
+as the first presidential candidate ever
+nominated by the Republicans, the old partisan
+voted for the Democrat, Buchanan. He did
+not like Buchanan, considering him weak and
+unsuitable, but the Republican party he believed
+to be entirely too sectional in character
+for him to give it his support. For governor
+there was a triangular fight, the Know-nothings
+having nominated one candidate, the secessionist
+Democrats a second, while Benton himself
+ran as the choice of the Union Democracy.
+He was now seventy-four years old, but his
+mind was as vigorous as ever, and his iron will
+kept up a frame that had hardly even yet begun
+to give way. During the course of the
+campaign he traveled throughout the state,
+going in all twelve hundred miles, and making
+forty speeches, each one of two or three
+hours' length. This was a remarkable feat for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_355" id="Page_355">[355]</a></span>
+so old a man; indeed, it has very rarely been
+paralleled, except by Gladstone's recent performances.
+The vote was quite evenly divided
+between the three candidates; but Benton came
+in third, and the extreme pro-slavery men
+carried the day. After this, during the few
+months of life he yet had left, he did not again
+mingle in the politics of Missouri.</p>
+
+<p>But in the days of his defeat at home, the
+regard and respect in which he was held in the
+other states, especially at the North, increased
+steadily; and in the fall of 1856 he made by
+request a lecturing tour in New England, speaking
+on the danger of the political situation and
+the imperative necessity of preserving the
+Union, which he now clearly saw to be gravely
+threatened. He was well received, for the
+North was learning to respect him, and he had
+gotten over his early hostility to New England,&mdash;a
+hostility originally shared by the whole
+West. The New Englanders were not yet
+aware, however, of the importance of the secession
+movements, and paid little heed to the
+warnings that were to be so fully justified by
+the events of the next few years. But Benton,
+in spite of his great age, saw distinctly the
+changes that were taking place, and the dangers
+that were impending,&mdash;an unusual thing
+for a man whose active life has already been
+lived out under widely different conditions.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_356" id="Page_356">[356]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>He again turned his attention to literature,
+and produced another great work, the "Abridgment
+of the Debates of Congress from 1787 to
+1856," in sixteen volumes, besides writing a
+valuable pamphlet on the Dred Scott decision,
+which he severely criticised. The amount of
+labor all this required was immense, and his
+health completely gave way; yet he continued
+working to the very end, dictating the closing
+portion of the "Abridgment" in a whisper as
+he lay on his death-bed. When he once began
+to fail his advanced years made him succumb
+rapidly; and on April 10, 1858, he died, in
+the city of Washington. As soon as the news
+reached Missouri, a great revulsion of feeling
+took place, and all classes of the people united
+to do honor to the memory of the dead statesman,
+realizing that they had lost a man who
+towered head and shoulders above both friends
+and foes. The body was taken to St. Louis,
+and after lying in state was buried in Bellefontaine
+Cemetery, more than forty thousand
+people witnessing the funeral. All the public
+buildings were draped in mourning; all places
+of business were closed, and the flags everywhere
+were at half-mast. Thus at the very
+end the great city of the West at last again
+paid fit homage to the West's mightiest son.</p>
+
+<p>Benton's most important writings are those<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_357" id="Page_357">[357]</a></span>
+mentioned above. The "Thirty Years' View"
+("a history of the working of the American
+government for thirty years, from 1820 to
+1850") will always be indispensable to every
+student of American history. It deals with the
+deeds of both houses of Congress, and of some
+of the higher federal officials during his thirty
+years' term of service in the Senate, and is valuable
+alike for the original data it contains, and
+because it is so complete a record of our public
+life at that time. The book is also remarkable
+for its courteous and equable tone, even towards
+bitter personal and political enemies. It shows
+a vanity on the part of the author that is too
+frank and free from malice to be anything but
+amusing; the style is rather ponderous, and the
+English not always good, for Benton began life,
+and, in fact, largely passed it, in an age of ornate
+periods, when grandiloquence was considered
+more essential than grammar. In much
+of the Mississippi valley the people had their
+own canons of literary taste; indeed, in a recent
+book by one of Benton's admirers, there is
+a fond allusion to his statement, anent the expunging
+resolution, that "solitary and alone"
+he had set the ball in motion,&mdash;the pleonasm
+being evidently looked upon in the light of a
+rather fine oratorical outburst.</p>
+
+<p>"The Abridgment of the Debates of Congress<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_358" id="Page_358">[358]</a></span>
+from 1789 to 1856" he was only able to
+bring down to 1850. Sixteen volumes were
+published. It was a compilation needing infinite
+labor, and is invaluable to the historian.
+While in the midst of the vast work he also
+found time to write his "Examination of the
+Dred Scott case," in so far as it decided the
+Missouri Compromise law to be unconstitutional,
+and asserted the self-extension of the
+Constitution into the territories, carrying slavery
+with it,&mdash;the decision in this case promulgated
+by Judge Taney, of unhappy fame,
+having been the last step taken in the interests
+of slavery and for the overthrow of freedom.
+The pamphlet contained nearly two hundred
+pages, and showed, as was invariably the case
+with anything Benton did, the effects of laborious
+research and wide historical and legal
+learning. His summing up was, "that the decision
+conflicts with the uniform action of all
+the departments of the federal government from
+its foundation to the present time, and cannot
+be accepted as a rule to govern Congress and
+the people, without severing that act and admitting
+the political supremacy of the court
+and accepting an altered constitution from its
+hands, and taking a new and portentous point
+of departure in the working of the government."
+He denounced the new party theories<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_359" id="Page_359">[359]</a></span>
+of the Democracy, which had abandoned the
+old belief of the founders of the Republic, that
+Congress had power to legislate upon slavery in
+territories, and which had gone on "from the
+abrogation of the Missouri Compromise, which
+saved the Union, to squatter sovereignty, which
+killed the compromise, and thence to the decisions
+of the supreme court, which kill both."
+In closing he touched briefly on the history
+of the pro-slavery agitation. "Up to Mr.
+Pierce's administration the plan had been defensive,
+that is to say, to make the secession
+of the South a measure of self-defense against
+the abolition encroachments and crusades of
+the North. In the time of Mr. Pierce the plan
+became offensive, that is to say, to commence
+the expansion of slavery, and the acquisition of
+territory to spread it over, so as to overpower
+the North with new Slave States, and drive
+them out of the Union.... The rising in
+the Free States, in consequence of the abrogation
+of the Missouri Compromise, checked these
+schemes, and limited the success of the disunionists
+to the revival of the agitation which
+enables them to wield the South against the
+North in all the federal elections and all federal
+legislation. Accidents and events have
+given the party a strange preëminence,&mdash;under
+Jackson's administration proclaimed for treason;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_360" id="Page_360">[360]</a></span>
+since at the head of the government and
+of the Democratic party. The death of Harrison,
+and the accession of Tyler, was their first
+great lift; the election of Mr. Pierce was their
+culminating point." This was the last protest
+of the last of the old Jacksonian leaders against
+that new generation of Democrats, whose delight
+it had become to bow down to strange
+gods.</p>
+
+<p>In his private life Benton's relations were of
+the pleasantest. He was a religious man, although,
+like his great political chief, he could
+on occasions swear roundly. He was rigidly
+moral, and he was too fond of work ever to
+make social life a business. But he liked small
+dinners, with just a few intimate friends or
+noted and brilliant public men, and always
+shone at such an entertainment. Although he
+had not traveled much, he gave the impression
+of having done so, by reason of his wide reading,
+and because he always made a point of
+knowing all explorers, especially those who had
+penetrated our great western wilds. His geographical
+knowledge was wonderful; and his
+good nature, as well as his delight in work
+for work's sake, made him of more use than
+any library of reference, if his friends needed
+information upon some abstruse matter,&mdash;Webster
+himself acknowledging his indebtedness to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_361" id="Page_361">[361]</a></span>
+him on one occasion, and being the authority
+for the statement that Benton knew more political
+facts than any other man he had ever met,
+even than John Quincy Adams, and possessed
+a wonderful fund of general knowledge. Although
+very gentle in his dealings with those
+for whom he cared, Benton originally was rather
+quarrelsome and revengeful in character. His
+personal and political prejudices were bitter,
+and he denounced his enemies freely in public
+and from the stump; yet he always declined
+to take part in joint political debates, on account
+of the personal discourtesy with which
+they were usually conducted. He gave his
+whole time to public life, rarely or never attending
+to his law practice after he had fairly
+entered the political field.</p>
+
+<p>Benton was one of those who were present
+and escaped death at the time of the terrible
+accident on board the Princeton, during
+Tyler's administration, when the bursting of
+her great gun killed so many prominent men.
+Benton was saved owing to the fact that, characteristically
+enough, he had stepped to one
+side the better to note the marksmanship of
+the gunner. Ex-Governor Gilmer, of Virginia,
+who had taken his place, was instantly killed.
+Tyler, who was also on board, was likewise
+saved in consequence of the exhibition of a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_362" id="Page_362">[362]</a></span>
+characteristic trait; for, just as the gun was
+about to be fired, something occurred in another
+part of the ship which distracted the
+attention of the fussy, fidgety president, who
+accordingly ran off to see what it was, and
+thus escaped the fatal explosion. The tragic
+nature of the accident and his own narrow escape
+made a deep impression upon Benton; and
+it was noticed that ever afterwards he was far
+more forbearing and forgiving than of old. He
+became good friends with Webster and other
+political opponents, with whom he had formerly
+hardly been on speaking terms. Calhoun
+alone he would never forgive. It was not
+in his nature to do anything by halves; and
+accordingly, when he once forgave an opponent,
+he could not do enough to show him that
+the forgiveness was real. A Missourian named
+Wilson, who had been his bitter and malignant
+political foe for years, finally becoming broken
+in fortune and desirous of bettering himself by
+going to California, where Benton's influence,
+through his son-in-law, Fremont, was supreme,
+was persuaded by Webster to throw himself
+on the generosity of his old enemy. The latter
+not only met him half-way, but helped
+him with a lavish kindness that would hardly
+have been warranted by less than a life-long
+friendship. Webster has left on record the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_363" id="Page_363">[363]</a></span>
+fact that, when once they had come to be on
+good terms with each other, there was no man
+in the whole Senate of whom he would more
+freely have asked any favor that could properly
+be granted.</p>
+
+<p>He was a most loving father. At his death
+he left four surviving daughters,&mdash;Mrs. William
+Carey Jones, Mrs. Sarah Benton Jacobs,
+Madame Susan Benton Boilleau, and Mrs. Jessie
+Ann Benton Fremont, the wife of the great
+explorer, whose wonderful feats and adventures,
+ending with the conquest of California,
+where he became a sort of viceroy in point of
+power, made him an especial favorite with his
+father-in-law, who loved daring and hardihood.
+Benton took the keenest delight in Fremont's
+remarkable successes, and was never tired of
+talking of them, both within and without the
+Senate. He records with very natural pride the
+fact that it was only the courage and judgment
+displayed in a trying crisis by his own gifted
+daughter, Fremont's wife, which enabled the
+adventurous young explorer to prosecute one
+of the most important of his expeditions, when
+threatened with fatal interference from jealous
+governmental superiors.</p>
+
+<p>He was an exceptionally devoted husband.
+His wife was Miss Elizabeth McDowell, of Virginia,
+whom he married after he had entered<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_364" id="Page_364">[364]</a></span>
+the Senate. Their life was most happy until
+1844, when she was struck by paralysis. From
+that time till her death in 1854, he never went
+out to a public place of amusement, spending
+all his time not occupied with public duties in
+writing by her bedside. It is scant praise to
+say that, while mere acquiescence on his part
+would have enabled him to become rich through
+government influence, he nevertheless died a
+poor man. In public, as in private life, he was
+a man of sensitive purity of character; he would
+never permit any person connected with him
+by blood or marriage to accept office under the
+government, nor would he ever favor any applicant
+for a government contract on political
+grounds.</p>
+
+<p>During his last years, when his sturdy independence
+and devotion to the Union had caused
+him the loss of his political influence in his
+own state and with his own party, he nevertheless
+stood higher with the country at large
+than ever before. He was a faithful friend
+and a bitter foe; he was vain, proud, utterly
+fearless, and quite unable to comprehend such
+emotions as are expressed by the terms despondency
+and yielding. Without being a great
+orator or writer, or even an original thinker, he
+yet possessed marked ability; and his abounding
+vitality and marvelous memory, his indomitable<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_365" id="Page_365">[365]</a></span>
+energy and industry, and his tenacious
+persistency and personal courage, all combined
+to give him a position and influence such as
+few American statesmen have ever held. His
+character grew steadily to the very last; he
+made better speeches and was better able to
+face new problems when past three score and
+ten than in his early youth or middle age. He
+possessed a rich fund of political, legal, and historical
+learning, and every subject that he ever
+handled showed the traces of careful and thorough
+study. He was very courteous, except
+when provoked; his courage was proof against
+all fear, and he shrank from no contest, personal
+or political. He was sometimes narrow-minded,
+and always wilful and passionate; but
+he was honest and truthful. At all times and
+in all places he held every good gift he had
+completely at the service of the American Federal
+Union.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_367" id="Page_367">[367]</a></span><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_366" id="Page_366">[</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="INDEX" id="INDEX"></a>INDEX.</h2>
+
+<div>
+Adams, John Quincy:<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">In presidential election of 1824-5, <a href="#Page_59">59</a>-61;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">makes Clay secretary of state, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">and is assailed therefor, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">outlines Whig policy in his inaugural, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">on the Panama mission, <a href="#Page_64">64</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">in election of 1828, <a href="#Page_69">69</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">preserves purity of civil service, <a href="#Page_81">81</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">on recognition of Texas, <a href="#Page_180">180</a>;</span><br />
+<br />
+"Albany Regency," the, adopts "spoils system," <a href="#Page_81">81</a>;<br />
+<br />
+Arnold, Benedict:<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">compared with Burr and J. Davis, <a href="#Page_163">163</a>.</span><br />
+<br />
+Atchison, protests against admission of California, <a href="#Page_338">338</a>.<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Benton, town of, founded, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>.<br />
+<br />
+Benton, Thomas Hart:&mdash;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">local character of his statesmanship, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">birth, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">boyhood and education, <a href="#Page_24">24</a> <i>et seq.</i>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">religious training, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">fights a duel, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">affray with Jackson, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">admitted to the bar, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">in legislature of Tennessee, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">on the Hartford Convention, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">a slave-holder, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">favors war of 1812, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>, in service, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>; befriends Jackson, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">associations in Tennessee, <a href="#Page_33">33</a> <i>et seq.</i>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">some traits of character, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">settles in Missouri, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">surroundings and influences there, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">speech on treaty with Spain concerning Florida, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">first position concerning slavery, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">enters U. S. Senate, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">honorable financial sacrifice, <a href="#Page_45">45</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">position on the Oregon question, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>-53, <a href="#Page_65">65</a>, <a href="#Page_263">263</a>-270, <a href="#Page_273">273</a>-279, <a href="#Page_281">281</a>-289;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">bill to establish a trading road through Missouri, <a href="#Page_53">53</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">on the removal of the Indians, <a href="#Page_55">55</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">votes for Clay's protective tariff bill, <a href="#Page_58">58</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">opposes internal improvements and Cumberland Road bill, <a href="#Page_58">58</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">condemns election of John Q. Adams to Presidency, <a href="#Page_60">60</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">supports Clay, then Jackson, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">will not join outcry against Adams and Clay, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">a leader of the opposition to Adams in the Senate, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">represents ultra-Southern feeling concerning revolted</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Spanish colonies, <a href="#Page_65">65</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">vote on the protective tariff of 1828, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>, <a href="#Page_91">91</a>, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">efforts concerning disposal of public land, <a href="#Page_68">68</a>, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>, <a href="#Page_149">149</a>, <a href="#Page_154">154</a>, <a href="#Page_217">217</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">hostility to the Northeastern States, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">in the Webster-Hayne debate, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">opposes Jackson's "spoils system," <a href="#Page_79">79</a>-85;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">leader of the Jacksonians in the Senate, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">shows that protective tariff has not helped the West, <a href="#Page_91">91</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">urges repeal of the tax on salt, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>, <a href="#Page_227">227</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">vigorously sustains Jackson in the nullification troubles, <a href="#Page_100">100</a>-105;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">sustains the Force bill, <a href="#Page_105">105</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">opposes Clay's compromise measure, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>-109;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">remarks on his position at this period, <a href="#Page_112">112</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">campaign against the Bank of the United States, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>, <a href="#Page_136">136</a>, <a href="#Page_143">143</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">speech on the currency, <a href="#Page_122">122</a>, <a href="#Page_136">136</a>-138, <a href="#Page_253">253</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">conflict with Clay, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">on the removal of the deposits, <a href="#Page_131">131</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">opposes the resolution of censure against Jackson, <a href="#Page_133">133</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">and pushes through his own expunging resolution, <a href="#Page_134">134</a>-136, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>-142;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">advocates establishment of mints at the South, <a href="#Page_144">144</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">opposes distribution of surplus, <a href="#Page_145">145</a>, <a href="#Page_149">149</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">wishes it used for fortifications, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>, <a href="#Page_150">150</a>-153;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">advocates insisting on our claims against France, <a href="#Page_147">147</a>;</span><br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_368" id="Page_368">[368]</a></span><span style="margin-left: 1em;">but opposes paying claims of American citizens, <a href="#Page_148">148</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">opposes the so-called specie circulars, <a href="#Page_154">154</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">views concerning Southern slavery politicians, <a href="#Page_162">162</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">opposed to the Abolitionists, <a href="#Page_165">165</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">criticises Calhoun, <a href="#Page_167">167</a>, <a href="#Page_168">168</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">aids to defeat bill prohibiting circulation of abolition</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">documents through U. S. mails, <a href="#Page_169">169</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">carries bill extending boundaries of Missouri, <a href="#Page_170">170</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">urges admission of Michigan, <a href="#Page_171">171</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">carries through treaty with Cherokees, <a href="#Page_171">171</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">defends governmental treatment of Indians, <a href="#Page_172">172</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">condemns treaty establishing Southwestern boundary, <a href="#Page_175">175</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">position concerning annexation of Texas, <a href="#Page_180">180</a>-183;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">hostility to separatist doctrines, <a href="#Page_188">188</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">blames bankers and politicians for financial crisis of 1837, <a href="#Page_190">190</a>, <a href="#Page_194">194</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">his forebodings of this trouble, <a href="#Page_191">191</a>-193;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">demeanor in the crisis, <a href="#Page_197">197</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">supports issue of Treasury notes, <a href="#Page_198">198</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">opposes payment of further installment of surplus, <a href="#Page_199">199</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">supports scheme for independent Treasury, <a href="#Page_200">200</a>, <a href="#Page_207">207</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">action concerning resumption by bonds, <a href="#Page_203">203</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">a supporter of the administration in these times, <a href="#Page_263">263</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">his knowledge, <a href="#Page_204">204</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">hostile to paper currency, <a href="#Page_206">206</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">defends administration in matters of Seminole war, <a href="#Page_212">212</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">theory for conducting this war, <a href="#Page_215">215</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">advocates; homestead law, <a href="#Page_217">217</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">opposes assumption of State debts by national government, <a href="#Page_220">220</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">explains greater rapidity of progress at North than at South, <a href="#Page_222">222</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">on the tariff of 1833, <a href="#Page_224">224</a>-230;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">defends Jackson and Van Buren against charges of squandering public moneys, <a href="#Page_230">230</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">in the Harrison campaign, <a href="#Page_233">233</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">holds the Democrats for the Union, <a href="#Page_234">234</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">feeling concerning slavery about Van Buren's time, <a href="#Page_235">235</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">leads the Democrats in struggle between President Tyler and Clay,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;"><a href="#Page_240">240</a>-244;</span><br />
+
+
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">exalts the "Democratic idea," <a href="#Page_241">241</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">comments on Tyler's first message to Congress, <a href="#Page_245">245</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">opposes sub-Treasury bill, <a href="#Page_246">246</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">also the bank, distribution and bankruptcy bills, <a href="#Page_246">246</a>-249;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">opposes the hour limit for speeches in the Senate, <a href="#Page_250">250</a>-252;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">speech concerning the district banks and the currency, <a href="#Page_253">253</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">opposes effort to establish a national bank during Tyler's</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">administration, <a href="#Page_255">255</a>-258;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">opposes new form of Treasury notes, <a href="#Page_258">258</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">opposes subsidizing steamship lines, <a href="#Page_258">258</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">also the abuse of the pension system, <a href="#Page_258">258</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">always an advocate of extending the national boundaries, <a href="#Page_263">263</a>, <a href="#Page_267">267</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">opposes the Ashburton treaty, <a href="#Page_269">269</a>, <a href="#Page_273">273</a>-279;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">remarks concerning the Caroline imbroglio, <a href="#Page_270">270</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">opposes making an efficient navy, <a href="#Page_272">272</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">references to slavery in speeches on the Ashburton treaty, <a href="#Page_274">274</a>, <a href="#Page_280">280</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">on the Oregon question, <a href="#Page_281">281</a>-289;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">position concerning annexation of Texas in time of Polk, <a href="#Page_299">299</a>-317;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">opposes the South, <a href="#Page_301">301</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">opposes Calhoun's treaty, <a href="#Page_306">306</a>-310;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">hoodwinked by the annexationists, <a href="#Page_313">313</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">attacks Calhoun and opposes the Mexican war, <a href="#Page_315">315</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">offered the command of the army, <a href="#Page_318">318</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">awakes to importance of slavery question, <a href="#Page_318">318</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">his later position concerning it, <a href="#Page_320">320</a>, <a href="#Page_333">333</a>-336;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">contests with pro-slavery Senators, <a href="#Page_322">322</a>, <a href="#Page_323">323</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">opposes Calhoun as to power of Congress over slavery in territories,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;"><a href="#Page_323">323</a>-327;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">and as to admission of Oregon, <a href="#Page_328">328</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">criticises Polk's administration, <a href="#Page_328">328</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">visits New York in presidential campaign in 1848, <a href="#Page_329">329</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">defends Taylor's message, <a href="#Page_331">331</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">opposes Clay's compromise, <a href="#Page_332">332</a>, <a href="#Page_333">333</a>-336;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">more antagonism towards Calhoun, <a href="#Page_333">333</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">position on the Wilmot Proviso, <a href="#Page_336">336</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">advocates admission of California as a Free State, <a href="#Page_337">337</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">refuses to support Fugitive Slave Act, <a href="#Page_339">339</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">nickname of "Old Bullion," <a href="#Page_342">342</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">opposition to him in Missouri, <a href="#Page_342">342</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">defeated, <a href="#Page_343">343</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">goes to House of Representatives, <a href="#Page_343">343</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">begins work on the "Thirty Years' View," <a href="#Page_344">344</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">supports Pierce for Presidency, <a href="#Page_344">344</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">but later goes into opposition, <a href="#Page_345">345</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">supports scheme for Pacific Railroad, <a href="#Page_346">346</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">discusses the Indian policy, <a href="#Page_347">347</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">speeches on land-bounty and pension bills, <a href="#Page_348">348</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">opposes Kansas-Nebraska bill, <a href="#Page_349">349</a>-352;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">discusses historically the Missouri Compromise, <a href="#Page_349">349</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">ridicules squatter sovereignty, <a href="#Page_350">350</a>;</span><br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_369" id="Page_369">[369]</a></span><span style="margin-left: 1em;">opposes the Gladstone treaty, <a href="#Page_352">352</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">view of Southern disunion scheme, <a href="#Page_352">352</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">again defeated in Missouri elections, <a href="#Page_353">353</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">returns to labor on "Thirty Years' View," <a href="#Page_354">354</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">votes for Buchanan, <a href="#Page_354">354</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">candidate for governorship, <a href="#Page_354">354</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">stumps the State, <a href="#Page_354">354</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">respected at the North, <a href="#Page_355">355</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">prepares his "Abridgment of the Debates of Congress," <a href="#Page_356">356</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">death, <a href="#Page_356">356</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">value of his works <a href="#Page_357">357</a>;</span><br />
+
+
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">criticism of the Dred Scott case, <a href="#Page_358">358</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">and of the new Democratic theories, <a href="#Page_358">358</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">domestic relations, <a href="#Page_360">360</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">extensive knowledge, <a href="#Page_360">360</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">on board the Princeton at time of explosion of great gun, <a href="#Page_361">361</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">generous temper, <a href="#Page_362">362</a>.</span><br />
+<br />
+Biddle, Nicholas:<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">president of Bank of United States, <a href="#Page_116">116</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">his errors, <a href="#Page_124">124</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">his bank goes to pieces, <a href="#Page_208">208</a>.</span><br />
+<br />
+Birney, James G.:<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">abolitionist candidate for Presidency, <a href="#Page_291">291</a>, <a href="#Page_292">292</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">folly of nominating him, <a href="#Page_293">293</a>, <a href="#Page_294">294</a>, <a href="#Page_310">310</a>.</span><br />
+<br />
+Blair, Francis C., displaced, <a href="#Page_317">317</a>.<br />
+<br />
+Buchanan, James:<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">on annexation of Texas, <a href="#Page_310">310</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Benton votes for him, <a href="#Page_354">354</a>.</span><br />
+<br />
+Burr, Aaron:<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">introduces "spoils system" in New York, <a href="#Page_81">81</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">compared with Benedict Arnold, <a href="#Page_163">163</a>.</span><br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Calhoun, John C.:<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">rupture with Jackson, resignation from Vice-Presidency, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">position concerning tariff in 1816, <a href="#Page_89">89</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">position as a nullifier, <a href="#Page_96">96</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">introduces nullification resolutions, <a href="#Page_103">103</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">threatened with hanging, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">arranges compromise with Clay, <a href="#Page_106">106</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">subsequent quarrel with Clay concerning this, <a href="#Page_110">110</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">his purposes at this time, <a href="#Page_111">111</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">assails Jackson, <a href="#Page_132">132</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">opposes Webster's bill for rechartering bank, <a href="#Page_133">133</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">on the expunging resolution, <a href="#Page_141">141</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">proposes constitutional amendment for distribution of Treasury</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">surplus, <a href="#Page_144">144</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">opposes appropriating Treasury surplus for fortifications, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">attack on President Pierce, <a href="#Page_166">166</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">his honesty, <a href="#Page_168">168</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">on admission of Texas, <a href="#Page_180">180</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">in connection with trouble with Mexico, <a href="#Page_260">260</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">on the Oregon question, <a href="#Page_285">285</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">instrumental in election of Polk, <a href="#Page_292">292</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">letter to Lord Aberdeen, <a href="#Page_300">300</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">assailed by Benton as to annexation of Texas, <a href="#Page_307">307</a>, <a href="#Page_309">309</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">action as to legislation about Texas, <a href="#Page_313">313</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">relations as to Mexican war, <a href="#Page_314">314</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">and the Wilmot Proviso, <a href="#Page_323">323</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">resolution as to power of Congress over slavery in the territories,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;"><a href="#Page_323">323</a>-326;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">not a "Union man," <a href="#Page_326">326</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">on the admission of Oregon, <a href="#Page_326">326</a>, <a href="#Page_327">327</a>, <a href="#Page_328">328</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">dislikes Taylor's message to Congress, <a href="#Page_331">331</a>.</span><br />
+<br />
+California, admission of, <a href="#Page_337">337</a>.<br />
+<br />
+Caroline, affair of the, <a href="#Page_270">270</a>.<br />
+<br />
+Cartwright, Peter, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>.<br />
+<br />
+Cass, Lewis: nominated for Presidency, <a href="#Page_329">329</a>.<br />
+<br />
+Cherokees, treaty for their removal, <a href="#Page_171">171</a>.<br />
+<br />
+Clay, Henry:<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">introduces his first tariff bill, <a href="#Page_58">58</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">secretary of state under Adams, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">assailed therefor, and fights Randolph, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">devises the Panama mission, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">leader of National Republican or Whig party, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">defies "the South, the President, and the devil," <a href="#Page_90">90</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">erroneous statement as to effect of tariff in the West, <a href="#Page_91">91</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">angers the nullifiers, <a href="#Page_99">99</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">defeated in presidential election in 1832, <a href="#Page_100">100</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">alarmed at position of Calhoun, <a href="#Page_106">106</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">and prepares compromise, <a href="#Page_106">106</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">afterward quarrels about it with Calhoun, <a href="#Page_110">110</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">befriends Bank of the United States, <a href="#Page_124">124</a>, <a href="#Page_127">127</a>, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">effect on his political fortunes, <a href="#Page_125">125</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">introduces resolution for return of deposits, <a href="#Page_131">131</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">also for censuring President Jackson, <a href="#Page_132">132</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">opposes Webster's bill for rechartering Bank, <a href="#Page_136">136</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">on the expunging resolution, <a href="#Page_141">141</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">opposes establishment of mints at the South, <a href="#Page_144">144</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">also appropriating surplus for fortifications, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">in financial crisis of 1837, <a href="#Page_200">200</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">on the sub-Treasury bill, <a href="#Page_201">201</a>, <a href="#Page_205">205</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">on resumption, <a href="#Page_202">202</a>, <a href="#Page_203">203</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">opposes payment of state debts by national government, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">prepares financial measures upon Tyler's accession, <a href="#Page_240">240</a>, <a href="#Page_244">244</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">construction of a presidential election, <a href="#Page_241">241</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">programme for legislation under Tyler, <a href="#Page_245">245</a>;</span><br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_370" id="Page_370">[370]</a></span><span style="margin-left: 1em;">attempts to introduce hour-limits for speeches in Senate, <a href="#Page_250">250</a>-252;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">lectures Tyler in the Bank debate, <a href="#Page_256">256</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">defeated by Polk, <a href="#Page_290">290</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">causes thereof, <a href="#Page_310">310</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">attacks Taylor's message to Congress, <a href="#Page_331">331</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">proposes compromise of slavery controversy, <a href="#Page_331">331</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">defeated by Benton, <a href="#Page_336">336</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">compared with Benton, <a href="#Page_339">339</a>.</span><br />
+<br />
+Crawford, William H.:<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">adopts the "spoils system," <a href="#Page_80">80</a>;</span><br />
+<br />
+Crockett, David, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">berates Jackson, <a href="#Page_113">113</a>.</span><br />
+<br />
+Cumberland Road, Benton votes against bill for, <a href="#Page_58">58</a>.<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Davis, Jefferson:<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">compared with Benedict Arnold, <a href="#Page_163">163</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">a repudiator, <a href="#Page_220">220</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">and Calhoun's resolution as to slavery in the territories, <a href="#Page_325">325</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">protests against admission of California, <a href="#Page_338">338</a>.</span><br />
+<br />
+Drayton, family, loyalty of the family in South Carolina, <a href="#Page_96">96</a>.<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Florida, the treaty securing it to the United States, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>.<br />
+<br />
+Foote, Senator from Mississippi, opposition to his public land scheme<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">by Benton and Webster, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>.</span><br />
+<br />
+Fremont, John C.:<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">explores Rocky Mountains, <a href="#Page_283">283</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Benton will not vote for, <a href="#Page_354">354</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Benton's interest in his explorations, <a href="#Page_363">363</a>.</span><br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Giddings, Joshua R., sound policy of, <a href="#Page_294">294</a>.<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Harrison, Wm. Henry:<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">election not affected by slavery question, <a href="#Page_235">235</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">death and character, <a href="#Page_237">237</a>.</span><br />
+<br />
+Hartford Convention, criticised by Benton, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">causes of, <a href="#Page_49">49</a>.</span><br />
+<br />
+Houston, Samuel, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>:<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">wins victory of San Jacinto, <a href="#Page_180">180</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">hates Van Buren, <a href="#Page_188">188</a>; description of, <a href="#Page_327">327</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">votes to admit California, <a href="#Page_338">338</a>.</span><br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Indian tribes, Benton on the removal of, <a href="#Page_55">55</a>;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">criticism on treatment of, <a href="#Page_57">57</a>, <a href="#Page_172">172</a>, <a href="#Page_347">347</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">removal of Cherokees in 1836, <a href="#Page_171">171</a>.</span><br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Jackson, Andrew:<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">affray with Benton, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">befriended by Benton at Washington, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">in presidential election of 1824, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>, <a href="#Page_60">60</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">incensed against Adams and Clay, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">success in election of 1828, <a href="#Page_59">59</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">character of his following, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>, <a href="#Page_74">74</a>, <a href="#Page_75">75</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">his opponents, <a href="#Page_72">72</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">his victory compared with Jefferson's, <a href="#Page_73">73</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">compared with Wellington, <a href="#Page_73">73</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">foster-father of the "spoils system," <a href="#Page_79">79</a>, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">inferior character of his cabinet, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">relations of his followers with those of Clay and Calhoun, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">struggles with the Bank and the nullifiers, <a href="#Page_88">88</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">expected to support nullification, <a href="#Page_96">96</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">but does not, <a href="#Page_97">97</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">repudiates Calhoun and adopts Van Buren, <a href="#Page_97">97</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">at the Jefferson birthday banquet, <a href="#Page_98">98</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">again defines his position, <a href="#Page_99">99</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">signs new tariff bill, <a href="#Page_99">99</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">reelected in 1832, <a href="#Page_100">100</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">issues proclamation against nullification, <a href="#Page_101">101</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">special message on nullification, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">opinion on tariff, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">threatens to hang Calhoun, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">signs "Force Bill," also Clay's compromise bill, <a href="#Page_108">108</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">behaves badly in case of Georgia, <a href="#Page_112">112</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">attack on U. S. Bank, <a href="#Page_114">114</a> <i>et seq.</i>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">reasons of his political success, <a href="#Page_116">116</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">opposes re-charter of Bank in message of 1829, <a href="#Page_117">117</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">vetoes bill for re-charter, <a href="#Page_127">127</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">reelected, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">removes the deposits, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">protests against Clay's resolution of censure, <a href="#Page_133">133</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">continued assaults on the Bank, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">gives a dinner to the expungers, <a href="#Page_141">141</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">signs bill for distributing Treasury surplus, <a href="#Page_153">153</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">issues Treasury order concerning payments for public lands, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Kitchen Cabinet and "machine politics," <a href="#Page_184">184</a>, <a href="#Page_185">185</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">liking for Van Buren, <a href="#Page_186">186</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">his nationalism, <a href="#Page_234">234</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">praised by Benton for hanging Arbuthnot and Ambrister, <a href="#Page_272">272</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">favors annexation of Texas, <a href="#Page_298">298</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">and Van Buren, <a href="#Page_299">299</a>.</span><br />
+<br />
+Jefferson, Thomas:<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">character of his following, <a href="#Page_70">70</a>, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">his victory compared with Jackson's, <a href="#Page_73">73</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">his pseudo-classicism, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">quoted as authority for nullification, <a href="#Page_95">95</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">celebration of birthday of, <a href="#Page_97">97</a>.</span><br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Lee, Robert E.:<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">military standing of, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>.</span><br />
+<br />
+Lincoln, Abraham:<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">services in anti-slavery cause, <a href="#Page_159">159</a>.</span><br />
+<br />
+Livingston, Edward:<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">aids in preparing proclamation against nullification, <a href="#Page_101">101</a>.</span><br />
+<br />
+Lucas, Benton's duel with, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>.<br />
+<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_371" id="Page_371">[371]</a></span><br />
+Madison, James, quoted, <a href="#Page_163">163</a>.<br />
+<br />
+Marcy, Wm. L., adopts "spoils system," <a href="#Page_81">81</a>;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">cringes to the South, <a href="#Page_108">108</a>.</span><br />
+<br />
+McDuffie, passage at arms with Benton, <a href="#Page_304">304</a>, <a href="#Page_305">305</a>;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">deceives Benton as to taxes, <a href="#Page_313">313</a>.</span><br />
+<br />
+McLeod, Alexander, case of, <a href="#Page_271">271</a>.<br />
+<br />
+Missouri, character of its population, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">admission to the Union, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>, <a href="#Page_47">47</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">land titles in, <a href="#Page_45">45</a>.</span><br />
+<br />
+Missouri Compromise bill, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">not the beginning of the slavery and anti-slavery divisions in the</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Union, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Benton concerning repeal of, <a href="#Page_349">349</a>.</span><br />
+<br />
+Monroe, James, remarks, <a href="#Page_47">47</a>, <a href="#Page_58">58</a>, <a href="#Page_59">59</a>;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">signs bill for trading road, <a href="#Page_53">53</a>.</span><br />
+<br />
+<br />
+New Orleans, Benton's astonishing description of, <a href="#Page_93">93</a>.<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Oregon, disputed between Great Britain and the United States, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Benton's remarks concerning, <a href="#Page_51">51</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">comes into notice again in J. Q. Adams's term, <a href="#Page_65">65</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">final settlement of the matter, <a href="#Page_260">260</a>-273;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">neglected in Ashburton treaty, <a href="#Page_278">278</a>,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">and by Calhoun, <a href="#Page_278">278</a>,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">and others, <a href="#Page_279">279</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Benton's feeling about, <a href="#Page_281">281</a>, <a href="#Page_284">284</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">bill for settlement of, <a href="#Page_284">284</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Calhoun on the admission of, <a href="#Page_326">326</a>-328.</span><br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Panama mission, disputes concerning, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>-65.<br />
+<br />
+Phillips, Wendell, estimate of, <a href="#Page_160">160</a>.<br />
+<br />
+Pierce, Franklin, assailed by Calhoun, <a href="#Page_166">166</a>;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">relations with Benton, <a href="#Page_344">344</a>, <a href="#Page_345">345</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">a valuation of, <a href="#Page_345">345</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Benton upon pro-slavery tendencies of, <a href="#Page_359">359</a>.</span><br />
+<br />
+Polk, James K., character of his following, <a href="#Page_234">234</a>;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">and the Southwestern boundary, <a href="#Page_287">287</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">elected President, <a href="#Page_290">290</a>, <a href="#Page_310">310</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">estimate of, <a href="#Page_292">292</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">deceives Benton as to Texas, <a href="#Page_313">313</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">displaces Blair, <a href="#Page_317">317</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">relations with various portions of Democratic party, <a href="#Page_317">317</a>, <a href="#Page_318">318</a>.</span><br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Randolph, John:<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">duel with Clay, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>.</span><br />
+<br />
+Rynders, Isaiah, a type, <a href="#Page_291">291</a>, <a href="#Page_292">292</a>.<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Seminoles, war with, <a href="#Page_209">209</a>-216.<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Taney, Roger B., removes the deposits, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">afterward made chief justice, <a href="#Page_131">131</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">criticised by Benton for his opinion in Dred Scott case, <a href="#Page_358">358</a>.</span><br />
+<br />
+Taylor, Zachary, elected President, <a href="#Page_329">329</a>;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">character, <a href="#Page_330">330</a>, <a href="#Page_337">337</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">message to Congress, <a href="#Page_331">331</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">dies, <a href="#Page_337">337</a>.</span><br />
+<br />
+Tyler, John, opposes "Force Bill," <a href="#Page_105">105</a>;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">estimate of, on his accession, <a href="#Page_237">237</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">his political affiliations, <a href="#Page_238">238</a>-240;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">first message to Congress, <a href="#Page_245">245</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">conduct concerning bill for establishing a bank, <a href="#Page_254">254</a>-257;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">his cabinet resigns, <a href="#Page_257">257</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">identifies himself with the separatist Democrats, <a href="#Page_298">298</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">schemes for annexation of Texas, <a href="#Page_300">300</a>, <a href="#Page_306">306</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">assailed by Benton, <a href="#Page_307">307</a>, <a href="#Page_309">309</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">behavior at time of explosion of gun on board the Princeton, <a href="#Page_361">361</a>.</span><br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Van Buren, Martin, supports Crawford for Presidency in 1824, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">adopts "spoils system," <a href="#Page_81">81</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">adopted by Jackson as his heir, <a href="#Page_97">97</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Vice-President, <a href="#Page_100">100</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">product of "machine politics," <a href="#Page_184">184</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">befriended by Jackson, <a href="#Page_186">186</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">sketch of, and causes of his elevation, <a href="#Page_186">186</a>-188;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">his inaugural, <a href="#Page_188">188</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">financial crisis and his doings therein, <a href="#Page_189">189</a> <i>et seq.</i>,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;"><a href="#Page_194">194</a>, <a href="#Page_196">196</a>, <a href="#Page_197">197</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">financial measures, <a href="#Page_200">200</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">has to deal with the Seminoles, <a href="#Page_209">209</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">public dishonesty under, <a href="#Page_219">219</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">charged with squandering the public money, <a href="#Page_230">230</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">significance of his defeat, <a href="#Page_234">234</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">slavery question did not arise in his administration, <a href="#Page_235">235</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">champion of old-style Union Democrats, and opposed to annexation</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">of Texas, <a href="#Page_298">298</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">candidate for Presidency, <a href="#Page_299">299</a>, <a href="#Page_310">310</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">and the Free Soil party, <a href="#Page_329">329</a>.</span><br />
+<br />
+<br />
+War of 1812, a cause of the, <a href="#Page_7">7</a>;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">political influence on Benton, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>.</span><br />
+<br />
+Warsaw, social habits of the town, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>.<br />
+<br />
+Webster, Daniel, position of, concerning Clay's first tariff bill, <a href="#Page_58">58</a>;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">position on the tariff question in 1828, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">in the debate on Foote's resolution concerning sales of public land,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;"><a href="#Page_77">77</a>, <a href="#Page_97">97</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">leader of National Republican, or Whig, party, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">aids Jackson in nullification troubles, <a href="#Page_103">103</a>, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">advocates the "Force Bill," <a href="#Page_105">105</a>;</span><br />
+
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_372" id="Page_372">[372]</a></span><span style="margin-left: 1em;">resolute in opposition to the South, <a href="#Page_106">106</a>, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>, <a href="#Page_108">108</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">remarks as to his services, <a href="#Page_111">111</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">befriends Bank of United States, <a href="#Page_124">124</a>, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>, <a href="#Page_127">127</a>, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">personal relations with the Jacksonians, <a href="#Page_131">131</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">introduces bill for re-charter of Bank, <a href="#Page_136">136</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">on the expunging resolution, <a href="#Page_142">142</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">supports establishment of mints at the South, <a href="#Page_144">144</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">opposes appropriating Treasury surplus for fortifications, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">in financial crisis of 1837, <a href="#Page_200">200</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">on sub-Treasury scheme, <a href="#Page_201">201</a>, <a href="#Page_205">205</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">opposes payment of state debt by national government, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">remains in Tyler's cabinet, <a href="#Page_257">257</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">negotiates treaty with England, settling boundaries between United</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">States and British possessions, <a href="#Page_260">260</a>, <a href="#Page_262">262</a>, <a href="#Page_268">268</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">criticised by Benton, <a href="#Page_273">273</a>-277, <a href="#Page_280">280</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">neglects Oregon controversy, <a href="#Page_278">278</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">compared with Benton on the slavery question, <a href="#Page_320">320</a>, <a href="#Page_339">339</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">compliments Benton's knowledge, <a href="#Page_360">360</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">on friendly terms with Benton, <a href="#Page_362">362</a>.</span><br />
+<br />
+Wellington, Duke of, compared with Washington and Jackson, <a href="#Page_73">73</a>.<br />
+<br />
+Wilmot Proviso, Benton's remarks upon, <a href="#Page_323">323</a>, <a href="#Page_336">336</a>.<br />
+<br />
+Wright, Silas, adopts "spoils system," <a href="#Page_81">81</a>;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">expresses the "dough face" sentiment at time of nullification</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">troubles, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>.</span><br />
+</div>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="American_Statesmen" id="American_Statesmen"></a>American Statesmen</h2>
+
+<div class="center">Edited by John T. Morse, Jr.<br />
+
+Each, 16mo, cloth, gilt top, $1.25; half morocco, $2.50.<br />
+
+The set, 31 volumes, half levant, $77.50.</div>
+<hr style="width: 25%;" />
+
+<p>
+BENJAMIN FRANKLIN. By John T. Morse, Jr.<br />
+SAMUEL ADAMS. By James K. Hosmer.<br />
+PATRICK HENRY. By Moses Coit Tyler.<br />
+GEORGE WASHINGTON. By Henry Cabot Lodge. 2 vols.<br />
+JOHN ADAMS. By John T. Morse, Jr.<br />
+ALEXANDER HAMILTON. By Henry Cabot Lodge.<br />
+GOUVERNEUR MORRIS. By Theodore Roosevelt.<br />
+JOHN JAY. By George Pellew.<br />
+JOHN MARSHALL. By Allan B. Magruder.<br />
+THOMAS JEFFERSON. By John T. Morse, Jr.<br />
+JAMES MADISON. By Sydney Howard Gay.<br />
+ALBERT GALLATIN. By John Austin Stevens.<br />
+JAMES MONROE. By President D. C. Gilman.<br />
+JOHN QUINCY ADAMS. By John T. Morse, Jr.<br />
+JOHN RANDOLPH. By Henry Adams.<br />
+ANDREW JACKSON. By Prof. William G. Sumner.<br />
+MARTIN VAN BUREN. By Edward M. Shepard.<br />
+HENRY CLAY. By Carl Schurz. 2 vols.<br />
+DANIEL WEBSTER. By Henry Cabot Lodge.<br />
+JOHN C. CALHOUN. By Dr. H. Von Holst.<br />
+THOMAS HART BENTON. By Theodore Roosevelt.<br />
+LEWIS CASS. By Prof. Andrew C. McLaughlin.<br />
+ABRAHAM LINCOLN. By John T. Morse, Jr. With Portrait and Map. 2 vols.<br />
+WILLIAM H. SEWARD. By Thornton K. Lothrop.<br />
+SALMON P. CHASE. By Prof. A. B. Hart.<br />
+CHARLES FRANCIS ADAMS. By C. F. Adams.<br />
+CHARLES SUMNER. By Moorfield Storey.<br />
+THADDEUS STEVENS. By Samuel W. McCall.<br />
+</p>
+<hr style="width: 25%;" />
+<h3><i>CRITICAL NOTICES.</i></h3>
+<hr style="width: 25%;" />
+<p><i>FRANKLIN.</i> He has managed to condense the whole mass of
+matter gleaned from all sources into his volume
+without losing in a single sentence the freedom or lightness of his
+style or giving his book in any part the crowded look of an
+epitome.&mdash;<i>The Independent</i> (New York).</p>
+
+<p><i>SAMUEL ADAMS.</i> Thoroughly appreciative and sympathetic,
+yet fair and critical.... This
+biography is a piece of good work&mdash;a clear and simple presentation
+of a noble man and pure patriot; it is written in a spirit of candor
+and humanity.&mdash;<i>Worcester Spy.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>HENRY.</i> Professor Tyler has not only made one of the best
+and most readable of American biographies; he may
+fairly be said to have reconstructed the life of Patrick Henry, and to
+have vindicated the memory of that great man from the unappreciative
+and injurious estimate which has been placed upon it.&mdash;<i>New
+York Evening Post.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>WASHINGTON.</i> Mr. Lodge has written an admirable biography,
+and one which cannot but confirm
+the American people in the prevailing estimate concerning the Father
+of his Country.&mdash;<i>New York Tribune.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>JOHN ADAMS.</i> A good piece of literary work.... It covers
+the ground thoroughly, and gives just
+the sort of simple and succinct account that is wanted.&mdash;<i>New York
+Evening Post.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>HAMILTON.</i> Mr. Lodge has done his work with conscientious
+care, and the biography of Hamilton is a
+book which cannot have too many readers. It is more than a biography;
+it is a study in the science of government.&mdash;<i>St. Paul Pioneer
+Press.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>MORRIS.</i> Mr. Roosevelt has produced an animated and intensely
+interesting biographical volume.... Mr.
+Roosevelt never loses sight of the picturesque background of politics,
+war-governments, and diplomacy.&mdash;<i>Magazine of American History</i>
+(New York).</p>
+
+<p><i>JAY.</i> It is an important addition to the admirable series of
+"American Statesmen," and elevates yet higher the character
+of a man whom all American patriots most delight to honor.&mdash;<i>New
+York Tribune.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>MARSHALL.</i> Well done, with simplicity, clearness, precision,
+and judgment, and in a spirit of moderation and
+equity. A valuable addition to the series.&mdash;<i>New York Tribune.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>JEFFERSON.</i> A singularly just, well-proportioned, and interesting
+sketch of the personal and political
+career of the author of the Declaration of Independence.&mdash;<i>Boston
+Journal.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>MADISON.</i> The execution of the work deserves the highest
+praise. It is very readable, in a bright and vigorous
+style, and is marked by unity and consecutiveness of plan.&mdash;<i>The
+Nation</i> (New York).</p>
+
+<p><i>GALLATIN.</i> It is one of the most carefully prepared of these
+very valuable volumes, ... abounding in information
+not so readily accessible as is that pertaining to men more
+often treated by the biographer.&mdash;<i>Boston Correspondent Hartford
+Courant.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>MONROE.</i> President Gilman has made the most of his hero,
+without the least hero-worship, and has done full
+justice to Mr. Monroe's "relations to the public service during half a
+century." ... The appendix is peculiarly valuable for its synopsis of
+Monroe's Presidential Messages, and its extensive Bibliography of
+Monroe and the Monroe Doctrine.&mdash;<i>N. Y. Christian Intelligencer.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>JOHN QUINCY ADAMS.</i> That Mr. Morse's conclusions
+will in the main be those of
+posterity we have very little doubt, and he has set an admirable
+example to his coadjutors in respect of interesting narrative, just
+proportion, and judicial candor.&mdash;<i>New York Evening Post.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>RANDOLPH.</i> The book has been to me intensely interesting....
+It is rich in new facts and side lights, and
+is worthy of its place in the already brilliant series of monographs
+on American Statesmen.&mdash;Prof. <span class="smcap">Moses Coit Tyler</span>.</p>
+
+<p><i>JACKSON.</i> Professor Sumner has ... all in all, made the
+justest long estimate of Jackson that has had itself
+put between the covers of a book.&mdash;<i>New York Times.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>VAN BUREN.</i> This absorbing book.... To give any adequate
+idea of the personal interest of the book,
+or its intimate bearing on nearly the whole course of our political
+history, would be equivalent to quoting the larger part of
+it.&mdash;<i>Brooklyn Eagle.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>CLAY.</i> We have in this life of Henry Clay a biography of one of
+the most distinguished of American statesmen, and a political
+history of the United States for the first half of the nineteenth
+century. Indeed, it is not too much to say that, for the period
+covered, we have no other book which equals or begins to equal this
+life of Henry Clay as an introduction to the study of American
+politics.&mdash;<i>Political Science Quarterly</i> (New York).</p>
+
+<p><i>WEBSTER.</i> It will be read by students of history; it will be
+invaluable as a work of reference; it will be an
+authority as regards matters of fact and criticism; it hits the key-note
+of Webster's durable and ever-growing fame; it is adequate,
+calm, impartial; it is admirable.&mdash;<i>Philadelphia Press.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>CALHOUN.</i> Nothing can exceed the skill with which the political
+career of the great South Carolinian is portrayed
+in these pages.... The whole discussion in relation to Calhoun's
+position is eminently philosophical and just.&mdash;<i>The Dial</i> (Chicago).</p>
+
+<p><i>BENTON.</i> An interesting addition to our political literature,
+and will be of great service if it spread an admiration
+for that austere public morality which was one of the marked
+characteristics of its chief figure.&mdash;<i>The Epoch</i> (New York).</p>
+
+<p><i>CASS.</i> Professor McLaughlin has given us one of the most satisfactory
+volumes in this able and important series....
+The early life of Cass was devoted to the Northwest, and in the
+transformation which overtook it the work of Cass was the work of
+a national statesman.&mdash;<i>New York Times.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>LINCOLN.</i> As a life of Lincoln it has no competitors; as a
+political history of the Union side during the Civil
+War, it is the most comprehensive, and, in proportion to its range,
+the most compact.&mdash;<i>Harvard Graduates' Magazine.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>SEWARD.</i> The public will be grateful for his conscientious
+efforts to write a popular vindication of one of the
+ablest, most brilliant, fascinating, energetic, ambitious, and patriotic
+men in American history.&mdash;<i>New York Evening Post.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>CHASE.</i> His great career as anti-slavery leader, United States
+Senator, Governor of Ohio, Secretary of the Treasury,
+and Chief Justice of the United States, is described in an adequate
+and effective manner by Professor Hart.</p>
+
+<p><i>CHARLES FRANCIS ADAMS.</i> His wise statesmanship
+before the Civil War,
+and the masterly ability and consummate diplomatic skill displayed
+by him while Minister to Great Britain, are judiciously set forth by
+his eminent son.</p>
+
+<p><i>SUMNER.</i> The majestic devotion of Sumner to the highest political
+ideals before and during his long term of lofty
+service to freedom in the United States Senate is fittingly delineated
+by Mr. Storey.</p>
+
+<p><i>STEVENS.</i> Thaddeus Stevens was unquestionably one of the
+most conspicuous figures of his time.... The book
+shows him the eccentric, fiery, and masterful congressional leader
+that he was.&mdash;<i>City and State</i> (Philadelphia).</p>
+
+<div class="center">HOUGHTON, MIFFLIN &amp; CO.<br />
+<span class="smcap">4 Park St., Boston; 85 Fifth Avenue, New York</span><br />
+<span class="smcap">378-388 Wabash Ave., Chicago</span>
+</div>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_1_1" id="Footnote_1_1"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1_1"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> Justin McCarthy.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_2_2" id="Footnote_2_2"></a><a href="#FNanchor_2_2"><span class="label">[2]</span></a> Aurelian.</p></div>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<div class='tn'><h3>Transcriber's Notes:</h3> <p>Minor typographical
+ errors and inconsistencies have been silently normalized.</p> </div>
+
+
+</div>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's Thomas Hart Benton, by Theodore Roosevelt
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THOMAS HART BENTON ***
+
+***** This file should be named 37656-h.htm or 37656-h.zip *****
+This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
+ http://www.gutenberg.org/3/7/6/5/37656/
+
+Produced by Julia Neufeld, Curtis Weyant and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
+file was produced from images generously made available
+by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
+
+
+Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions
+will be renamed.
+
+Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no
+one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation
+(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without
+permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules,
+set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to
+copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to
+protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. Project
+Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you
+charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission. If you
+do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the
+rules is very easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose
+such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and
+research. They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do
+practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks. Redistribution is
+subject to the trademark license, especially commercial
+redistribution.
+
+
+
+*** START: FULL LICENSE ***
+
+THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
+PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
+
+To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
+distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
+(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License (available with this file or online at
+http://gutenberg.org/license).
+
+
+Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic works
+
+1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
+and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
+(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
+the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy
+all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession.
+If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the
+terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or
+entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.
+
+1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
+used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
+agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
+things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
+even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
+paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement
+and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works. See paragraph 1.E below.
+
+1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the Foundation"
+or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual works in the
+collection are in the public domain in the United States. If an
+individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are
+located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from
+copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative
+works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg
+are removed. Of course, we hope that you will support the Project
+Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by
+freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of
+this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with
+the work. You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by
+keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others.
+
+1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
+what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in
+a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, check
+the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement
+before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or
+creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project
+Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no representations concerning
+the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United
+States.
+
+1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
+
+1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate
+access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently
+whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the
+phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed,
+copied or distributed:
+
+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
+
+1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived
+from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is
+posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied
+and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees
+or charges. If you are redistributing or providing access to a work
+with the phrase "Project Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the
+work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1
+through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the
+Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or
+1.E.9.
+
+1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
+with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
+must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional
+terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms will be linked
+to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the
+permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work.
+
+1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
+work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
+
+1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
+electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
+prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
+active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm License.
+
+1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
+compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any
+word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or
+distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than
+"Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official version
+posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org),
+you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a
+copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon
+request, of the work in its original "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other
+form. Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
+
+1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
+performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
+unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
+
+1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
+access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided
+that
+
+- You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
+ the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
+ you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is
+ owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he
+ has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the
+ Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments
+ must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you
+ prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax
+ returns. Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and
+ sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the
+ address specified in Section 4, "Information about donations to
+ the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."
+
+- You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
+ you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
+ does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+ License. You must require such a user to return or
+ destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium
+ and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of
+ Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+- You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any
+ money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
+ electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days
+ of receipt of the work.
+
+- You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
+ distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set
+forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from
+both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael
+Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the
+Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
+
+1.F.
+
+1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
+effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
+public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm
+collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain
+"Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or
+corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual
+property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a
+computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by
+your equipment.
+
+1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
+of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
+liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
+fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
+LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
+PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
+TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
+LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
+INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
+DAMAGE.
+
+1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
+defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
+receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
+written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
+received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with
+your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you with
+the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a
+refund. If you received the work electronically, the person or entity
+providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to
+receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If the second copy
+is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further
+opportunities to fix the problem.
+
+1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
+in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS' WITH NO OTHER
+WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO
+WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
+
+1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
+warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages.
+If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the
+law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be
+interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by
+the applicable state law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any
+provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions.
+
+1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
+trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
+providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance
+with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production,
+promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works,
+harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees,
+that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do
+or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm
+work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any
+Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause.
+
+
+Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
+electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers
+including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It exists
+because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from
+people in all walks of life.
+
+Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
+assistance they need, are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
+goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
+remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
+and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations.
+To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
+and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4
+and the Foundation web page at http://www.pglaf.org.
+
+
+Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive
+Foundation
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
+501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
+state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
+Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
+number is 64-6221541. Its 501(c)(3) letter is posted at
+http://pglaf.org/fundraising. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent
+permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
+
+The Foundation's principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S.
+Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered
+throughout numerous locations. Its business office is located at
+809 North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887, email
+business@pglaf.org. Email contact links and up to date contact
+information can be found at the Foundation's web site and official
+page at http://pglaf.org
+
+For additional contact information:
+ Dr. Gregory B. Newby
+ Chief Executive and Director
+ gbnewby@pglaf.org
+
+
+Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
+spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
+increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
+freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
+array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
+($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
+status with the IRS.
+
+The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
+charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
+States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
+considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
+with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
+where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To
+SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any
+particular state visit http://pglaf.org
+
+While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
+have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
+against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
+approach us with offers to donate.
+
+International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
+any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
+outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
+
+Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
+methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
+ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations.
+To donate, please visit: http://pglaf.org/donate
+
+
+Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works.
+
+Professor Michael S. Hart is the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm
+concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared
+with anyone. For thirty years, he produced and distributed Project
+Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support.
+
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
+editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S.
+unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily
+keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.
+
+
+Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility:
+
+ http://www.gutenberg.org
+
+This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
+including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
+subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
+
+
+</pre>
+
+</body>
+</html>
diff --git a/37656.txt b/37656.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..d537779
--- /dev/null
+++ b/37656.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,8577 @@
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Thomas Hart Benton, by Theodore Roosevelt
+
+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: Thomas Hart Benton
+
+Author: Theodore Roosevelt
+
+Release Date: October 7, 2011 [EBook #37656]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THOMAS HART BENTON ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Julia Neufeld, Curtis Weyant and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
+file was produced from images generously made available
+by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
+
+
+
+
+
+Transcriber's Note: Passages in italics are indicated by _underscores_.
+Small caps have been replaced by ALL CAPS.
+
+ American Statesmen
+
+ EDITED BY
+
+ JOHN T. MORSE, JR.
+
+
+
+
+ American Statesmen
+
+ THOMAS HART BENTON
+
+ BY
+
+ THEODORE ROOSEVELT
+
+
+
+ BOSTON AND NEW YORK
+ HOUGHTON, MIFFLIN AND COMPANY
+ The Riverside Press, Cambridge
+ 1890
+
+
+
+ Copyright, 1886,
+ BY THEODORE ROOSEVELT.
+
+ _All rights reserved._
+
+
+ FIFTH EDITION.
+
+ _The Riverside Press, Cambridge, Mass., U. S. A._
+ Electrotyped and Printed by H. O. Houghton & Company.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS.
+
+
+ CHAPTER I.
+ PAGE
+
+ THE YOUNG WEST 1
+
+ CHAPTER II.
+
+ BENTON'S EARLY LIFE AND ENTRY INTO THE SENATE 23
+
+ CHAPTER III.
+
+ EARLY YEARS IN THE SENATE 47
+
+ CHAPTER IV.
+
+ THE ELECTION OF JACKSON, AND THE SPOILS SYSTEM 69
+
+ CHAPTER V.
+
+ THE STRUGGLE WITH THE NULLIFIERS 88
+
+ CHAPTER VI.
+
+ JACKSON AND BENTON MAKE WAR ON THE BANK 114
+
+ CHAPTER VII.
+
+ THE DISTRIBUTION OF THE SURPLUS 143
+
+ CHAPTER VIII.
+
+ THE SLAVE QUESTION APPEARS IN POLITICS 157
+
+ CHAPTER IX.
+
+ THE CHILDREN'S TEETH ARE SET ON EDGE 184
+
+ CHAPTER X.
+
+ LAST DAYS OF THE JACKSONIAN DEMOCRACY 209
+
+ CHAPTER XI.
+
+ THE PRESIDENT WITHOUT A PARTY 237
+
+ CHAPTER XII.
+
+ BOUNDARY TROUBLES WITH ENGLAND 260
+
+ CHAPTER XIII.
+
+ THE ABOLITIONISTS DANCE TO THE SLAVE BARONS' PIPING 290
+
+ CHAPTER XIV.
+
+ SLAVERY IN THE NEW TERRITORIES 317
+
+ CHAPTER XV.
+
+ THE LOSING FIGHT 341
+
+
+
+
+THOMAS HART BENTON.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+THE YOUNG WEST.
+
+
+Even before the end of the Revolutionary War the movement had begun
+which was to change in form a straggling chain of sea-board republics
+into a mighty continental nation, the great bulk of whose people would
+live to the westward of the Appalachian Mountains. The hardy and
+restless backwoodsmen, dwelling along the eastern slopes of the
+Alleghanies, were already crossing the mountain-crests and hewing their
+way into the vast, sombre forests of the Mississippi basin; and for the
+first time English-speaking communities were growing up along waters
+whose outlet was into the Gulf of Mexico and not into the Atlantic
+Ocean. Among these communities Kentucky and Tennessee were the earliest
+to form themselves into states; and around them, as a nucleus, other
+states of the woodland and the prairie were rapidly developed, until, by
+the close of the second decade in the present century, the region
+between the Great Lakes and the Gulf was almost solidly filled in, and
+finally, in 1820, by the admission of Missouri, the Union held within
+its borders a political body whose whole territory lay to the west of
+the Mississippi.
+
+All the men who founded these states were of much the same type; they
+were rough frontiersmen, of strong will and adventurous temper,
+accustomed to the hard, barren, and yet strangely fascinating life of
+those who dwell as pioneers in the wilderness. Moreover, they were
+nearly all of the same blood. The people of New York and New England
+were as yet filling out their own territory; it was not till many years
+afterwards that their stock became the predominant one in the
+northwestern country. Most of the men who founded the new states north
+of the Ohio came originally from the old states south of the Potomac;
+Virginia and North Carolina were the first of the original thirteen to
+thrust forth their children in masses, that they might shift for
+themselves in the then untrodden West.
+
+But though these early Western pioneers were for the most part of
+Southern stock, they were by no means of the same stamp as the men who
+then and thereafter formed the ruling caste in the old slave-holding
+states. They were the mountaineers, the men of the foot-hills and
+uplands, who lived in what were called the backwater counties. Many of
+them were themselves of northern origin. In striking contrast to the
+somewhat sluggish and peaceful elements going to make up the rest of its
+heterogeneous population, Pennsylvania also originally held within its
+boundaries many members of that most fiery and restless race, the
+Scotch-Irish. These naturally drew towards the wilder, western parts of
+the state, settling along the slopes of the numerous inland mountain
+ridges running parallel to the Atlantic coast; and from thence they
+drifted southward through the long valleys, until they met and mingled
+with their kinsfolk of Virginia and the Carolinas, when the movement
+again trended towards the West. In a generation or two, all, whether
+their forefathers were English, Scotch, Irish, or, as was often the
+case, German and Huguenot, were welded into one people; and in a very
+short time the stern and hard surroundings of their life had hammered
+this people into a peculiar and characteristically American type, which
+to this day remains almost unchanged. In their old haunts we still see
+the same tall, gaunt men, with strongly marked faces and saturnine,
+resolute eyes; men who may pass half their days in listless idleness,
+but who are also able to show on occasion the fiercest intensity of
+purpose and the most sustained energy of action. We see them, moreover,
+in many places, even across to the Pacific coast and down to the Rio
+Grande. For after thronging through the gaps and passes of the
+Appalachians, and penetrating the forest region to the outskirts of the
+treeless country beyond, the whilom mountaineers and woodsmen, the
+wielders of the axe and rifle, then streamed off far to the West and
+South and even to the Northwest, their lumbering, white-topped wagons
+being, even to the present moment, a familiar sight to those who travel
+over the prairies and the great plains; while it is their descendants
+who, in the saddle instead of afoot, and with rope and revolver instead
+of axe and rifle, now form the bulk of the reckless horsemen who spend
+their lives in guarding the wandering cattle herds that graze over the
+vast, arid plains of the "Far West."
+
+The method of settlement of these states of the Mississippi valley had
+nothing whatever in common with the way in which California and the
+Australian colonies were suddenly filled up by the promiscuous overflow
+of a civilized population, which had practically no fear of any
+resistance from the stunted and scanty native races. It was far more
+closely akin to the tribe movements of the Germanic peoples in time
+past; to that movement, for example, by which the Juttish and Low Dutch
+sea-thieves on the coast of Britain worked their way inland at the cost
+of the Cymric Celts. The early settlers of the territory lying
+immediately west of the Alleghanies were all of the same kind; they were
+in search of homes, not of riches, and their actions were planned
+accordingly, except in so far as they were influenced by mere restless
+love of adventure and excitement. Individuals and single families, of
+course, often started off by themselves; but for the most part the men
+moved in bands, with their wives and their children, their cattle and
+their few household goods; each settler being from the necessity of the
+case also a fighter, ready, and often forced, to do desperate battle in
+defense of himself and his family. Where such a band or little party
+settled, there would gradually grow up a village or small town; for
+instance, where those renowned pioneers and heroes of the backwoods,
+Boone and Harrod, first formed permanent settlements after they had
+moved into Kentucky, now stand the towns of Boonsboro and Harrodsburg.
+
+The country whither these settlers went was not one into which timid men
+would willingly venture, and the founders of the West were perforce men
+of stern stuff, who from the very beginning formed a most warlike race.
+It is impossible to understand aright the social and political life of
+the section, unless we keep prominently before our minds that it derived
+its distinguishing traits largely from the extremely militant character
+acquired by all the early settlers during the long drawn out warfare in
+which the first two generations were engaged. The land was already held
+by powerful Indian tribes and confederacies, who waged war after war, of
+the most ferocious and bloody character, against the men of the border,
+in the effort to avert their inevitable doom, or at least to stem for
+the time being the invasion of the swelling tide of white settlement. At
+the present time, when an Indian uprising is a matter chiefly of
+annoyance, and dangerous only to scattered, outlying settlers, it is
+difficult to realize the formidable nature of the savage Indian wars
+waged at the end of the last and the beginning of the present centuries.
+The red nations were then really redoubtable enemies, able to send into
+the field thousands of well-armed warriors, whose ferocious bravery and
+skill rendered them quite as formidable antagonists as trained European
+soldiers would have been. Warfare with them did not affect merely
+outlying farms or hamlets; it meant a complete stoppage of the white
+movement westward, and great and imminent danger even to the large
+communities already in existence; a state of things which would have to
+continue until the armies raised among the pioneers were able, in fair
+shock of battle, to shatter the strength of their red foes. The
+victories of Wayne and Harrison were conditions precedent to the opening
+of the Ohio valley; Kentucky was won by a hundred nameless and bloody
+fights, whose heroes, like Shelby and Sevier, afterwards rose to
+prominent rank in civil life; and it was only after a hard-fought
+campaign and slaughtering victories that the Tennesseeans were able to
+break the power of the great Creek confederacy, which was thrust in
+between them and what were at that time the French and Spanish lands
+lying to the south and southwest.
+
+The founders of our Western States were valiant warriors as well as
+hardy pioneers, and from the very first their fighting was not confined
+to uncivilized foes. It was they who at King's Mountain slew gallant
+Ferguson, and completely destroyed his little army; it was from their
+ranks that most of Morgan's men were recruited, when that grizzled old
+bush-fighter smote Tarleton so roughly at the battle of the Cowpens.
+These two blows crippled Cornwallis, and were among the chief causes of
+his final overthrow. At last, during the War of 1812, there was played
+out the final act in the military drama of which the West had been the
+stage during the lifetime of a generation. For this war had a twofold
+aspect: on the sea-board it was regarded as a contest for the rights of
+our sailors and as a revolt against Great Britain's domineering
+insolence; west of the mountains, on the other hand, it was simply a
+renewal on a large scale of the Indian struggles, all the red-skinned
+peoples joining together in a great and last effort to keep the lands
+which were being wrested from them; and there Great Britain's part was
+chiefly that of ally to the savages, helping them with her gold and with
+her well-drilled mercenary troops. The battle of the Thames is memorable
+rather because of the defeat and death of Tecumseh, than because of the
+flight of Proctor and the capture of his British regulars; and for the
+opening of the Southwest the ferocious fight at the Horseshoe Bend was
+almost as important as the far more famous conflict of New Orleans.
+
+The War of 1812 brought out conspicuously the solidarity of interest in
+the West. The people there were then all pretty much of the same blood;
+and they made common cause against outsiders in the military field
+exactly as afterwards they for some time acted together politically.
+Further eastward, on the Niagara frontier, the fighting was done by the
+troops of New York and New England, unassisted by the Southern States;
+and in turn the latter had to shift for themselves when Washington was
+burned and Baltimore menaced. It was far otherwise in the regions lying
+beyond the Appalachians. Throughout all the fighting in the Northwest,
+where Ohio was the state most menaced, the troops of Kentucky formed the
+bulk of the American army, and it was the charge of their mounted
+riflemen which at a blow won the battle of the Thames. Again, on that
+famous January morning, when it seemed as if the fair Creole city was
+already in Packenham's grasp, it was the wild soldiery of Tennessee who,
+lolling behind their mud breastworks, peered out through the lifting fog
+at the scarlet array of the English veterans, as the latter, fresh from
+their long and unbroken series of victories over the best troops of
+Europe, advanced, for the first time, to meet defeat.
+
+This solidarity of interest and feeling on the part of the
+trans-Appalachian communities is a factor often not taken into account
+in relating the political history of the early part of this century;
+most modern writers (who keep forgetting that the question of slavery
+was then not one tenth as absorbing as it afterwards became) apparently
+deeming that the line of demarkation between North and South was at
+that period, as it has since in reality become, as strongly defined west
+of the mountains as east of them. That such was not the case was due to
+several different causes. The first comers into Tennessee and Kentucky
+belonged to the class of so-called poor whites, who owned few or no
+slaves, and who were far less sectionally southern in their feelings
+than were the rich planters of the low, alluvial plains towards the
+coast of the Atlantic; and though a slave-owning population quickly
+followed the first pioneers, yet the latter had imprinted a stamp on the
+character of the two states which was never wholly effaced,--as witness
+the tens of thousands of soldiers which both, even the more southern of
+the two, furnished to the Union army in the Civil War.
+
+If this immigration made Kentucky and Tennessee, and afterwards
+Missouri, less distinctively Southern in character than the South
+Atlantic States, it at the same time, by furnishing the first and for
+some time the most numerous element in the population of the states
+north of the Ohio, made the latter less characteristically Northern than
+was the case with those lying east of them. Up to 1810 Indiana kept
+petitioning Congress to allow slavery within her borders; Illinois, in
+the early days, felt as hostile towards Massachusetts as did Missouri.
+Moreover, at first the Southern States west of the mountains greatly
+outweighed the Northern, both in numbers and importance.
+
+Thus several things came about. In the first place, all the communities
+across the Alleghanies originally felt themselves to be closely knit
+together by ties of blood, sentiment, and interest; they felt that they
+were, taking them altogether, Western as opposed to Eastern. In the next
+place, they were at first Southern rather than Northern in their
+feeling. But, in the third place, they were by no means so extremely
+Southern as were the Southern Atlantic States. This was the way in which
+they looked at themselves; and this was the way in which at that time
+others looked at them. In our day Kentucky is regarded politically as
+being simply an integral portion of the solid South; but the greatest of
+her sons, Clay, was known to his own generation, not as a Southern
+statesman, but as "Harry of the West." Of the two presidents, Harrison
+and Taylor, whom the Whigs elected, one lived in Ohio and one in
+Louisiana; but both were chosen simply as Western men, and, as a matter
+of fact, both were born in Virginia. Andrew Jackson's victory over Adams
+was in some slight sense a triumph of the South over the North, but it
+was far more a triumph of the West over the East. Webster's famous
+sneer at old Zachary Taylor was aimed at him as a "frontier colonel;" in
+other words, though Taylor had a large plantation in Louisiana, Webster,
+and many others besides, looked upon him as the champion of the rough
+democracy of the West rather than as the representative of the polished
+slave-holders of the South.
+
+Thus, during the first part of this century, the term "Western" was as
+applicable to the states lying south of the Ohio as to those lying north
+of it. Moreover, at first the Central, or, as they were more usually
+termed, the Border States, were more populous and influential than were
+those on either side of them, and so largely shaped the general tone of
+Western feeling. While the voters in these states, whether Whigs or
+Democrats, accepted as their leaders men like Clay in Kentucky, Benton
+in Missouri, and Andrew Jackson in Tennessee, it could be taken for
+granted that on the whole they felt for the South against the North, but
+much more for the West against the East, and most strongly of all for
+the Union as against any section whatsoever. Many influences came
+together to start and keep alive this feeling; but one, more potent than
+all the others combined, was working steadily, and with ever-increasing
+power, against it; and when slavery finally brought about a break
+between the Northern and Southern States of the West as complete as that
+in the East, then the Democrats of the stamp of Jackson and Benton
+disappeared as completely from public life as did the Whigs of the stamp
+of Clay.
+
+Benton's long political career can never be thoroughly understood unless
+it is kept in mind that he was primarily a Western and not a Southern
+statesman; and it owes its especial interest to the fact that during its
+continuance the West first rose to power, acting as a unit, and to the
+further fact that it was brought to a close by the same causes which
+soon afterwards broke up the West exactly as the East was already
+broken. Benton was not one of the few statesmen who have left the
+indelible marks of their own individuality upon our history; but he was,
+perhaps, the most typical representative of the statesmanship of the
+Middle West at the time when the latter gave the tone to the political
+thought of the entire Mississippi valley. The political school which he
+represented came to its fullest development in the so-called Border
+States of Kentucky, Tennessee, and Missouri, and swayed the destinies of
+the West so long as the states to the north as well as the states to the
+south were content to accept the leadership of those that lay between
+them. It came to an end and disappeared from sight when people north of
+the Ohio at last set up their own standard, and when, after some
+hesitation, the Border States threw in their lot with the other side and
+concluded to follow the Southern communities, which they had hitherto
+led. Benton was one of those public men who formulate and express,
+rather than shape, the thought of the people who stand behind them and
+whom they represent. A man of strong intellect and keen energy, he was
+for many years the foremost representative of at least one phase of that
+thought; being, also, a man of high principle and determined courage,
+when a younger generation had grown up and the bent of the thought had
+changed, he declined to change with it, bravely accepting political
+defeat as the alternative, and going down without flinching a hair's
+breadth from the ground on which he had always stood.
+
+To understand his public actions as well as his political ideas and
+principles it is, of course, necessary to know at least a little of the
+men among whom he lived and from whom he sprang: the men who were the
+first of our people to press out beyond the limits of the thirteen old
+states; who filled Kentucky, Tennessee, Arkansas, and Missouri, and who
+for so long a time were the dominant class all through the West, until,
+at last, the flood of Northeastern immigration completely swamped their
+influence north of the Ohio, while along the Gulf coast the political
+control slipped from their hands into the grasp of the great planter
+class.
+
+The wood-choppers, game-hunters, and Indian-fighters, who first came
+over the mountains, were only the forerunners of the more regular
+settlers who followed them; but these last had much the same attributes
+as their predecessors. For many years after the settlements were firmly
+rooted, the life of the settlers was still subject to all the perils of
+the wilderness. Above all, the constant warfare in which they were
+engaged for nearly thirty-five years, and which culminated in the battle
+of New Orleans, left a deep and lasting imprint on their character.
+Their incessant wars were waged almost wholly by the settlers
+themselves, with comparatively little help from the federal government,
+and with hardly any regular troops as allies. A backwoods levy, whether
+raised to meet an Indian inroad or to march against the disciplined
+armies of the British, was merely a force of volunteers, made up from
+among the full-grown male settlers, who were induced to join either from
+motives of patriotism, or from love of adventure, or because they felt
+that their homes and belongings were in danger from which they could
+only extricate them by their own prowess. Every settler thus became more
+or less of a soldier, was always expert with the rifle, and was taught
+to rely upon his own skill and courage for his protection. But the
+military service in which he was from time to time engaged was of such a
+lawless kind, and was carried on with such utter absence of discipline,
+that it did not accustom him in the least to habits of self-command, or
+render him inclined to brook the exercise of authority by an outsider;
+so that the Western people grew up with warlike traditions and habits of
+thought, accustomed to give free rein to their passions, and to take
+into their own hands the avenging of real or supposed wrongs, but
+without any of the love for order and for acting in concert with their
+fellows which characterize those who have seen service in regular
+armies. On the contrary, the chief effect of this long-continued and
+harassing Border warfare was to make more marked the sullen and almost
+defiant self-reliance of the pioneer, and to develop his peculiarly
+American spirit of individual self-sufficiency, his impatience of
+outside interference or control, to a degree not known elsewhere, even
+on this continent. It also gave a distinct military cast to his way of
+looking at territory which did not belong to him. He stood where he was
+because he was a conqueror; he had wrested his land by force from its
+rightful Indian lords; he fully intended to repeat the same feat as soon
+as he should reach the Spanish lands lying to the west and southwest; he
+would have done so in the case of French Louisiana if it had not been
+that the latter was purchased, and was thus saved from being taken by
+force of arms. This belligerent, or, more properly speaking, piratical
+way of looking at neighboring territory, was very characteristic of the
+West, and was at the root of the doctrine of "manifest destiny."
+
+All the early settlers, and most of those who came after them, were
+poor, living narrow lives fraught with great hardship, and varying
+between toil and half-aimless roving; even when the conditions of their
+life became easier it was some time before the influence of their old
+existence ceased to make itself felt in their way of looking at things.
+The first pioneers were, it is true, soon followed by great
+slave-owners; and by degrees there grew up a clan of large landed
+proprietors and stock-raisers, akin to the planter caste which was so
+all-powerful along the coast; but it was never relatively either so
+large or so influential as the latter, and was not separated from the
+rest of the white population by anything like so wide a gap as that
+which, in the Southern Atlantic and Gulf States, marked the difference
+between the rich growers of cotton, rice, and sugar, and the squalid
+"poor whites" or "crackers."
+
+The people of the Border States were thus mainly composed of small
+land-owners, scattered throughout the country; they tilled their small
+farms for themselves, were hewers of their own wood, and drawers of
+their own water, and for generations remained accustomed to and skillful
+in the use of the rifle. The pioneers of the Middle West were not
+dwellers in towns; they kept to the open country, where each man could
+shift for himself without help or hindrance from his neighbors, scorning
+the irksome restraints and the lack of individual freedom of city life.
+They built but few cities of any size; the only two really important
+ones of whose inhabitants they formed any considerable part, St. Louis
+and New Orleans, were both founded by the French long before our people
+came across the mountains into the Mississippi valley. Their life was
+essentially a country life, alike for the rich and for the bulk of the
+population. The few raw frontier towns and squalid, straggling villages
+were neither seats of superior culture nor yet centres for the
+distribution of educated thought, as in the North. Large tracts of land
+remained always populated by a class of backwoodsmen differing but
+little from the first comers. Such was the district from which grand,
+simple old Davy Crockett went to Washington as a Whig congressman; and
+perhaps there was never a quainter figure in our national legislature
+than that of the grim old rifleman, who shares with Daniel Boone the
+honor of standing foremost in the list of our mighty hunters. Crockett
+and his kind had little in common with the men who ruled supreme in the
+politics of most of the Southern States; and even at this day many of
+their descendants in the wooded mountain land are Republicans; for when
+the Middle States had lost the control of the West, and when those who
+had hitherto followed such leaders as Jackson, Clay, and Benton, drifted
+with the tide that set so strongly to the South, it was only the men of
+the type of dogged, stubborn old Crockett who dared to make head against
+it. But, indeed, one of the characteristics of the people with whom we
+are dealing was the slowness and suspicion with which they received a
+new idea, and the tenacity with which they clung to one that they had at
+last adopted.
+
+They were above all a people of strong, virile character, certain to
+make their weight felt either for good or for evil. They had many
+virtues which can fairly be called great, and their faults were equally
+strongly marked. They were not a thrifty people, nor one given to
+long-sustained, drudging work; there were not then, nor are there now,
+to be found in this land such comfortable, prosperous homes and farms as
+those which dot all the country where dwell the men of Northeastern
+stock. They were not, as a rule, even ordinarily well educated; the
+public school formed no such important feature in their life as it did
+in the life of their fellow-citizens farther north. They had narrow,
+bitter prejudices and dislikes; the hard and dangerous lives they had
+led had run their character into a stern and almost forbidding mould.
+They valued personal prowess very highly, and respected no man who did
+not possess the strongest capacity for self-help, and who could not
+shift for himself in any danger. They felt an intense, although perhaps
+ignorant, pride in and love for their country, and looked upon all the
+lands hemming in the United States as territory which they or their
+children should some day inherit; for they were a race of masterful
+spirit, and accustomed to regard with easy tolerance any but the most
+flagrant violations of law. They prized highly such qualities as
+courage, loyalty, truth, and patriotism, but they were, as a whole,
+poor, and not over-scrupulous of the rights of others, nor yet with the
+nicest sense of money obligations; so that the history of their state
+legislation affecting the rights of debtor and creditor, whether public
+or private, in hard times, is not pleasant reading for an American who
+is proud of his country. Their passions, once roused, were intense, and
+if they really wished anything they worked for it with indomitable
+persistency. There was little that was soft or outwardly attractive in
+their character: it was stern, rude, and hard, like the lives they led;
+but it was the character of those who were every inch men, and who were
+Americans through to the very heart's core.
+
+In their private lives their lawless and arrogant freedom and lack of
+self-restraint produced much gross licentiousness and barbarous cruelty;
+and every little frontier community could tell its story of animal
+savagery as regards the home relations of certain of its members. Yet in
+spite of this they, as a whole, felt the family ties strongly, and in
+the main had quite a high standard of private morality. Many of them, at
+any rate, were, according to their lights, deeply and sincerely
+religious; though even their religion showed their strong,
+coarse-fibred, narrow natures. Episcopalianism was the creed of the rich
+slave-owner, who dwelt along the sea-board; but the Western settlers
+belonged to some one or other of the divisions of the great Methodist
+and Baptist churches. They were as savagely in earnest about this as
+about everything else; meekness, mildness, broad liberality, and gentle
+tolerance of difference in religious views were not virtues they
+appreciated. They were always ready to do battle for their faith, and,
+indeed, had to do it, as it was quite a common amusement for the wilder
+and more lawless members of the community to try to break up by force
+the great camp-meetings, which formed so conspicuous a feature in the
+social and religious life of the country. For even irreligion took the
+form of active rebellion against God, rather than disbelief in his
+existence.
+
+Physically they were, and are, especially in Kentucky, the finest
+members of our race; an examination of the statistics relating to the
+volunteers in the Civil War shows that the natives of no other state,
+and the men from no foreign country whatsoever, came up to them in
+bodily development.
+
+Such a people, in choosing men to represent them in the national
+councils, would naturally pay small heed to refined, graceful, and
+cultivated statesmanship; their allegiance would be given to men of
+abounding vitality, of rugged intellect, and of indomitable will. No
+better or more characteristic possessor of these attributes could be
+imagined than Thomas Benton.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+BENTON'S EARLY LIFE AND ENTRY INTO THE SENATE.
+
+
+Thomas Hart Benton was born on March 14, 1782, near Hillsborough, in
+Orange County, North Carolina,--the same state that fifteen years
+before, almost to a day, had seen the birth of the great political chief
+whose most prominent supporter he in after life became. Benton, however,
+came of good colonial stock; and his early surroundings were not
+characterized by the squalid poverty that marked Jackson's, though the
+difference in the social condition of the two families was of small
+consequence on the frontier, where caste was, and is, almost unknown,
+and social equality is not a mere figure of speech--particularly it was
+not so at that time in the Southwest, where there were no servants,
+except black slaves, and where even what in the North would be called
+"hired help" was almost an unknown quantity.
+
+Benton's father, who was a lawyer in good standing at the North Carolina
+bar, died when the boy was very young, leaving him to be brought up by
+his Virginian mother. She was a woman of force, and, for her time, of
+much education. She herself began the training of her son's mind,
+studying with him history and biography, while he also, of course, had
+access to his father's law library. The home in which he was brought up
+was, for that time and for that part of the country, straightlaced; his
+mother, though a Virginian, had many traits which belonged rather to the
+descendants of the Puritans, and possessed both their strength of
+character and their austerely religious spirit. Although living in a
+roistering age, among a class peculiarly given to all the coarser kinds
+of pleasure, and especially to drink and every form of gambling, she
+nevertheless preserved the most rigid decorum and morality in her own
+household, frowning especially upon all intemperance, and never
+permitting a pack of cards to be found within her doors. She was greatly
+beloved and respected by the son, whose mind she did so much to mould,
+and she lived to see him become one of the foremost statesmen of the
+country.
+
+Young Benton was always fond of reading. He began his studies at home,
+and continued them at a grammar school taught by a young New Englander
+of good ability, a very large proportion of the school-teachers of the
+country then coming from New England; indeed, school-teachers and
+peddlers were, on the whole, the chief contributions made by the
+Northeast to the _personnel_ of the new Southwest. Benton then began a
+course at Chapel Hill, the University of North Carolina, but broke off
+before completing it, as his mother decided to move her family westward
+to the almost unbroken wilderness near Nashville, Tennessee, where his
+father had left them a large tract of land. But he was such an
+insatiable student and reader that he rapidly acquired a very extensive
+knowledge, not only of law, but of history and even of Latin and English
+literature, and thus became a well-read and cultivated, indeed a
+learned, man; though his frequent displays of learning and knowledge
+were sometimes marked by a trace of that self-complacent, amusing
+pedantry so apt to characterize a really well-educated man who lives in
+a community in which he believes, and with which he has thoroughly
+identified himself, but whose members are for the most part below the
+average in mental cultivation.
+
+The Bentons founded a little town, named after them, and in which, of
+course, they took their position as leaders and rich landed proprietors.
+It lay on the very outskirts of the Indian country; indeed, the great
+war trail of the Southern Indians led right through the settlement, and
+they at all times swarmed around it. The change from the still somewhat
+rude civilization of North Carolina to the wildness on the border was
+far less abrupt and startling then than would be the case under similar
+circumstances now, and the Bentons soon identified themselves completely
+with the life and interests of the people around them. They even
+abandoned the Episcopalianism of their old home, and became Methodists,
+like their neighbors. Young Benton himself had his hands full, at first,
+in attending to his great backwoods farm, tilled by slaves, and in
+pushing the growth of the settlement by building first a rude log
+school-house (he himself taught school at one time, while studying law),
+and a meeting-house of the same primitive construction, then mills,
+roads, bridges, and so forth. The work hardened and developed him, and
+he readily enough turned into a regular frontiersman of the better and
+richer sort. The neighboring town of Nashville was a raw, pretentious
+place, where horse-racing, cock-fighting, gambling, whiskey-drinking,
+and the various coarse vices which masquerade as pleasures in frontier
+towns, all throve in rank luxuriance. It was somewhat of a change from
+Benton's early training, but he took to it kindly, and though never a
+vicious or debauched man, he bore his full share in the savage brawls,
+the shooting and stabbing affrays, which went to make up one of the
+leading features in the excessively unattractive social life of the
+place and epoch.
+
+At that time dueling prevailed more or less throughout the United
+States, and in the South and West to an extent never before or since
+attained. On the frontier, not only did every man of spirit expect now
+and then to be called on to engage in a duel, but he also had to make up
+his mind to take occasional part in bloody street-fights. Tennessee, the
+state where Benton then had his home, was famous for the affrays that
+took place within its borders; and that they were common enough among
+the people at large may be gathered from the fact that they were of
+continual occurrence among judges, high state officials, and in the very
+legislature itself, where senators and assemblymen were always becoming
+involved in undignified rows and foolish squabbles, apparently without
+fear of exciting any unfavorable comment, as witness Davy Crockett's
+naive account of his early experiences as a backwoods member of the
+Tennessee assembly. Like Jackson, Benton killed his man in a duel. This
+was much later, in 1817, when he was a citizen of Missouri. His
+opponent was a lawyer named Lucas. They fought twice, on Bloody Island,
+near St. Louis. On the first occasion both were wounded; on the second
+Lucas was killed. The latter came of a truculent family. A recent
+biographer of his father, Judge John R. Lucas, remarks, with refreshing
+unconsciousness of the grotesque humor of the chronicle: "This gentleman
+was one of the most remarkable men who ever settled west of the
+Mississippi River.... Towards the close of his life Judge Lucas became
+melancholy and dejected--the result of domestic affliction, for six of
+his sons met death by violence." One feels curious to know how the other
+sons died.
+
+But the most famous of Benton's affrays was that with Jackson himself,
+in 1813. This rose out of a duel of laughable rather than serious
+character, in which Benton's brother was worsted by General Carroll,
+afterwards one of Jackson's lieutenants at New Orleans. The encounter
+itself took place between the Benton brothers on one side, and on the
+other, Jackson, General Coffee, also of New Orleans fame, and another
+friend. The place was a great rambling Nashville inn, and the details
+were so intricate that probably not even the participants themselves
+knew exactly what had taken place, while all the witnesses impartially
+contradicted each other and themselves. At any rate, Jackson was shot
+and Benton was pitched headlong down-stairs, and all the other
+combatants were more or less damaged; but it ended in Jackson being
+carried off by his friends, leaving the Bentons masters of the field,
+where they strutted up and down and indulged in a good deal of loud
+bravado. Previous to this Benton and Jackson had been on the best of
+terms, and although there was naturally a temporary break in their
+friendship, yet it proved strong enough in the end to stand even such a
+violent wrench as that given by this preposterously senseless and almost
+fatal brawl. They not only became completely reconciled, but eventually
+even the closest and warmest of personal and political friends; for
+Benton was as generous and forgiving as he was hot-tempered, and
+Jackson's ruder nature was at any rate free from any small meanness or
+malice.
+
+In spite of occasional interludes of this kind, which must have given a
+rather ferocious fillip to his otherwise monotonous life, Benton
+completed his legal studies, was admitted to the bar, and began to
+practice as a frontier lawyer at Franklin. Very soon, however, he for
+the first time entered the more congenial field of politics, and in 1811
+served a single term in the lower house of the Tennessee legislature.
+Even thus early he made his mark. He had a bill passed introducing the
+circuit system into the state judiciary, a reform of much importance,
+especially to the poorer class of litigants; and he also introduced, and
+had enacted into a law, a bill providing that a slave should have the
+same right to the full benefit of a jury trial as would a white man
+suffering under the same accusation. This last measure is noteworthy as
+foreshadowing the position which Benton afterwards took in national
+politics, where he appeared as a slave-holder, it is true, but as one of
+the most enlightened and least radical of his class. Its passage also
+showed the tendency of Southern opinion at the time, which was
+undoubtedly in the direction of bettering the condition of the blacks,
+though the events of the next few years produced such a violent
+revulsion of feeling concerning the negro race that this current of
+public opinion was completely reversed. Benton, however, was made of
+sturdy stuff, and as he grew older his views on the question did not
+alter as did those of most of his colleagues.
+
+Shortly after he left the legislature the War of 1812 broke out, and its
+events impressed on Benton another of what soon became his cardinal
+principles. The war was brought on by the South and West, the Democrats
+all favoring it, while the Federalists, forming the then
+anti-Democratic party, especially in the Northeast, opposed it; and
+finally their more extreme members, at the famous Hartford Convention,
+passed resolutions supposed to tend towards the dissolution of the
+Union, and which brought upon the party the bitter condemnation of their
+antagonists. Says Benton himself: "At the time of its first appearance
+the right of secession was repulsed and repudiated by the Democracy
+generally.... The leading language in respect to it south of the Potomac
+was that no state had a right to withdraw from the Union, ... and that
+any attempt to dissolve it, or to obstruct the action of constitutional
+laws, was treason. If since that time political parties and sectional
+localities have exchanged attitudes on this question, it cannot alter
+the question of right." For, having once grasped an idea and made it his
+own, Benton clung to it with unyielding tenacity, no matter whether it
+was or was not abandoned by the majority of those with whom he had been
+in the habit of acting.
+
+Thus early Benton's political character became moulded into the shape
+which it ever afterwards retained. He was a slave-holder, but as
+advanced as a slave-holder could be; he remained to a certain extent a
+Southerner, but his Southernism was of the type prevalent immediately
+after the Revolution, and not of the kind that came to the fore prior to
+the Rebellion. He was much more a Westerner in his feelings, and more
+than all else he was emphatically a Union man.
+
+Like every other hot spirit of the West--and the West was full of little
+but hot spirits--Benton heartily favored the War of 1812. He served as a
+colonel of volunteers under Jackson, but never saw actual fighting, and
+his short term of soldiership was of no further account than to furnish
+an excuse to Polk, thirty-five years later, for nominating him
+commanding general in the time of the Mexican War,--an incident which,
+as the nomination was rejected, may be regarded as merely ludicrous, the
+gross impropriety of the act safely defying criticism. He was of genuine
+use, however, in calling on and exciting the volunteers to come forward;
+for he was a fluent speaker, of fine presence, and his pompous
+self-sufficiency was rather admired than otherwise by the frontiersmen,
+while his force, energy, and earnestness commanded their respect. He
+also, when Jackson's reckless impetuosity got him into a snarl with the
+feeble national administration, whose imbecile incapacity to carry on
+the war became day by day more painfully evident, went to Washington,
+and there finally extricated his chief by dint of threatening that, if
+"justice" was not done him, Tennessee would, in future political
+contests, be found ranged with the administration's foes. For Benton
+already possessed political influence, and being, like most of his
+class, anti-Federalist, or Democratic, in sentiment, was therefore of
+the same party as the people at Washington, and was a man whose
+representations would have some weight with them.
+
+During his stay in Tennessee Benton's character was greatly influenced
+by his being thrown into close contact with many of the extraordinary
+men who then or afterwards made their mark in the strange and
+picturesque annals of the Southwest. Jackson even thus early loomed up
+as the greatest and arch-typical representative of his people and his
+section. The religious bent of the time was shown in the life of the
+grand, rugged old Methodist, Peter Cartwright, who, in the far-off
+backwoods, was a preacher and practical exponent of "muscular
+Christianity" half a century before the day when, under Bishop Selwyn
+and Charles Kingsley, it became a cult among the most highly civilized
+classes of England. There was David Crockett, rifleman and congressman,
+doomed to a tragic and heroic death in that remarkable conflict of which
+it was said at the time, that "Thermopylae had its messengers of death,
+but the Alamo had none;" and there was Houston, who, after a singular
+and romantic career, became the greatest of the statesmen and soldiers
+of Texas. It was these men, and their like, who, under the shadow of
+world-old forests and in the sunlight of the great, lonely plains,
+wrought out the destinies of a nation and a continent, and who, with
+their rude war-craft and state-craft, solved problems that, in the
+importance of their results, dwarf the issues of all European struggles
+since the day of Waterloo as completely as the Punic wars in their
+outcome threw into the shade the consequences of the wars waged at the
+same time between the different Greek monarchies.
+
+Benton, in his mental training, came much nearer to the statesmen of the
+sea-board, and was far better bred and better educated, than the rest of
+the men around him. But he was, and was felt by them to be, thoroughly
+one of their number, and the most able expounder of their views; and it
+is just because he is so completely the type of a great and important
+class, rather than because even of his undoubted and commanding ability
+as a statesman, that his life and public services will always repay
+study. His vanity and boastfulness were faults which he shared with
+almost all his people; and, after all, if they overrated the
+consequence of their own deeds, the deeds, nevertheless, did possess
+great importance, and their fault was slight compared to that committed
+by some of us at the present day, who have gone to the opposite extreme
+and try to belittle the actions of our fathers. Benton was deeply imbued
+with the masterful, overbearing spirit of the West,--a spirit whose
+manifestations are not always agreeable, but the possession of which is
+certainly a most healthy sign of the virile strength of a young
+community. He thoroughly appreciated that he was helping to shape the
+future of a country, whose wonderful development is the most important
+feature in the history of the nineteenth century; the non-appreciation
+of which fact is in itself sufficient utterly to disqualify any American
+statesman from rising to the first rank.
+
+It was not in Tennessee, however, that Benton rose to political
+prominence, for shortly after the close of the war he crossed the
+Mississippi and made his permanent home in the territory of Missouri.
+Missouri was then our extreme western outpost, and its citizens
+possessed the characteristic western traits to an even exaggerated
+extent. The people were pushing, restless, and hardy; they were lawless
+and violent to a degree. In spite of the culture and education of some
+families, society, as a whole, was marked by florid unconventionality
+and rawness. The general and widespread intemperance of the judges and
+high officials of state was even more marked than their proclivities for
+brawling. The lawyers, as usual, furnished the bulk of the politicians;
+success at the bar depended less upon learning than upon "push" and
+audacity. The fatal feuds between individuals and families were as
+frequent and as bloody as among Highland clans a century before. The
+following quotations are taken at random from a work on the Bench and
+Bar of Missouri, by an ex-judge of its supreme court: "A man by the name
+of Hiram K. Turk, and four sons, settled in 1839 near Warsaw, and a
+personal difficulty occurred between them and a family of the name of
+Jones, resulting in the death of one or two. The people began to take
+sides with one or the other, and finally a general outbreak took place,
+in which many were killed, resulting in a general reign of terror and of
+violence beyond the power of the law to subdue." The social annals of
+this pleasant town of Warsaw could not normally have been dull; in 1844,
+for instance, they were enlivened by Judge Cherry and Senator Major
+fighting to the death on one of its principal streets, the latter being
+slain. The judges themselves were by no means bigoted in their support
+of law and order. "In those days it was common for people to settle
+their quarrels during court week.... Judge Allen took great delight in
+these exhibitions, and would at any time adjourn his court to witness
+one.... He (Allen) always traveled with a holster of large pistols in
+front of his saddle, and a knife with a blade at least a foot long."
+Hannibal Chollop was no mere creature of fancy; on the contrary, his
+name was legion, and he flourished rankly in every town throughout the
+Mississippi valley. But, after all, this ruffianism was really not a
+whit worse in its effects on the national character than was the case
+with certain of the "universal peace" and "non-resistance" developments
+in the Northeastern States; in fact, it was more healthy. A class of
+professional non-combatants is as hurtful to the real, healthy growth of
+a nation as is a class of fire-eaters; for a weakness or folly is
+nationally as bad as a vice, or worse; and, in the long run, a Quaker
+may be quite as undesirable a citizen as is a duelist. No man who is not
+willing to bear arms and to fight for his rights can give a good reason
+why he should be entitled to the privilege of living in a free
+community. The decline of the militant spirit in the Northeast during
+the first half of this century was much to be regretted. To it is due,
+more than to any other cause, the undoubted average individual
+inferiority of the Northern compared to the Southern troops; at any
+rate, at the beginning of the great war of the Rebellion. The
+Southerners, by their whole mode of living, their habits, and their love
+of out-door sports, kept up their warlike spirit; while in the North the
+so-called upper classes developed along the lines of a wealthy and timid
+bourgeoisie type, measuring everything by a mercantile standard (a
+peculiarly debasing one if taken purely by itself), and submitting to be
+ruled in local affairs by low foreign mobs, and in national matters by
+their arrogant Southern kinsmen. The militant spirit of these last
+certainly stood them in good stead in the Civil War. The world has never
+seen better soldiers than those who followed Lee; and their leader will
+undoubtedly rank as without any exception the very greatest of all the
+great captains that the English-speaking peoples have brought forth--and
+this, although the last and chief of his antagonists may himself claim
+to stand as the full equal of Marlborough and Wellington.
+
+The other Western States still kept touch on the old colonial
+communities of the sea-coast, having a second or alternative outlet
+through Louisiana, newly acquired by the United States, it is true, but
+which was nevertheless an old settled land. Missouri, however, had lost
+all connection with the sea-coast, and though, through her great river
+towns, swarming with raftsmen and flat-boatmen, she drove her main and
+most thriving trade with the other Mississippi cities, yet her restless
+and adventure-loving citizens were already seeking other outlets for
+their activity, and were establishing trade relations with the Mexicans;
+being thus the earliest among our people to come into active contact
+with the Hispano-Indian race from whom we afterwards wrested so large a
+part of their inheritance. Missouri was thrust out beyond the
+Mississippi into the vast plains-country of the Far West, and except on
+the river-front was completely isolated, being flanked on every side by
+great stretches of level wilderness, inhabited by roaming tribes of
+warlike Indians. Thus for the first time the borderers began to number
+in their ranks plainsmen as well as backwoodsmen. In such a community
+there were sure to be numbers of men anxious to take part in any
+enterprise that united the chance of great pecuniary gain with the
+certainty of even greater personal risk, and both these conditions were
+fulfilled in the trading expeditions pushed out from Missouri across the
+trackless wastes lying between it and the fringe of Mexican settlements
+on the Rio del Norte. The route followed by these caravans, which
+brought back furs and precious metals, soon became famous under the name
+of the Santa Fe trail; and the story of the perils, hardships, and gains
+of the adventurous traders who followed it would make one of the most
+striking chapters of American history.
+
+Among such people Benton's views and habits of thought became more
+markedly Western and ultra-American than ever, especially in regard to
+our encroachments upon the territory of neighboring powers. The general
+feeling in the West upon this last subject afterwards crystallized into
+what became known as the "Manifest Destiny" idea, which, reduced to its
+simplest terms, was: that it was our manifest destiny to swallow up the
+land of all adjoining nations who were too weak to withstand us; a
+theory that forthwith obtained immense popularity among all statesmen of
+easy international morality. It cannot be too often repeated that no one
+can understand even the domestic, and more especially the foreign,
+policy of Benton and his school without first understanding the
+surroundings amidst which they had been brought up and the people whose
+chosen representatives they were. Recent historians, for instance,
+always speak as if our grasping after territory in the Southwest was
+due solely to the desire of the Southerners to acquire lands out of
+which to carve new slave-holding states, and as if it was merely a move
+in the interests of the slave-power. This is true enough so far as the
+motives of Calhoun, Tyler, and the other public leaders of the Gulf and
+southern sea-board states were concerned. But the hearty Western support
+given to the movement was due to entirely different causes, the chief
+among them being the fact that the Westerners honestly believed
+themselves to be indeed created the heirs of the earth, or at least of
+so much of it as was known by the name of North America, and were
+prepared to struggle stoutly for the immediate possession of their
+heritage.
+
+One of Benton's earliest public utterances was in regard to a matter
+which precisely illustrates this feeling. It was while Missouri was
+still a territory, and when Benton, then a prominent member of the St.
+Louis bar, had by his force, capacity, and power as a public speaker
+already become well known among his future constituents. The treaty with
+Spain, by which we secured Florida, was then before the Senate, which
+body had to consider it several times, owing to the dull irresolution
+and sloth of the Spanish government in ratifying it. The bounds it gave
+us were far too narrow to suit the more fiery Western spirits, and these
+cheered Benton to the echo when he attacked it in public with fierce
+vehemence. "The magnificent valley of the Mississippi is ours, with all
+its fountains, springs, and floods; and woe to the statesman who shall
+undertake to surrender one drop of its water, one inch of its soil to
+any foreign power." So he said, his words ringing with the boastful
+confidence so well liked by the masterful men of the West, strong in
+their youth, and proudly conscious of their strength. The treaty was
+ratified in the Senate, nevertheless, all the old Southern States
+favoring it, and the only votes at any stage recorded against it being
+of four Western senators, coming respectively from Ohio, Kentucky,
+Tennessee, and Louisiana. So that in 1818, at any rate, the desire for
+territorial aggrandizement at the expense of Maine or Mexico was common
+to the West as a whole, both to the free and the slave states, and was
+not exclusively favored by the Southerners. The only effect of Benton's
+speech was to give rise to the idea that he was hostile to the Southern
+and Democratic administration at Washington, and against this feeling he
+had to contend in the course of his successful candidacy for the United
+States senatorship the following year, when Missouri was claiming
+admittance to the Union.
+
+It was in reference to this matter of admitting Missouri that the
+slavery question for the first time made its appearance in national
+politics, where it threw everything into confusion and for the moment
+overshadowed all else; though it vanished almost as quickly as it had
+appeared, and did not again come to the front for several years. The
+Northerners, as a whole, desiring to "restrict" the growth of slavery
+and the slave-power, demanded that Missouri, before being admitted as a
+state, should abolish slavery within her boundaries. The South was
+equally determined that she should be admitted as a slave state; and for
+the first time the politicians of the country divided on geographical
+rather than on party lines, though the division proved but temporary,
+and was of but little interest except as foreshadowing what was to come
+a score of years later. Even within the territory itself the same
+contest was carried on with the violence bred by political conflicts in
+frontier states, there being a very respectable "restriction" party,
+which favored abolition. Benton was himself a slave-holder, and as the
+question was in no way one between the East and the West, or between the
+Union as a whole and any part of it, he naturally gave full swing to his
+Southern feelings, and entered with tremendous vigor into the contest on
+the anti-restriction side. So successful were his efforts, and so great
+was the majority of the Missourians who sympathized with him, that the
+restrictionists were completely routed and succeeded in electing but one
+delegate to the constitutional convention. In Congress the matter was
+finally settled by the passage of the famous Missouri Compromise bill, a
+measure Southern in its origin, but approved at the time by many if not
+most Northerners, and disapproved by not a few Southerners. Benton
+heartily believed in it, announcing somewhat vaguely that he was
+"equally opposed to slavery agitation and to slavery extension." By its
+terms Missouri was admitted as a slave state, while slavery was
+abolished in all the rest of the old province of Louisiana lying north
+and west of it and north of the parallel of 36 deg. 30'. Owing to an
+objectionable clause in its Constitution, the admission was not fully
+completed until 1821, and then only through the instrumentality of Henry
+Clay. But Benton took his seat immediately, and entered on his thirty
+years' of service in the United States Senate. His appearance in
+national politics was thus coincident with the appearance of the
+question which, it is true, almost immediately sank out of sight for a
+period of fifteen years, but which then reappeared to stay for good and
+to become of progressively absorbing importance, until, combining
+itself with the still greater question of national unity, it dwarfed all
+other issues, cleft the West as well as the East asunder, and, as one of
+its minor results, brought about the political downfall of Benton
+himself and of his whole school in what were called the Border States.
+
+Before entering the Senate, Benton did something which well illustrates
+his peculiar uprightness, and the care which he took to keep his public
+acts free from the least suspicion of improper influence. When he was at
+the bar in St. Louis, real estate litigation was much the most important
+branch of legal business. The condition of Missouri land-titles was very
+mixed, since many of them were based upon the thousands of "concessions"
+of land made by the old French and Spanish governments, which had been
+ratified by Congress, but subject to certain conditions which the Creole
+inhabitants, being ignorant and lawless, had generally failed to
+fulfill. By an act of Congress these inchoate claims were to be brought
+before the United States recorder of land titles; and the Missouri bar
+were divided as to what action should be taken on them, the majority
+insisting that they should be held void, while Benton headed the
+opposite party, which was averse to forfeiting property on technical
+grounds, and advocated the confirmation of every honest claim. Further
+and important legislation was needed to provide for these claims.
+Benton, being much the most influential member of the bar who had
+advocated the confirmation of the claims, and being so able, honest, and
+energetic, was the favorite counsel of the claimants, and had hundreds
+of their titles under his professional charge. Of course in such cases
+the compensation of the lawyer depended solely upon his success; and
+success to Benton would have meant wealth. Nevertheless, and though his
+action was greatly to his own pecuniary hurt, the first thing he did
+when elected senator was to convene his clients, and tell them that
+henceforth he could have nothing more to do, as their attorney, with the
+prosecution of their claims, giving as his reason that their success
+largely depended upon the action of Congress, of which he was now
+himself a member, so that he was bound to consult, not any private
+interest, but the good of the community as a whole. He even refused to
+designate his successor in the causes, saying that he was determined not
+only to be quite unbiased in acting upon the subject of these claims as
+senator, but not to have, nor to be suspected of having, any personal
+interest in the fate of any of them. Many a modern statesman might most
+profitably copy his sensitiveness.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+EARLY YEARS IN THE SENATE.
+
+
+When Benton took his seat in the United States Senate, Monroe, the last
+president of the great house of Virginia, was about beginning his second
+term. He was a courteous, high-bred gentleman, of no especial ability,
+but well fitted to act as presidential figure-head during the
+politically quiet years of that era of good feeling which lasted from
+1816 till 1824. The Federalist party, after its conduct during the war,
+had vanished into well-deserved obscurity, and though influences of
+various sorts were working most powerfully to split the dominant and
+all-embracing Democracy into factional fragments, these movements had
+not yet come to a head.
+
+The slavery question, it cannot be too often said, was as yet of little
+or no political consequence. The violent excitement over the admission
+of Missouri had subsided as quickly as it had arisen; and though the
+Compromise bill was of immense importance in itself, and still more as
+giving a hint of what was to come, it must be remembered that its effect
+upon general politics, during the years immediately succeeding its
+passage, was slight. Later on, the slavery question became of such
+paramount consequence, and so completely identified with the movement
+for the dissolution of the Union, that it seems impossible for even the
+best of recent historians of American politics to understand that such
+was not the case at this time. One writer of note even goes so far as to
+state that "From the night of March 2, 1820, party history is made up
+without interruption or break of the development of geographical [the
+context shows this to mean Northern and Southern] parties." There is
+very little ground for such a sweeping assertion until a considerable
+time after the date indicated; indeed, it was more than ten years later
+before any symptom of the development spoken of became at all marked.
+Until then, parties divided even less on geographical lines than had
+been the case earlier, during the last years of the existence of the
+Federalists; and what little division there was had no reference to
+slavery. Nor was it till nearly a score of years after the passage of
+the Missouri Compromise bill that the separatist spirit began to
+identify itself for good with the idea of the maintenance of slavery.
+Previously to that there had been outbursts of separatist feeling in
+different states, but always due to entirely different causes. Georgia
+flared up in hot defiance of the federal government, when the latter
+rubbed against her on the question of removing the Cherokees from within
+her borders. But her having negro slaves did not affect her feelings in
+the least, and her attitude was just such as any Western state with
+Indians on its frontier is now apt to assume so far as it dares,--such
+an attitude as Arizona, for example, would at this moment take in
+reference to the Apaches, if she were able. Slavery was doubtless
+remotely one of the irritating causes that combined to work South
+Carolina up to a fever heat of insanity over the nullification
+excitement. But in its immediate origin nullification arose from the
+outcry against the protective tariff, and it is almost as unfair to
+ascribe it in any way to the influence of slavery as it would be to
+assign a similar cause for the Virginia and Kentucky resolutions of
+1798, or to say that the absence of slavery was the reason for the
+abortively disloyal agitation in New England, which culminated in the
+Hartford Convention. The separatist feeling is ingrained in the fibre of
+our race, and though in itself a most dangerous failing and weakness, is
+yet merely a perversion and distortion of the defiant and self-reliant
+independence of spirit which is one of the chief of the race virtues;
+and slavery was partly the cause and partly merely the occasion of the
+abnormal growth of the separatist movement in the South. Nor was the
+tariff question so intimately associated with that of slavery as has
+been commonly asserted. This might be easily guessed from the fact that
+the originator and chief advocate of a high tariff himself came from a
+slave state, and drew many of his warmest supporters from among the
+slave-holding sugar-planters. Except in the futile discussion over the
+proposed Panama Congress it was not till Benton's third senatorial term
+that slavery became of really great weight in politics.
+
+One of the first subjects that attracted Benton's attention in the
+Senate was the Oregon question, and on this he showed himself at once in
+his true character as a Western man, proud alike of every part of his
+country, and as desirous of seeing the West extended in a northerly as
+in a southerly direction. Himself a slave-holder, from a slave state, he
+was one of the earliest and most vehement advocates of the extension of
+our free territory northwards along the Pacific coast. All the country
+stretching north and south of the Oregon River was then held by the
+United States in joint possession with Great Britain. But the whole
+region was still entirely unsettled, and as a matter of fact our
+British rivals were the only parties in actual occupation. The title to
+the territory was doubtful, as must always be the case when it rests
+upon the inaccurate maps of forgotten explorers, or upon the chance
+landings of stray sailors and traders, especially if the land in dispute
+is unoccupied and of vast but uncertain extent, of little present value,
+and far distant from the powers claiming it. The real truth is that such
+titles are of very little practical value, and are rightly enough
+disregarded by any nations strong enough to do so. Benton's intense
+Americanism, and his pride and confidence in his country and in her
+unlimited capacity for growth of every sort, gifted him with the power
+to look much farther into the future, as regarded the expansion of the
+United States, than did his colleagues; and moreover caused him to
+consider the question from a much more far-seeing and statesmanlike
+stand-point. The land belonged to no man, and yet was sure to become
+very valuable; our title to it was not very good, but was probably
+better than that of any one else. Sooner or later it would be filled
+with the overflow of our population, and would border on our dominion,
+and on our dominion alone. It was therefore just, and moreover in the
+highest degree desirable, that it should be made a part of that
+dominion at the earliest possible moment. Benton introduced a bill to
+enable the president to terminate the arrangement with Great Britain and
+make a definite settlement in our favor; and though the Senate refused
+to pass it, yet he had the satisfaction of bringing the subject
+prominently before the people, and, moreover, of outlining the way in
+which it would have to be and was finally settled. In one of his
+speeches on the matter he said, using rather highflown language, (for he
+was unfortunately deficient in sense of humor): "Upon the people of
+Eastern Asia the establishment of a civilized power on the opposite
+coast of America could not fail to produce great and wonderful benefits.
+Science, liberal principles in government, and the true religion might
+cast their lights across the intervening sea. The valley of the Columbia
+might become the granary of China and Japan, and an outlet to their
+imprisoned and exuberant population." Could he have foreseen how, in the
+future, the Americans of the valley of the Columbia would greet the
+"imprisoned and exuberant population" of China, he would probably have
+been more doubtful as to the willingness of the latter empire to accept
+our standard of the true religion and liberal principles of government.
+In the course of the same speech he for the first time, and by what was
+then considered a bold flight of imagination, suggested the possibility
+of sending foreign ministers to the Oriental nations, to China, Japan,
+and Persia, "and even to the Grand Turk."
+
+Better success attended a bill he introduced to establish a trading-road
+from Missouri through the Indian country to New Mexico, which, after
+much debate, passed both houses and was signed by President Monroe. The
+road thus marked out and established became, and remained for many
+years, a great thoroughfare, and among the chief of the channels through
+which our foreign commerce flowed. Until Benton secured the enactment of
+this law, so important to the interests and development of the West, the
+overland trade with Mexico had been carried on by individual effort and
+at the cost of incalculable hazard, hardship, and risk of life. Mexico,
+with its gold and silver mines, its strange physical features, its
+population utterly foreign to us in race, religion, speech, and ways of
+life, and especially because of the glamour of mystery which surrounded
+it and partly shrouded it from sight, always dazzled and strongly
+attracted the minds of the Southwesterners, occupying much the same
+place in their thoughts that the Spanish Main did in the imagination of
+England during the reign of Elizabeth. The young men of the Mississippi
+valley looked upon an expedition with one of the bands of armed traders,
+who wound their way across Indian-haunted wastes, through deep canyons
+and over lofty mountain passes, to Santa Fe, Chihuahua, and Sonora, with
+the same feelings of eager excitement and longing that were doubtless
+felt by some of their forefathers more than two centuries previously in
+regard to the cruises of Drake and Hawkins. The long wagon trains or
+pack trains of the traders carried with them all kinds of goods, but
+especially cotton, and brought back gold and silver bullion, bales of
+furs and droves of mules; and, moreover, they brought back tales of
+lawless adventure, of great gains and losses, of fights against Indians
+and Mexicans, and of triumphs and privations, which still further
+inflamed the minds of the Western men. Where they had already gone as
+traders, who could on occasion fight, they all hoped on some future day
+to go as warriors, who would acquire gain by their conquests. These
+hopes were openly expressed, and with very little more idea of there
+being any right or wrong in the matter than so many Norse Vikings might
+have felt. The Southwesterners are credited with altogether too complex
+motives when it is supposed that they were actuated in regard to the
+conquest of northern Mexico by a desire to provide for additional slave
+states to offset the growth of the North; their emotions in regard to
+their neighbor's land were in the main perfectly simple and purely
+piratical. That the Northeast did not share in the greed for new
+territory felt by the other sections of the country was due partly to
+the decline in its militant spirit, (a decline on many accounts
+sincerely to be regretted,) and partly to its geographical situation,
+since it adjoined Canada, an unattractive and already well-settled
+country, jealously guarded by the might of Great Britain.
+
+Another question, on which Benton showed himself to be thoroughly a
+representative of Western sentiment, was the removal of the Indian
+tribes. Here he took a most active and prominent part in reporting and
+favoring the bills, and in advocating the treaties, by which the Indian
+tribes of the South and West were forced or induced, (for the latter
+word was very frequently used as a euphemistic synonym of the former,)
+to abandon great tracts of territory to the whites and to move farther
+away from the boundaries of their ever-encroaching civilization. Nor was
+his action wholly limited to the Senate, for it was at his instance that
+General Clark, at St. Louis, concluded the treaties with the Kansas and
+Osage tribes, by which the latter surrendered to the United States all
+the vast territory which they nominally owned west of Missouri and
+Arkansas, except small reserves for themselves. Benton, as was to be
+expected, took the frontier view of the Indian question, which, by the
+way, though often wrong, is much more apt to be right than is the
+so-called humanitarian or Eastern view. But, so far as was compatible
+with having the Indians removed, he always endeavored to have them
+kindly and humanely treated. There was, of course, much injustice and
+wrong inevitably attendant upon the Indian policy advocated by him, and
+by the rest of the Southern and Western statesmen; but it is difficult
+to see what other course could have been pursued with most of the
+tribes. In the Western States there were then sixty millions of acres of
+the best land, owned in great tracts by barbarous or half-barbarous
+Indians, who were always troublesome and often dangerous neighbors, and
+who did not come in any way under the laws of the states in which they
+lived. The states thus encumbered would evidently never have been
+satisfied until all their soil was under their own jurisdiction and open
+to settlement. The Cherokees had advanced far on the road toward
+civilization, and it was undoubtedly a cruel grief and wrong to take
+them away from their homes; but the only alternative would have been to
+deprive them of much of their land, and to provide for their gradually
+becoming citizens of the states in which they were. For a movement of
+this sort the times were not then, and, unfortunately, are not yet ripe.
+
+Much maudlin nonsense has been written about the governmental treatment
+of the Indians, especially as regards taking their land. For the simple
+truth is that they had no possible title to most of the lands we took,
+not even that of occupancy, and at the most were in possession merely by
+virtue of having butchered the previous inhabitants. For many of its
+actions towards them the government does indeed deserve the severest
+criticism; but it has erred quite as often on the side of too much
+leniency as on the side of too much severity. From the very nature of
+things, it was wholly impossible that there should not be much mutual
+wrong-doing and injury in the intercourse between the Indians and
+ourselves. It was equally out of the question to let them remain as they
+were, and to bring the bulk of their number up to our standard of
+civilization with sufficient speed to enable them to accommodate
+themselves to the changed condition of their surroundings. The policy
+towards them advocated by Benton, which was much the same as, although
+more humane than, that followed by most other Western men who have had
+practically to face the problem, worked harshly in many instances, and
+was the cause of a certain amount of temporary suffering. But it was
+infinitely better for the nation, as a whole, and, in the end, was
+really more just and merciful, than it would have been to attempt
+following out any of the visionary schemes which the more impracticable
+Indian enthusiasts are fond of recommending.
+
+It was during Monroe's last term that Henry Clay brought in the first
+protective tariff bill, as distinguished from tariff bills to raise
+revenue with protection as an incident only. It was passed by a
+curiously mixed vote, which hardly indicated any one's future position
+on the tariff excepting that of Clay himself; Massachusetts, under the
+lead of Webster, joining hands with the Southern sea-coast states to
+oppose it, while Tennessee and New York split, and Missouri and
+Kentucky, together with most of the North, favored it. Benton voted for
+it, but on the great question of internal improvements he stood out
+clearly for the views that he ever afterwards held. This was first
+brought up by the veto, on constitutional grounds, of the Cumberland
+Road bill, which had previously passed both houses with singular
+unanimity, Benton's vote being one of the very few recorded against it.
+In regard to all such matters Benton was strongly in favor of a strict
+construction of the Constitution and of guarding the rights of the
+states, in spite of his devoted attachment to the Union. While voting
+against this bill, and denying the power or the right of the federal
+government to take charge of improvements which would benefit one state
+only, Benton was nevertheless careful to reserve to himself the right to
+support measures for improving national rivers or harbors yielding
+revenues. The trouble is, that however much the two classes of cases may
+differ in point of expediency, they overlap so completely that it is
+wholly impossible to draw a hard and fast line between them, and the
+question of constitutionality, if waived in the one instance, can
+scarcely with propriety be raised in the other.
+
+With the close of Monroe's second term the "era of good feeling" came to
+an end, and the great Democratic-Republican party split up into several
+fragments, which gradually crystallized round two centres. But in 1824
+this process was still incomplete, and the presidential election of that
+year was a simple scramble between four different candidates,--Jackson,
+Adams, Clay, and Crawford. Jackson had the greatest number of votes, but
+as no one had a majority, the election was thrown into the House of
+Representatives, where the Clay men, inasmuch as their candidate was out
+of the race, went over to Adams and elected him. Benton at the time, and
+afterwards in his "Thirty Years' View," inveighed against this choice as
+being a violation of what he called the "principle demos krateo"--a
+barbarous phrase for which he had a great fondness, and which he used
+and misused on every possible occasion, whether in speaking or writing.
+He insisted that, as Jackson had secured the majority of the electoral
+vote, it was the duty of the House of Representatives to ratify promptly
+this "choice of the people." The Constitution expressly provided that
+this need not be done. So Benton, who on questions of state rights and
+internal improvements was so pronounced a stickler for a strict
+construction of the Constitution, here coolly assumed the absurd
+position that the Constitution was wrong on this particular point, and
+should be disregarded, on the ground that there was a struggle "between
+the theory of the Constitution and the democratic principle." His
+proposition was ridiculous. The "democratic principle" had nothing more
+to do with the matter than had the law of gravitation. Either the
+Constitution was or it was not to be accepted as a serious document,
+that meant something; in the former case the election of Adams was
+proper in every aspect, in the latter it was unnecessary to have held
+any election at all.
+
+At this period every one was floundering about in efforts to establish
+political relations, Benton not less than others; for he had begun the
+canvass as a supporter of Clay, and had then gone over to Crawford. But
+at the end he had become a Jacksonian Democrat, and during the rest of
+his political career he figured as the most prominent representative of
+the Jacksonian Democracy in the Senate. Van Buren himself, afterwards
+Jackson's prime favorite and political heir, was a Crawford man during
+this campaign.
+
+Adams, after his election, which was owing to Clay's support, gave Clay
+the position of secretary of state in his cabinet. The affair
+unquestionably had an unfortunate look, and the Jacksonians, especially
+Jackson, at once raised a great hue and cry that there had been a
+corrupt bargain. Benton, much to his credit, refused to join in the
+outcry, stating that he had good and sufficient reasons--which he
+gave--to be sure of its falsity; a position which brought him into
+temporary disfavor with many of his party associates, and which a man
+who had Benton's ambition and bitter partisanship, without having his
+sturdy pluck, would have hesitated to take. The assault was directed
+with especial bitterness against Clay, whom Jackson ever afterwards
+included in the very large list of individuals whom he hated with the
+most rancorous and unreasoning virulence. Randolph of Roanoke, the
+privileged eccentric of the Senate, in one of those long harangues in
+which he touched upon everybody and everything, except possibly the
+point at issue, made a rabid onslaught upon the Clay-Adams coalition as
+an alliance of "the blackleg and the Puritan." Clay, who was susceptible
+enough to the charge of loose living, but who was a man of rigid honor
+and rather fond than otherwise of fighting, promptly challenged him, and
+a harmless interchange of shots took place. Benton was on the field as
+the friend of both parties, and his account of the affair is very
+amusing in its description of the solemn, hair-splitting punctilio with
+which it is evident that both Randolph and many of his contemporaries
+regarded points of dueling honor, which to us seem either absurd,
+trivial, or wholly incomprehensible.
+
+Two tolerably well-defined parties now emerged from the chaos of
+contending politicians; one was the party of the administration, whose
+members called themselves National Republicans, and later on Whigs; the
+other was the Jacksonian Democracy. Adams's inaugural address and first
+message outlined the Whig policy as favoring a protective tariff,
+internal improvements, and a free construction of the Constitution
+generally. The Jacksonians accordingly took the opposite side on all
+these points, partly from principle and partly from perversity. In the
+Senate they assailed with turgid eloquence every administration measure,
+whether it was good or bad, very much of their opposition being purely
+factious in character. There has never been a time when there was more
+rabid, objectless, and unscrupulous display of partisanship. Benton,
+little to his credit, was a leader in these purposeless conflicts. The
+most furious of them took place over the proposed Panama mission. This
+was a scheme that originated in the fertile brain of Henry Clay, whose
+Americanism was of a type quite as pronounced as Benton's, and who was
+always inclined to drag us into a position of hostility to European
+powers. The Spanish-American States, having succeeded in winning their
+independence from Spain, were desirous of establishing some principle of
+concert in action among the American republics as a whole, and for this
+purpose proposed to hold an international congress at Panama. Clay's
+fondness for a spirited and spectacular foreign policy made him grasp
+eagerly at the chance of transforming the United States into the head of
+an American league of free republics, which would be a kind of
+cis-Atlantic offset to the Holy Alliance of European despotisms. Adams
+took up the idea, nominated ministers to the Panama Congress, and gave
+his reasons for his course in a special message to the Senate. The
+administration men drew the most rosy and impossible pictures of the
+incalculable benefits which would be derived from the proposed congress;
+and the Jacksonians attacked it with an exaggerated denunciation that
+was even less justified by the facts.
+
+Adams's message was properly open to attack on one or two points;
+notably in reference to its proposals that we should endeavor to get the
+Spanish-American States to introduce religious tolerance within their
+borders. It was certainly an unhappy suggestion that we should endeavor
+to remove the mote of religious intolerance from our brother's eye while
+indignantly resenting the least allusion to the beam of slavery in our
+own. It was on this very point of slavery that the real opposition
+hinged. The Spanish States had emancipated their comparatively small
+negro populations, and, as is usually the case with Latin nations, did
+not have a very strong caste feeling against the blacks, some of whom
+accordingly had risen to high civic and military rank; and they also
+proposed to admit to their congress the negro republic of Hayti. Certain
+of the slave-holders of the South fiercely objected to any such
+association; and on this occasion Benton for once led and voiced the
+ultra-Southern feeling on the subject, announcing in his speech that
+diplomatic intercourse with Hayti should not even be discussed in the
+senate chamber, and that we could have no association with republics who
+had "black generals in their armies and mulatto senators in their
+congresses." But this feeling on the part of the slave-holders against
+the measure was largely, although not wholly, spurious; and really had
+less to do with the attitude of the Jacksonian Democrats than had a mere
+factious opposition to Adams and Clay. This was shown by the vote on the
+confirmation of the ministers, when the senators divided on party and
+not on sectional lines. The nominations were confirmed, but not till
+after such a length of time that the ministers were unable to reach
+Panama until after the congress had adjourned.
+
+The Oregon question again came up during Adams's term, the
+administration favoring the renewal of the joint occupation convention,
+by which we held the country in common with Great Britain. There was
+not much public feeling in the matter; in the East there was none
+whatever. But Benton, when he opposed the renewal, and claimed the whole
+territory as ours, gave expression to the desires of all the Westerners
+who thought over the subject at all. He was followed by only half a
+dozen senators, all but one from the West, and from both sides of the
+Ohio--Illinois, Kentucky, Tennessee, Mississippi; the Northwest and
+Southwest as usual acting together.
+
+The vote on the protective tariff law of 1828 furnished another
+illustration of the solidarity of the West. New England had abandoned
+her free trade position since 1824, and the North went strongly for the
+new tariff; the Southern sea-coast states, except Louisiana, opposed it
+bitterly; and the bill was carried by the support of the Western States,
+both the free and the slave. This tariff bill was the first of the
+immediate irritating causes which induced South Carolina to go into the
+nullification movement. Benton's attitude on the measure was that of a
+good many other men who, in their public capacities, are obliged to
+appear as protectionists, but who lack his frankness in stating their
+reasons. He utterly disbelieved in and was opposed to the principle of
+the bill, but as it had bid for and secured the interest of Missouri by
+a heavy duty on lead, he felt himself forced to support it; and so he
+announced his position. He simply went with his state, precisely as did
+Webster, the latter, in following Massachusetts' change of front and
+supporting the tariff of 1828, turning a full and complete somersault.
+Neither the one nor the other was to blame. Free traders are apt to look
+at the tariff from a sentimental stand-point; but it is in reality
+purely a business matter, and should be decided solely on grounds of
+expediency. Political economists have pretty generally agreed that
+protection is vicious in theory and harmful in practice; but if the
+majority of the people in interest wish it, and it affects only
+themselves, there is no earthly reason why they should not be allowed to
+try the experiment to their hearts' content. The trouble is that it
+rarely does affect only themselves; and in 1828 the evil was peculiarly
+aggravated on account of the unequal way in which the proposed law would
+affect different sections. It purported to benefit the rest of the
+country, but it undoubtedly worked real injury to the planter states,
+and there is small ground for wonder that the irritation over it in the
+region so affected should have been intense.
+
+During Adams's term Benton began his fight for disposing of the public
+lands to actual settlers at a small cost. It was a move of enormous
+importance to the whole West; and Benton's long and sturdy contest for
+it, and for the right of preemption, entitle him to the greatest credit.
+He never gave up the struggle, although repulsed again and again, and at
+the best only partially successful; for he had to encounter much
+opposition, especially from the short-sighted selfishness of many of the
+Northeasterners, who wished to consider the public lands purely as
+sources of revenue. He utterly opposed the then existing system of
+selling land to the highest bidder--a most hurtful practice; and
+objected to the establishment of an arbitrary minimum price, which
+practically kept all land below a certain value out of the market
+altogether. He succeeded in establishing the preemption system, and had
+the system of renting public mines, etc., abolished; and he struggled
+for the principle of giving land outright to settlers in certain cases.
+As a whole, his theory of a liberal system of land distribution was
+undoubtedly the correct one, and he deserves the greatest credit for
+having pushed it as he did.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+THE ELECTION OF JACKSON, AND THE SPOILS SYSTEM.
+
+
+In the presidential election of 1828 Jackson and Adams were pitted
+against each other as the only candidates before the people, and Jackson
+won an overwhelming victory. The followers of the two were fast
+developing respectively into Democrats and Whigs, and the parties were
+hardening and taking shape, while the dividing lines were being drawn
+more clearly and distinctly. But the contest was largely a personal one,
+and Jackson's success was due to his own immense popularity more than to
+any party principles which he was supposed to represent. Almost the
+entire strength of Adams was in the Northeast; but it is absolutely
+wrong to assume, because of this fact, that the election even remotely
+foreshadowed the way in which party lines would be drawn in the coming
+sectional antagonism over slavery. Adams led Jackson in the two slave
+states of Maryland and Delaware; and in the free states outside of New
+England Jackson had an even greater lead over Adams. East of the
+Alleghanies it may here and there have been taken as in some sort a
+triumph of the South over the North; but its sectional significance, as
+far as it had any, really came from its being a victory of the West over
+the East. Infinitely more important than this was the fact that it
+represented the overwhelmingly successful upheaval of the most extreme
+democratic elements in the community.
+
+Until 1828 all the presidents, and indeed almost all the men who took
+the lead in public life, alike in national and in state affairs, had
+been drawn from what in Europe would have been called the "upper
+classes." They were mainly college-bred men of high social standing, as
+well educated as any in the community, usually rich or at least
+well-to-do. Their subordinates in office were of much the same material.
+It was believed, and the belief was acted upon, that public life needed
+an apprenticeship of training and experience. Many of our public men had
+been able; almost all had been honorable and upright. The change of
+parties in 1800, when the Jeffersonian Democracy came in, altered the
+policy of the government, but not the character of the officials. In
+that movement, though Jefferson had behind him the mass of the people as
+the rank and file of his party, yet all his captains were still drawn
+from among the men in the same social position as himself. The
+Revolutionary War had been fought under the leadership of the colonial
+gentry; and for years after it was over the people, as a whole, felt
+that their interests could be safely intrusted to and were identical
+with those of the descendants of their revolutionary leaders. The
+classes in which were to be found almost all the learning, the talent,
+the business activity, and the inherited wealth and refinement of the
+country, had also hitherto contributed much to the body of its rulers.
+
+The Jacksonian Democracy stood for the revolt against these rulers; its
+leaders, as well as their followers, all came from the mass of the
+people. The majority of the voters supported Jackson because they felt
+he was one of themselves, and because they understood that his election
+would mean the complete overthrow of the classes in power and their
+retirement from the control of the government. There was nothing to be
+said against the rulers of the day; they had served the country and all
+its citizens well, and they were dismissed, not because the voters could
+truthfully allege any wrong-doing whatsoever against them, but solely
+because, in their purely private and personal feelings and habits of
+life, they were supposed to differ from the mass of the people. This
+was such an outrageously absurd feeling that the very men who were
+actuated by it, or who, like Benton, shaped and guided it, were ashamed
+to confess the true reason of their actions, and tried to cloak it
+behind an outcry, as vague and senseless as it was clamorous, against
+"aristocratic corruption" and other shadowy and spectral evils. Benton
+even talked loosely of "retrieving the country from the deplorable
+condition in which the enlightened classes had sunk it," although the
+country was perfectly prosperous and in its usual state of quiet,
+healthy growth. On the other hand, the opponents of Jackson indulged in
+talk almost as wild, and fears even more extravagant than his
+supporters' hopes; and the root of much of their opposition lay in a
+concealed but still existent caste antagonism to a man of Jackson's
+birth and bringing up. In fact, neither side, in spite of all their loud
+talk of American Republicanism, had yet mastered enough of its true
+spirit to be able to see that so long as public officers did their whole
+duty to all classes alike, it was not in the least the affair of their
+constituents whether they chose to spend their hours of social
+relaxation in their shirt-sleeves or in dress coats.
+
+The change was a great one; it was not a change of the policy under
+which the government was managed, as in Jefferson's triumph, but of the
+men who controlled it. The two great democratic victories had little in
+common; almost as little as had the two great leaders under whose
+auspices they were respectively won,--and few men were ever more unlike
+than the scholarly, timid, and shifty doctrinaire, who supplanted the
+elder Adams, and the ignorant, headstrong, and straightforward soldier,
+who was victor over the younger. That the change was the deliberate
+choice of the great mass of the people, and that it was one for the
+worse, was then, and has been ever since, the opinion of most thinking
+men; certainly the public service then took its first and greatest step
+in that downward career of progressive debasement and deterioration
+which has only been checked in our own days. But those who would,
+off-hand, decry the democratic principle on this account would do well
+to look at the nearly contemporaneous career of the pet heroes of a
+trans-Atlantic aristocracy before passing judgment. A very charming
+English historian of our day[1] has compared Wellington with Washington;
+it would have been far juster to have compared him with Andrew Jackson.
+Both were men of strong, narrow minds and bitter prejudices, with few
+statesmanlike qualities, who, for brilliant military services, were
+raised to the highest civil positions in the gift of the state. The
+feeling among the aristocratic classes of Great Britain in favor of the
+Iron Duke was nearly as strong and quite as unreasonable as was the
+homage paid by their homelier kinsfolk across the Atlantic to Old
+Hickory. Wellington's military successes were far greater, for he had
+more chances; but no single feat of his surpassed the remarkable victory
+won against his ablest lieutenant and choicest troops by a much smaller
+number of backwoods riflemen under Andrew Jackson. As a statesman
+Wellington may have done less harm than Jackson, for he had less
+influence; but he has no such great mark to his credit as the old
+Tennessean's attitude toward the Nullifiers. If Jackson's election is a
+proof that the majority is not always right, Wellington's elevation may
+be taken as showing that the minority, or a fraction thereof, is in its
+turn quite as likely to be wrong.
+
+[1: Justin McCarthy.]
+
+This caste antagonism was the distinguishing feature in the election of
+1828, and the partially sectional character of the contest was due to
+the different degree of development the caste spirit had reached in
+different portions of the Union. In New England wealth was quite evenly
+distributed, and education and intelligence were nearly universal; so
+there the antagonism was slight, the bulk of the New England vote being
+given, as usually before and since, in favor of the right candidate. In
+the Middle States, on the contrary, the antagonism was very strong. In
+the South it was of but little political account as between the whites
+themselves, they all being knit together by the barbarous bond of a
+common lordship of race; and here the feeling for Jackson was largely
+derived from the close kinship still felt for the West. In the West
+itself, where Jackson's great strength lay, the people were still too
+much on the same plane of thought as well as of material prosperity, and
+the wealthy and cultivated classes were of too limited extent to admit
+of much caste feeling against the latter; and, accordingly, instead of
+hostility to them, the Western caste spirit took the form of hostility
+to their far more numerous representatives who had hitherto formed the
+bulk of the political rulers of the East.
+
+New England was not only the most advanced portion of the Union, as
+regards intelligence, culture, and general prosperity, but was also most
+disagreeably aware of the fact, and was possessed with a self-conscious
+virtue that was peculiarly irritating to the Westerners, who knew that
+they were looked down upon, and savagely resented it on every occasion;
+and, besides, New England was apt to meddle in affairs that more nearly
+concerned other localities. Several of Benton's speeches, at this time,
+show this irritation against the Northeast, and also incidentally bring
+out the solidarity of interest felt throughout the West. In a long and
+able speech, favoring the repeal of the iniquitous "salt tax," or high
+duty on imported salt (a great hobby of his, in which, after many
+efforts, he was finally successful), he brought out the latter point
+very strongly, besides complaining of the disproportionate lightness of
+the burden imposed upon the Northeast by the high tariff, of which he
+announced himself to be but a moderate adherent. In common with all
+other Western statesmen, he resented keenly the suspicion with which the
+Northeast was then only too apt to regard the West, quoting in one of
+his speeches with angry resentment a prevalent New England sneer at "the
+savages beyond the Alleghanies." At the time we are speaking of it must
+be remembered that many even of the most advanced Easterners were
+utterly incapable of appreciating the almost limitless capacity of their
+country for growth and expansion, being in this respect far behind their
+Western brethren; indeed, many regarded the acquisition of any new
+territory in the West with alarm and regret, as tending to make the
+Union of such unwieldy size that it would break of its own weight.
+
+Benton was the leading opponent of a proposal, introduced by Senator
+Foot of Connecticut, to inquire into the expediency of limiting the
+sales of public lands to such lands as were then in the market. The
+limitation would have been most injurious to the entire West, which was
+thus menaced by the action of a New Englander, while Benton appeared as
+the champion of the whole section, North and South alike, in the speech
+wherein he strenuously and successfully opposed the adoption of the
+resolution, and at the same time bitterly attacked the quarter of the
+country from which it came, as having from the earliest years opposed
+everything that might advance the interests of the people beyond the
+Alleghanies. Webster came to the assistance of the mover of the measure
+in a speech wherein, among other things, he claimed for the North the
+merit of the passage of the Ordinance of 1787, in relation to the
+Northwest Territory, and especially of the anti-slavery clause therein
+contained. But Benton here caught him tripping, and in a very good
+speech showed that he was completely mistaken in his facts. The debate
+now, however, completely left the point at issue, taking a bitterly
+sectional turn, and giving rise to the famous controversy between
+Hayne, of South Carolina, who for the first time on the floor of the
+Senate announced the doctrine of nullification, and Webster, who, in
+response to his antagonist, voiced the feeling of the Union men of the
+North in that wonderful and magnificent speech known ever since under
+the name of the "Reply to Hayne," and the calling forth of which will
+henceforward be Hayne's sole title to fame. Benton, though himself a
+strong Union and anti-nullification man, was still too excited over the
+subject-matter of the bill and the original discussion over it to
+understand that the debate had ranged off upon matters of infinitely
+greater importance, and entirely failed to realize that he had listened
+to the greatest piece of oratory of the century. On the contrary,
+encouraged by his success earlier in the debate, he actually attempted a
+kind of reply to Webster, attacking him with invective and sarcasm as an
+alarmist, and taunting him with the memory of the Hartford Convention,
+which had been held by members of the Federalist party, to which Webster
+himself had once belonged. Benton afterwards became convinced that
+Webster's views were by no means those of a mere alarmist, and frankly
+stated that he had been wrong in his position; but at the time, heated
+by his original grievance, as a Western man, against New England, he
+failed entirely to understand the true drift of Hayne's speech. Much of
+New England's policy to the West was certainly excessively
+narrow-minded.
+
+Jackson's administration derives a most unenviable notoriety as being
+the one under which the "spoils system" became, for the first time,
+grafted on the civil service of the nation; appointments and removals in
+the public service being made dependent upon political qualifications,
+and not, as hitherto, upon merit or capacity. Benton, to his honor,
+always stoutly opposed this system. It is unfair to assert that Jackson
+was the originator of this method of appointment; but he was certainly
+its foster-father, and more than any one else is responsible for its
+introduction into the affairs of the national government. Despite all
+the Eastern sneers at the "savages" of the West, it was from Eastern men
+that this most effective method of debauching political life came. The
+Jacksonian Democrats of the West, when they introduced it into the
+working of the federal government, simply copied the system which they
+found already firmly established by their Eastern allies in New York and
+Pennsylvania. For many years the course of politics throughout the
+country had been preparing and foreshadowing the advent of the "spoils
+system." The greatest single stroke in its favor had been done at the
+instigation of Crawford, when that scheming politician was seeking the
+presidency, and, to further his ends, he procured the passage by
+Congress of a law limiting the term of service of all public officials
+to four years, thus turning out of office all the fifty thousand public
+servants during each presidential term. This law has never been
+repealed, every low politician being vitally interested in keeping it as
+it is, and accordingly it is to be found on the statute-books at the
+present day; and though it has the company of some other very bad
+measures, it still remains very much the worst of all, as regards both
+the evil it has done and that which it is still doing. This four years'
+limitation law was passed without comment or protest, every one voting
+in its favor, its probable working not being comprehended in the least.
+Says Benton, who, with all his colleagues, voted for it: "The object of
+the law was to pass the disbursing officers every four years under the
+supervision of the appointing power, for the inspection of their
+accounts, in order that defaulters might be detected and dropped, while
+the faithful should be ascertained and continued.... It was found to
+operate contrary to its intent, and to have become the facile means of
+getting rid of faithful disbursing officers, instead of retaining
+them." New York has always had a low political standard, one or the
+other of its great party and factional organizations, and often both or
+all of them, being at all times most unlovely bodies of excessively
+unwholesome moral tone. Aaron Burr introduced the "spoils system" into
+her state affairs, and his methods were followed and improved upon by
+Marcy, Wright, Van Buren, and all the "Albany Regency." In 1829 these
+men found themselves an important constituent portion of the winning
+party, and immediately, by the help of the only too willing Jackson,
+proceeded to apply their system to affairs at Washington. It was about
+this time that, in the course of a debate in the Senate, Marcy gave
+utterance to the now notorious maxim, "To the victors belong the
+spoils."
+
+Under Adams the non-partisan character of the public service had been
+guarded with a scrupulous care that could almost be called exaggerated.
+Indeed, Adams certainly went altogether too far in his non-partisanship
+when it came to appointing cabinet and other high officers, his views on
+such points being not only fantastic, but absolutely wrong. The
+colorless character of his administration was largely due to his having,
+in his anxiety to avoid blind and unreasoning adherence to party,
+committed the only less serious fault of paying too little heed to
+party; for a healthy party spirit is prerequisite to the performance of
+effective work in American political life. Adams was not elected purely
+for himself, but also on account of the men and the principles that he
+was supposed to represent; and when he partly surrounded himself with
+men of opposite principles, he just so far, though from the best of
+motives, betrayed his supporters, and rightly forfeited much of their
+confidence. But, under him, every public servant felt that, so long as
+he faithfully served the state, his position was secure, no matter what
+his political opinions might be.
+
+With the incoming of the Jacksonians all this changed, and terribly for
+the worse. A perfect reign of terror ensued among the office-holders. In
+the first month of the new administration more removals took place than
+during all the previous administrations put together. Appointments were
+made with little or no attention to fitness, or even honesty, but solely
+because of personal or political services. Removals were not made in
+accordance with any known rule at all; the most frivolous pretexts were
+sufficient, if advanced by useful politicians who needed places already
+held by capable incumbents. Spying and tale-bearing became prominent
+features of official life, the meaner office-holders trying to save
+their own heads by denouncing others. The very best men were
+unceremoniously and causelessly dismissed; gray-headed clerks, who had
+been appointed by the earlier presidents,--by Washington, the elder
+Adams, and Jefferson,--being turned off at an hour's notice, although a
+quarter of a century's faithful work in the public service had unfitted
+them to earn their living elsewhere. Indeed, it was upon the best and
+most efficient men that the blow fell heaviest; the spies, tale-bearers,
+and tricksters often retained their positions. In 1829 the public
+service was, as it always had been, administered purely in the interest
+of the people; and the man who was styled the especial champion of the
+people dealt that service the heaviest blow it has ever received.
+
+Benton himself always took a sound stand on the civil service question,
+although his partisanship led him at times to defend Jackson's course
+when he must have known well that it was indefensible. He viewed with
+the greatest alarm and hostility the growth of the "spoils system," and
+early introduced, as chairman of a special committee, a bill to repeal
+the harmful four years' limitation act. In discussing this proposed bill
+afterwards, he wrote, in words that apply as much at this time as they
+did then: "The expiration of the four years' term came to be considered
+as the termination and vacation of all the offices on which it fell,
+and the creation of vacancies to be filled at the option of the
+president. The bill to remedy this defect gave legal effect to the
+original intention of the law by confining the vacation of office to
+actual defaulters. The power of the president to dismiss civil officers
+was not attempted to be curtailed, but the restraints of responsibility
+were placed upon its exercise by requiring the cause of dismission to be
+communicated to Congress in each case. The section of the bill to that
+effect was in these words: _That in all nominations made by the
+president to the Senate, to fill vacancies occasioned by an exercise of
+the president's power to remove from office, the fact of the removal
+shall be stated to the Senate at the same time that the nomination is
+made, with a statement of the reasons for which such officer may have
+been removed._ This was intended to operate as a restraint upon removals
+without cause."
+
+In the "Thirty Years' View" he again writes, in language which would be
+appropriate from every advanced civil service reformer of the present
+day, that is, from every disinterested man who has studied the workings
+of the "spoils system" with any intelligence:--
+
+ I consider "sweeping" removals, as now practiced by both parties, a
+ great political evil in our country, injurious to individuals, to
+ the public service, to the purity of elections, and to the harmony
+ and union of the people. Certainly no individual has a right to an
+ office; no one has an estate or property in a public employment; but
+ when a mere ministerial worker in a subordinate station has learned
+ its duties by experience and approved his fidelity by his conduct,
+ it is an injury to the public service to exchange him for a novice
+ whose only title to the place may be a political badge or partisan
+ service. It is exchanging experience for inexperience, tried ability
+ for untried, and destroying the incentive to good conduct by
+ destroying its reward. To the party displaced it is an injury, he
+ having become a proficient in that business, expecting to remain in
+ it during good behavior, and finding it difficult, at an advanced
+ age, and with fixed habits, to begin a new career in some new walk
+ of life. It converts elections into scrambles for office, and
+ degrades the government into an office for rewards and punishments;
+ and divides the people of the Union into two adverse parties, each
+ in its turn, and as it becomes dominant, to strip and proscribe the
+ other.
+
+Benton had now taken the position which he was for many years to hold,
+as the recognized senatorial leader of a great and well-defined party.
+Until 1828 the prominent political chiefs of the nation had either been
+its presidents, or had been in the cabinets of these presidents. But
+after Jackson's time they were in the Senate, and it was on this body
+that public attention was concentrated. Jackson's cabinet itself showed
+such a falling off, when compared with the cabinets of any of his
+predecessors, as to justify the caustic criticism that, when he took
+office, there came in "the millennium of the minnows." In the Senate, on
+the contrary, there were never before or since so many men of commanding
+intellect and powers. Calhoun had been elected as vice-president on the
+Jacksonian ticket, and was thus, in 1829, presiding over the body of
+which he soon became an active member; Webster and Clay were already
+taking their positions as the leaders of the great National Republican,
+or, as it was afterwards called, Whig party.
+
+When the rupture between Calhoun and the Jacksonian Democrats, and the
+resignation of the former from the vice-presidency took place, three
+parties developed in the United States Senate. One was composed of the
+Jacksonian Democrats, with Benton at their head; one was made up of the
+little band of Nullifiers, led by Calhoun; and the third included the
+rather loose array of the Whigs, under Clay and Webster. The feeling of
+the Jacksonians towards Calhoun and the Nullifiers and towards Clay and
+the Clay Whigs were largely those of personal animosity; but they had
+very little of this sentiment towards Webster and his associates, their
+differences with them being on questions of party principle, or else
+proceeding from merely sectional causes.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+THE STRUGGLE WITH THE NULLIFIERS.
+
+
+During both Jackson's presidential terms he and his adherents were
+engaged in two great struggles; that with the Nullifiers, and that with
+the Bank. Although these struggles were in part synchronous, it will be
+easier to discuss each by itself.
+
+The nullification movement in South Carolina, during the latter part of
+the third and early part of the fourth decades in the present century,
+had nothing to do, except in the most distant way, with slavery. Its
+immediate cause was the high tariff; remotely it sprang from the same
+feelings which produced the Virginia and Kentucky resolutions of 1798.
+
+Certain of the Slave States, including those which raised hemp, indigo,
+and sugar, were high-tariff states; indeed, it was not till towards the
+close of the presidency of Monroe that there had been much sectional
+feeling over the policy of protection. Originally, while we were a
+purely agricultural and mercantile people, free trade was the only
+economic policy which occurred to us as possible to be followed, the
+first tariff bill being passed in 1816. South Carolina then was inclined
+to favor the system, Calhoun himself supporting the bill, and, his
+subsequent denials to the contrary notwithstanding, distinctly
+advocating the policy of protection to native industries; while
+Massachusetts then and afterwards stoutly opposed its introduction, as
+hostile to her interests. However, the bill was passed, and
+Massachusetts had to submit to its operation. After 1816 new tariff laws
+were enacted about every four years, and soon the coast Slave States,
+except Louisiana, realized that their working was hurtful to the
+interests of the planters. New England also changed her attitude; and
+when the protective tariff bill of 1828 came up, its opponents and
+supporters were sharply divided by sectional lines. But these lines were
+not such as would have divided the states on the question of slavery.
+The Northeast and Northwest alike favored the measure, as also did all
+the Southern States west of the Alleghanies, and Louisiana. It was
+therefore passed by an overwhelming vote, against the solid opposition
+of the belt of Southern coast states stretching from Virginia to
+Mississippi, and including these two.
+
+The states that felt themselves harmed by the tariff did something more
+than record their disapproval by the votes of their representatives in
+Congress. They nearly all, through their legislatures, entered emphatic
+protests against its adoption, as being most harmful to them and
+dangerous to the Union; and some accompanied their protests with threats
+as to what would be done if the obnoxious laws should be enforced. They
+certainly had grounds for discontent. In 1828 the tariff, whether it
+benefited the country as a whole or not, unquestionably harmed the
+South; and in a federal Union it is most unwise to pass laws which shall
+benefit one part of the community to the hurt of another part, when the
+latter receives no compensation. The truculent and unyielding attitude
+of the extreme protectionists was irritating in the extreme; for cooler
+men than the South Carolinians might well have been exasperated at such
+an utterance as that of Henry Clay, when he stated that for the sake of
+the "American system"--by which title he was fond of styling a doctrine
+already ancient in mediaeval times--he would "defy the South, the
+president and the devil."
+
+On the other hand, both the good and the evil effects of the tariff were
+greatly exaggerated. Some harm to the planter states was doubtless
+caused by it; but their falling back, as compared with the North, in
+the race for prosperity, was doubtless caused much more by the presence
+of slavery, as Dallas, of Pennsylvania, pointed out in the course of
+some very temperate and moderate remarks in the Senate. Clay's
+assertions as to what the tariff had done for the West were equally
+ill-founded, as Benton showed in a good speech, wherein he described
+picturesquely enough the industries and general condition of his portion
+of the country, and asserted with truth that its revived prosperity was
+due to its own resources, entirely independent of federal aid or
+legislation. He said: "I do not think we are indebted to the high tariff
+for our fertile lands and our navigable rivers; and I am certain we are
+indebted to these blessings for the prosperity we enjoy." "In all that
+comes from the soil the people of the West are rich. They have an
+abundant supply of food for man and beast, and a large surplus to send
+abroad. They have the comfortable living which industry creates for
+itself in a rich soil, but beyond this they are poor.... They have no
+roads paved or macadamized; no canals or aqueducts; no bridges of stone
+across the innumerable streams; no edifices dedicated to eternity; no
+schools for the fine arts; not a public library for which an ordinary
+scholar would not apologize." Then he went on to speak of the commerce
+of the West and its exports, "the marching myriads of living animals
+annually taking their departure from the heart of the West, defiling
+through the gorges of the Cumberland, the Alleghany, and the Appalachian
+mountains, or traversing the plains of the South, diverging as they
+march, ... and the flying steamboats and the fleets of floating arks,
+loaded with the products of the forest, the farm, and the pasture,
+following the courses of our noble rivers, and bearing their freights to
+the great city" of New Orleans.
+
+Unfortunately Benton would interlard even his best speeches with
+theories of economics often more or less crude, and, still worse, with a
+series of classic quotations and allusions; for he was grievously
+afflicted with the rage for cheap pseudo-classicism that Jefferson and
+his school had borrowed from the French revolutionists. Nor could he
+resist the temptation to drag in allusions to some favorite hobby. The
+repeal of the salt-tax was an especial favorite of his. He was perfectly
+right in attacking the tax, and deserves the greatest credit for the
+persistency which finally won him the victory. But his associates,
+unless of a humorous turn of mind, must have found his allusions to it
+rather tiresome, as when, apropos of the commerce of the Mississippi,
+and without any possible excuse for speaking of the iniquity of taxing
+salt, he suddenly alluded to New Orleans as "that great city which
+revives upon the banks of the Mississippi the name of the greatest of
+the emperors[2] that ever reigned upon the banks of the Tiber, and who
+eclipsed the glory of his own heroic exploits by giving an order to his
+legions never to levy a contribution of salt upon a Roman citizen!"
+
+[2: Aurelian.]
+
+It must be admitted that the tariff did some harm to the South, and that
+it was natural for the latter to feel resentment at the way in which it
+worked. But it must also be remembered that no law can be passed which
+does not distribute its benefits more or less unequally, and which does
+not, in all probability, work harm in some cases. Moreover, the South
+was estopped from complaining of one section being harmed by a law that
+benefited, or was supposed to benefit, the country at large, by her
+position in regard to the famous embargo and non-intervention acts.
+These inflicted infinitely more damage and loss in New England than any
+tariff law could inflict on South Carolina, and, moreover, were put into
+execution on account of a quarrel with England forced on by the West and
+South contrary to the desire of the East. Yet the Southerners were
+fierce in their denunciations of such of the Federalists as went to the
+extreme in opposition to them. Even in 1816 Massachusetts had been
+obliged to submit with good grace to the workings of a tariff which she
+deemed hostile to her interests, and which many Southerners then
+advocated. Certainly, even if the new tariff laws were ill-advised,
+unjust, and unequal in their working, yet they did not, in the most
+remote degree, justify any effort to break up the Union; especially the
+South had no business to complain when she herself had joined in laying
+heavier burdens on the shoulders of New England.
+
+Complain she did, however; and soon added threats to complaints, and was
+evidently ready to add acts to threats. Georgia, at first, took the lead
+in denunciation; but South Carolina soon surpassed her, and finally went
+to the length of advocating and preparing for separation from the Union;
+a step that produced a revulsion of feeling even among her fellow
+anti-tariff states. The South Carolinian statesmen now proclaimed the
+doctrine of nullification,--that is, proclaimed that if any state deemed
+a federal law improper, it could proceed to declare that law null and
+void so far as its own territory was concerned,--and, as a corollary,
+that it had the right forcibly to prevent execution of this void law
+within its borders. This was proclaimed, not as an exercise of the right
+of revolution, which, in the last resort, belongs, of course, to every
+community and class, but as a constitutional privilege. Jefferson was
+quoted as the father of the idea, and the Kentucky resolutions of
+1798-99, which he drew, were cited as the precedent for the South
+Carolinian action. In both these last assertions the Nullifiers were
+correct. Jefferson was the father of nullification, and therefore of
+secession. He used the word "nullify" in the original draft which he
+supplied to the Kentucky legislature, and though that body struck it out
+of the resolutions which they passed in 1798, they inserted it in those
+of the following year. This was done mainly as an unscrupulous party
+move on Jefferson's part, and when his side came into power he became a
+firm upholder of the Union; and, being constitutionally unable to put a
+proper value on truthfulness, he even denied that his resolutions could
+be construed to favor nullification--though they could by no possibility
+be construed to mean anything else.
+
+At this time it is not necessary to discuss nullification as a
+constitutional dogma; it is an absurdity too great to demand serious
+refutation. The United States has the same right to protect itself from
+death by nullification, secession, or rebellion, that a man has to
+protect himself from death by assassination. Calhoun's hair-splitting
+and metaphysical disquisitions on the constitutionality of nullification
+have now little more practical interest than have the extraordinary
+arguments and discussions of the school-men of the Middle Ages.
+
+But at the time they were of vital interest, for they were words which
+it was known South Carolina was prepared to back up by deeds. Calhoun
+was vice-president, the second officer in the federal government, and
+yet also the avowed leader of the most bitter disunionists. His state
+supported him by an overwhelming majority, although even within its own
+borders there was an able opposition, headed by the gallant and loyal
+family of the Draytons,--the same family that afterwards furnished the
+captain of Farragut's flag-ship, the glorious old Hartford. There was a
+strong sentiment in the other Southern States in his favor; the public
+men of South Carolina made speech after speech goading him on to take
+even more advanced ground.
+
+In Washington the current at first seemed to be all setting in favor of
+the Nullifiers; they even counted on Jackson's support, as he was a
+Southerner and a states'-rights man. But he was also a strong Unionist,
+and, moreover, at this time, felt very bitterly towards Calhoun, with
+whom he had just had a split, and had in consequence remodeled his
+cabinet, thrusting out all Calhoun's supporters, and adopting Van Buren
+as his political heir,--the position which it was hitherto supposed the
+great Carolina separatist occupied.
+
+The first man to take up the gauntlet the Nullifiers had thrown down was
+Webster, in his famous reply to Hayne. He, of course, voiced the
+sentiment of the Whigs, and especially of the Northeast, where the high
+tariff was regarded with peculiar favor, where the Union feeling was
+strong, and where there was a certain antagonism felt towards the South.
+The Jacksonian Democrats, whose strength lay in the West, had not yet
+spoken. They were, for the most part, neither ultra protectionists nor
+absolute free-traders; Jackson's early presidential utterances had given
+offense to the South by not condemning all high-tariff legislation, but
+at the same time had declared in favor of a much more moderate degree of
+protection than suited the Whigs. Only a few weeks after Webster's
+speech Jackson's chance came, and he declared himself in unmistakable
+terms. It was on the occasion of the Jefferson birthday banquet, April
+13, 1830. An effort was then being made to have Jefferson's birthday
+celebrated annually; and the Nullifiers, rightly claiming him as their
+first and chief apostle, attempted to turn this particular feast into a
+demonstration in favor of nullification. Most of the speakers present
+were actively or passively in favor of the movement, and the toasts
+proposed strongly savored of the new doctrine. But Jackson, Benton, and
+a number of other Union men were in attendance also, and when it came to
+Jackson's turn he electrified the audience by proposing: "Our federal
+Union; it must be preserved." Calhoun at once answered with: "The Union;
+next to our liberty the most dear; may we all remember that it can only
+be preserved by respecting the rights of the states and distributing
+equally the benefit and burden of the Union." The issue between the
+president and the vice-president was now complete, and the Jacksonian
+Democracy was squarely committed against nullification. Jackson had
+risen to the occasion as only a strong and a great man could rise, and
+his few, telling words, finely contrasting at every point with Calhoun's
+utterances, rang throughout the whole country, and will last as long as
+our government. One result, at least, the Nullifiers accomplished,--they
+completely put an end to the Jefferson birthday celebrations.
+
+The South Carolinians had no intention of flinching from the contest
+which they had provoked, even when they saw that the North and West were
+united against them, and though the tide began to set the same way in
+their sister states of the South; North Carolina, among the latter,
+being the first and most pronounced in her support of the president and
+denunciation of the Nullifiers. The men of the Palmetto State have
+always ranked high for hotheaded courage, and they soon showed that they
+had wills as fiery as that of Jackson himself. Yet in the latter they
+had met an antagonist well worthy of any foeman's steel. In declining an
+invitation to be present at Charleston, on July 4, 1831, the president
+again defined most clearly his position in favor of the Union, and his
+words had an especial significance because he let it be seen that he was
+fully determined to back them up by force if necessary. But his letter
+only had the effect of inflaming still more the minds of the South
+Carolinians. The prime cause of irritation, the tariff, still remained;
+and in 1832, Clay, having entered the Senate after a long retirement
+from politics, put the finishing stroke to their anger by procuring the
+passage of a new tariff bill, which left the planter states almost as
+badly off as did the law of 1828. Jackson signed this, although not
+believing that it went far enough in the reduction of duties.
+
+In the presidential election of 1832, Jackson defeated Clay by an
+enormous majority; Van Buren was elected vice-president, there being
+thus a Northern man on the ticket. South Carolina declined to take part
+in the election, throwing away her vote. Again, it must be kept in mind
+that the slave question did not shape, or, indeed, enter into this
+contest at all, directly, although beginning to be present in the
+background as a source of irritation. In 1832 there was ten-fold more
+feeling in the North against Masonry, and secret societies generally,
+than there was against slavery.
+
+Benton threw himself in, heart and soul, with the Union party, acting as
+Jackson's right-hand man throughout the contest with South Carolina, and
+showing an even more resolute and unflinching front than Old Hickory
+himself. No better or trustier ally than the Missouri statesman, in a
+hard fight for a principle, could be desired. He was intensely national
+in all his habits of thought; he took a deep, personal pride in all his
+country,--North, South, East, and West. He had been very loath to
+believe that any movement hostile to the Union was really on foot; but
+once thoroughly convinced of it he chose his own line of action without
+an instant's hesitation.
+
+A fortnight after the presidential election South Carolina passed her
+ordinance of nullification, directed against the tariff laws generally,
+and against those of 1828 and 1832 in particular. The ordinance was to
+take effect on February 1st; and if meantime the federal government
+should make any attempt to enforce the laws, the fact of such attempt
+was to end the continuance of South Carolina in the Union.
+
+Jackson promptly issued a proclamation against nullification, composed
+jointly by himself and the great Louisiana jurist and statesman,
+Livingston. It is one of the ablest, as well as one of the most
+important, of all American state papers. It is hard to see how any
+American can read it now without feeling his veins thrill. Some claim it
+as being mainly the work of Jackson, others as that of Livingston; it is
+great honor for either to have had a hand in its production.
+
+In his annual message the president merely referred, in passing, to the
+Nullifiers, expressing his opinion that the action in reducing the
+duties, which the extinction of the public debt would permit and
+require, would put an end to the proceedings. As matters grew more
+threatening, however, South Carolina making every preparation for war
+and apparently not being conciliated in the least by the evident desire
+in Congress to meet her more than half-way on the tariff question,
+Jackson sent a special message to both houses. He had already sent
+General Scott to Charleston, and had begun the concentration of certain
+military and naval forces in or near the state boundaries. He now asked
+Congress to pass a measure to enable him to deal better with possible
+resistance to the laws. South Carolina having complained of the
+oppressed condition in which she found herself, owing to the working of
+the tariff, Jackson, in his message, with some humor, quoted in reply
+the last Thanksgiving proclamation of her governor, wherein he dilated
+upon the state's unexampled prosperity and happiness.
+
+It must always be kept in mind in describing the attitude of the
+Jacksonian Democrats towards the Nullifiers that they were all along,
+especially in the West, hostile to a very high tariff. Jackson and
+Benton had always favored a much lower tariff than that established in
+1828 and hardly changed in 1832. It was no change of front on their part
+now to advocate a reduction of duties. Jackson and Benton both felt that
+there was much ground for South Carolina's original complaint, although
+as strongly opposed to her nullification attitude as any Northerner.
+Most of the Southern senators and representatives, though opposed to
+nullification, were almost equally hostile to the high tariff; and very
+many others were at heart in sympathy with nullification itself. The
+intensely national and anti-separatist tone of Jackson's declaration,--a
+document that might well have come from Washington or Lincoln, and that
+would have reflected high honor on either,--though warmly approved by
+Benton, was very repugnant to many of the Southern Democrats, and was
+too much even for certain of the Whigs. In fact, it reads like the
+utterance of some great Federalist or Republican leader. The feeling in
+Congress, as a whole, was as strong against the tariff as it was against
+nullification; and Jackson had to take this into account, all the more
+because not only was he in some degree of the same way of thinking, but
+also many of his followers entertained the sentiment even more
+earnestly.
+
+Calhoun introduced a series of nullification resolutions into the
+Senate, and defended them strongly in the prolonged constitutional
+debate that followed. South Carolina meanwhile put off the date at which
+her decrees were to take effect, so that she might see what Congress
+would do. Beyond question, Jackson's firmness, and the way in which he
+was backed up by Benton, Webster, and their followers, was having some
+effect. He had openly avowed his intention, if matters went too far, of
+hanging Calhoun "higher than Haman." He unquestionably meant to
+imprison him, as well as the other South Carolina leaders, the instant
+that state came into actual collision with the Union; and to the end of
+his life regretted, and with reason, that he had not done so without
+waiting for an overt act of resistance. Some historians have treated
+this as if it were an idle threat; but such it certainly was not.
+Jackson undoubtedly fully meant what he said, and would have acted
+promptly had the provocation occurred, and, moreover, he would have been
+sustained by the country. He was not the man to weigh minutely what
+would and what would not fall just on one side or the other of the line
+defining treason; nor was it the time for too scrupulous adherence to
+precise wording. Had a collision occurred, neither Calhoun nor his
+colleague would ever have been permitted to leave Washington; and brave
+though they were, the fact unquestionably had much influence with them.
+
+Webster was now acting heartily with Benton. He introduced a set of
+resolutions which showed that in the matters both of the tariff and of
+nullification his position was much the same as was that of the
+Missourian. Unfortunately Congress, as a whole, was by no means so
+stiff-kneed. A certain number of Whigs followed Webster, and a certain
+number of Democrats clung to Benton; but most Southerners were very
+reluctant to allow pressure to be brought to bear on South Carolina, and
+many Northerners were as willing to compromise as Henry Clay himself. In
+accordance with Jackson's recommendations two bills were introduced: one
+the so-called "Force bill," to allow the president to take steps to
+defend the federal authority in the event of actual collision; and the
+other a moderate, and, on the whole, proper tariff bill, to reduce
+protective duties. Both were introduced by administration supporters.
+Benton and Webster warmly sustained the "Force bill," which was bitterly
+attacked by the Nullifiers and by most of the Southerners, who really
+hardly knew what stand to take, the leading opponent being Tyler of
+Virginia, whose disunion attitude was almost as clearly marked as that
+of Calhoun himself. The measure was eminently just, and was precisely
+what the crisis demanded; and the Senate finally passed it and sent it
+to the House.
+
+All this time an obstinate struggle was going on over the tariff bill.
+Calhoun and his sympathizers were beginning to see that there was real
+danger ahead, alike to themselves, their constituents, and their
+principles, if they followed unswervingly the course they had laid
+down; and the weak-kneed brethren on the other side, headed by Clay,
+were becoming even more uneasy. Calhoun wished to avert collision with
+the federal government; Clay was quite as anxious to avoid an outbreak
+in the South and to save what he could of the protective system, which
+was evidently doomed. Calhoun was willing to sacrifice some of his
+constitutional theories in regard to protection; Clay was ready greatly
+to reduce protection itself. Each, of them, but especially Clay, was
+prepared to shift his stand somewhat from that of abstract moral right
+to that of expediency. Benton and Webster were too resolute and
+determined in their hostility to any form of yielding to South
+Carolina's insolent defiance to admit any hope of getting them to accept
+a compromise; but the majority of the members were known to be only too
+ready to jump at any half-way measure which would patch up the affair
+for the present, no matter what the sacrifice of principle or how great
+the risk incurred for the future. Accordingly, Clay and Calhoun met and
+agreed on a curious bill, in reality recognizing the protective system,
+but making a great although gradual reduction of duties; and Clay
+introduced this as a "compromise measure." It was substituted in the
+House for the administration tariff bill, was passed and sent to the
+Senate. It gave South Carolina much, but not all, that she demanded.
+Her representatives announced themselves satisfied, and supported it,
+together with all their Southern sympathizers. Webster and Benton fought
+it stoutly to the last, but it was passed by a great majority; a few
+Northerners followed Webster, and Benton received fair support from his
+Missouri colleagues and the Maryland senators; the other senators, Whigs
+and Democrats alike, voted for the measure. Many of the Southerners were
+imbued with separatist principles, although not yet to the extent that
+Calhoun was; others, though Union men, did not possess the unflinching
+will and stern strength of character that enabled Benton to stand out
+against any section of the country, even his own, if it was wrong. Silas
+Wright, of New York, a typical Northern "dough-face" politician, gave
+exact expression to the "dough-face" sentiment, which induced Northern
+members to vote for the compromise, when he stated that he was
+unalterably opposed to the principle of the bill, but that on account of
+the attitude of South Carolina, and of the extreme desire which he had
+to remove all cause of discontent in that state, and in order to enable
+her again to become an affectionate member of the Union, he would vote
+for what was satisfactory to her, although repugnant to himself.
+Wright, Marcy, and their successors in New York politics, almost up to
+the present day, certainly carried cringing subserviency to the South to
+a pitch that was fairly sublime.
+
+The "Force bill" and the compromise tariff bill passed both houses
+nearly simultaneously, and were sent up to the president, who signed
+both on the same day. His signing the compromise bill was a piece of
+weakness out of keeping with his whole character, and especially out of
+keeping with his previous course towards the Nullifiers. The position
+assumed by Benton and Webster, that South Carolina should be made to
+submit first and should have the justice of her claims examined into
+afterwards, was unquestionably the only proper attitude.
+
+Benton wrote:--
+
+ My objections to this bill, and to its mode of being passed, were
+ deep and abiding, and went far beyond its own obnoxious provisions,
+ and all the transient and temporary considerations connected with
+ it.... A compromise made with a state in arms is a capitulation to
+ that state.... The injury was great then, and a permanent evil
+ example. It remitted the government to the condition of the old
+ confederation, acting upon sovereignties instead of individuals. It
+ violated the feature of our Union which discriminated it from all
+ confederacies that ever existed, and which was wisely and
+ patriotically put into the Constitution to save it from the fate
+ which had attended all confederacies, ancient and modern.... The
+ framers of our Constitution established a Union instead of a
+ League--to be sovereign and independent within its sphere, acting
+ upon persons through its own laws and courts, instead of acting on
+ communities through persuasion or force. The effect of this
+ compromise legislation was to destroy this great feature of our
+ Union--to bring the general and state governments into conflict--and
+ to substitute a sovereign state for an offending individual as often
+ as a state chose to make the cause of that individual her own.
+
+Not only was Benton's interpretation of the Constitution sound, and one
+that by the course of events has now come to be universally accepted,
+but his criticisms on the wisdom of the compromise bill were perfectly
+just. Had the Anti-Nullifiers stood firm, the Nullifiers would probably
+have given way, and if not, would certainly have been crushed. Against a
+solid North and West, with a divided South, even her own people not
+being unanimous, and with Jackson as chief executive, South Carolina
+could not have made even a respectable resistance. A salutary lesson
+then might very possibly have saved infinite trouble and bloodshed
+thereafter. But in Jackson's case it must be remembered that, so far as
+his acts depended purely upon his own will and judgment, no fault can be
+found with him; he erred only in ratifying a compromise agreed to by the
+vast majority of the representatives of the people in both houses of
+Congress.
+
+The battle did not result in a decisive victory for either side. This
+was shown by the very fact that each party insisted that it had won a
+signal triumph. Calhoun and Clay afterwards quarreled in the senate
+chamber as to which had given up the more in the compromise. South
+Carolina had declared, first, that the tariff was unconstitutional, and
+therefore to be opposed upon principle; second, that it worked injustice
+to her interests, and must be abolished forthwith; thirdly, that, if it
+were not so abolished, she would assert her power to nullify a federal
+law, and, if necessary, would secede from the Union. When her
+representatives agreed to the compromise bill, they abandoned the first
+point; the second was decided largely in her favor, though protection
+was not by any means entirely given up; the third she was allowed to
+insist upon with impunity, although the other side, by passing the
+"Force bill," showed that in case matters did proceed to extremities
+they were prepared to act upon the opposite conviction. Still, she
+gained most of that for which she contended, and the victory, as a
+whole, rested with her. Calhoun's purposes seem to have been, in the
+main, pure; but few criminals have worked as much harm to their country
+as he did. The plea of good intentions is not one that can be allowed to
+have much weight in passing historical judgment upon a man whose
+wrong-headedness and distorted way of looking at things produced, or
+helped to produce, such incalculable evil; there is a wide political
+applicability in the remark attributed to a famous Texan, to the effect
+that he might, in the end, pardon a man who shot him on purpose, but
+that he would surely never forgive one who did so accidentally.
+
+Without doubt, the honors of the nullification dispute were borne off by
+Benton and Webster. The latter's reply to Hayne is, perhaps, the
+greatest single speech of the nineteenth century, and he deserves the
+highest credit for the stubbornness with which he stood by his colors to
+the last. There never was any question of Webster's courage; on the
+occasions when he changed front he was actuated by self-interest and
+ambition, not by timidity. Usually he appears as an advocate rather than
+an earnest believer in the cause he represents; but when it came to be a
+question of the Union, he felt what he said with the whole strength of
+his nature.
+
+An even greater meed of praise attaches to Benton for the unswerving
+fidelity which he showed to the Union in this crisis. Webster was a
+high-tariff man, and was backed up by all the sectional antipathies of
+the Northeast in his opposition to the Nullifiers; Benton, on the
+contrary, was a believer in a low tariff, or in one for revenue merely,
+and his sectional antipathies were the other way. Yet, even when
+deserted by his chief, and when he was opposed to every senator from
+south of the Potomac and the Ohio, he did not flinch for a moment from
+his attitude of aggressive loyalty to the national Union. He had a
+singularly strong and upright character; this country has never had a
+statesman more fearlessly true to his convictions, when great questions
+were at stake, no matter what might be the cost to himself, or the
+pressure from outside,--even when, as happened later, his own state was
+against him. Intellectually he cannot for a moment be compared to the
+great Massachusetts senator; but morally he towers much higher.
+
+Yet, while praising Jackson and Benton for their behavior towards South
+Carolina, we cannot forget that but a couple of years previously they
+had not raised their voices even in the mildest rebuke of Georgia for
+conduct which, though not nearly so bad in degree as that of South
+Carolina, was of much the same kind. Towards the close of Adams's term,
+Georgia had bid defiance to the mandates of the Supreme Court, and
+proceeded to settle the Indian question within her borders without
+regard to the authority of the United States, and these matters were
+still unsettled when Jackson became president. Unfortunately he let his
+personal feelings bias him; and, as he took the Western and Georgian
+view of the Indian question, and, moreover, hated the Supreme Court
+because it was largely Federalist in its composition, he declined to
+interfere. David Crockett, himself a Union man and a nationalist to the
+backbone, rated Jackson savagely, and with justice, for the
+inconsistency of his conduct in the two cases, accusing him of having,
+by his harmful leniency to Georgia, encouraged South Carolina to act as
+she did, and ridiculing him because, while he smiled at the deeds of the
+one state, when the like acts were done by the other, "he took up the
+rod of correction and shook it over her".
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+JACKSON AND BENTON MAKE WAR ON THE BANK.
+
+
+If the struggle with the Nullifiers showed Benton at his best, in the
+conflict with the Bank he exhibited certain qualities which hardly place
+him in so favorable a light. Jackson's attack upon the Bank was a move
+undertaken mainly on his own responsibility, and one which, at first,
+most of his prominent friends were alarmed to see him undertake. Benton
+alone supported him from the beginning. Captain and lieutenant alike
+intensely appreciated the joy of battle; they cared for a fight because
+it was a fight, and the certainty of a struggle, such as would have
+daunted weaker or more timid men, simply offered to them an additional
+inducement to follow out the course they had planned. Benton's
+thorough-going support was invaluable to Jackson. The president sorely
+needed a friend in the Senate who would uphold him through thick and
+thin, and who yet commanded the respect of all his opponents by his
+strength, ability, and courage. To be sure, Benton's knowledge of
+financial economics was not always profound; but, on the other hand, a
+thorough mastery of the laws of finance would have been, in this fight,
+a very serious disadvantage to any champion of Jackson.
+
+The rights and wrongs of this matter have been worn threadbare in
+countless discussions. For much of the hostility of Jackson and Benton
+towards the Bank, there were excellent grounds; but many of their
+actions were wholly indefensible and very harmful in their results to
+the country. An assault upon what Benton called "the money power" is apt
+to be popular in a democratic republic, partly on account of the vague
+fear with which the poorer and more ignorant voters regard a powerful
+institution, whose working they do not understand, and partly on account
+of the jealousy they feel towards those who are better off than
+themselves. When these feelings are appealed to by men who are intensely
+in earnest, and who are themselves convinced of the justice and wisdom
+of their course, they become very formidable factors in any political
+contest.
+
+The struggle first became important when the question of the re-charter
+of the Bank was raised, towards the end of Jackson's first term, the
+present charter still having three years to run. This charter had in it
+many grave faults; and there might well be a question as to whether it
+should be renewed. The Bank itself, beyond doubt, possessed enormous
+power; too much power for its own or outsiders' good. Its president,
+Biddle, was a man of some ability, but conceited to the last degree,
+untruthful, and to a certain extent unscrupulous in the use he made of
+the political influence of the great moneyed institution over which he
+presided. Some of the financial theories on which he managed the Bank
+were wrong; yet, on the whole, it was well conducted, and under its care
+the monetary condition of the country was quiet and good, infinitely
+better than it had been before, or than, under the auspices of the
+Jacksonian Democracy, it afterwards became.
+
+The two great reasons for Jackson's success throughout his political
+career were to be found in the strength of the feeling in his favor
+among the poorer and least educated classes of voters, and in the ardent
+support given him by the low politicians, who, by playing on his
+prejudices and passions, moulded him to their wishes, and who organized
+and perfected in their own and his interests a great political machine,
+founded on the "spoils system"; and both the Jacksonian rank and file
+and the Jacksonian politicians soon agreed heartily in their opposition
+to the Bank. Jackson and Benton opposed it for the same reasons that the
+bulk of their followers did; that is to say, partly from honest and
+ignorant prejudice and partly from a well-founded feeling of distrust as
+to some of its actions. The mass of their fellow party-leaders and
+henchmen assailed it with the cry that it was exerting its influence to
+debauch politics, while at the same time they really sought to use it as
+a power in politics on their own side.
+
+Jackson, in his first annual message in 1829, had hinted that he was
+opposed to the re-charter of the Bank, then a question of the future and
+not to arise for four or five years. At the same time he had called in
+question the constitutionality and expediency of the Bank's existence,
+and had criticised as vicious its currency system. The matter of
+constitutionality had been already decided by the Supreme Court, the
+proper tribunal, and was, and had been for years, an accepted fact; it
+was an absurdity to call it in question. As regards the matter of
+expediency, certainly the Jacksonians failed signally to put anything
+better in its place. Yet it was undeniable that there were grave defects
+in the currency system.
+
+The president's message roused but little interest, and what little it
+did rouse was among the Bank's friends. At once these began to prepare
+the way for the re-charter by an active and extensive agitation in its
+favor. The main bank was at Philadelphia, but it had branches
+everywhere, and naturally each branch bank was a centre of opposition to
+the president's proposed policy. As the friends of the Bank were greatly
+interested, and as the matter did not immediately concern those who
+afterwards became its foes, the former, for the time, had it all their
+own way, and the drift of public opinion seemed to be strongly in its
+favor.
+
+Benton was almost the only public man of prominence who tried to stem
+this tide from the beginning. Jackson's own party associates were
+originally largely against him, and so he stood all the more in need of
+the vigorous support which he received from the Missouri senator.
+Indeed, it would be unfair in the matter of the attack on the Bank to
+call Benton Jackson's follower; he might with more propriety be called
+the leader in the assault, although of course he could accomplish little
+compared with what was done by the great popular idol. He had always
+been hostile to the Bank, largely as a matter of Jeffersonian tradition,
+and he had shown his hostility by resolutions introduced in the Senate
+before Jackson was elected president.
+
+Early in 1831 he asked leave to introduce a resolution against the
+re-charter of the Bank; his purpose being merely to give formal notice
+of war against it, and to attempt to stir up a current of feeling
+counter to that which then seemed to be generally prevailing in its
+favor. In his speech he carefully avoided laying stress upon any such
+abstract point as that of constitutionality, and dwelt instead upon the
+questions that would affect the popular mind; assailing the Bank "as
+having too much power over the people and the government, over business
+and politics, and as too much disposed to exercise that power to the
+prejudice of the freedom and equality which should prevail in a
+republic, to be allowed to exist in our country." The force of such an
+argument in a popular election will be acknowledged by all practical
+politicians. But, although Benton probably believed what he said, or at
+any rate most of it, he certainly ought not to have opened the
+discussion of a great financial measure with a demagogic appeal to caste
+prejudices. He wished to substitute a gold currency in the place of the
+existing bank-notes, and was not disturbed at all as to how he would
+supply the place of the Bank, saying: "I am willing to see the charter
+expire, without providing any substitute for the present Bank. I am
+willing to see the currency of the federal government left to the hard
+money mentioned and intended in the Constitution; ... every species of
+paper might be left to the state authorities, unrecognized by the
+federal government!" Of the beauties of such a system as the last the
+country later on received practical demonstration. Some of his
+utterances, however, could be commended to the friends of greenbacks and
+of dishonest money even at the present day, as when he says: "Gold and
+silver are the best currency for a republic; it suits the men of middle
+property and the working people best; and if I was going to establish a
+workingman's party it should be on the basis of hard money--a hard-money
+party against a paper party." The Bank was in Philadelphia; much of the
+stock was held in the East, and a good deal was held abroad, which gave
+Benton a chance to play on sectional feelings, as follows: "To whom is
+all the power granted? To a company of private individuals, many of them
+foreigners, and the mass of them residing in a remote and narrow corner
+of the Union, unconnected by any sympathy with the fertile regions of
+the Great Valley, in which the natural power of this Union--the power of
+numbers--will be found to reside long before the renewed term of a
+second charter would expire." Among the other sentences occurs the
+following bit of pure demagogic pyrotechnics: "It [the Bank] tends to
+aggravate the inequality of fortunes; to make the rich richer and the
+poor poorer; to multiply nabobs and paupers; and to deepen and widen the
+gulf which separates Dives from Lazarus. A great moneyed power is
+favorable to great capitalists, for it is the principle of money to
+favor money. It is unfavorable to small capitalists, for it is the
+principle of money to eschew the needy and unfortunate. It is injurious
+to the laboring classes." Altogether it was not a speech to be proud of.
+The Senate refused permission to introduce the resolution by the close
+vote of twenty-three to twenty.
+
+Benton lived only a generation after that one which had itself
+experienced oppression from a king, from an aristocratic legislature and
+from a foreign power; and so his rant about the undue influence of
+foreigners in our governmental affairs, and his declamation over the
+purely supposititious powers that were presumed to be conspiring against
+the welfare of the poorer classes probably more nearly expressed his
+real feelings than would be the case with the similar utterances of any
+leading statesman nowadays. He was an enthusiastic believer in the
+extreme Jeffersonian doctrinaire views as to the will of the majority
+being always right, and as to the moral perfection of the average
+voter. Like his fellow-statesmen he failed to see the curious absurdity
+of supporting black slavery, and yet claiming universal suffrage for
+whites as a divine right, not as a mere matter of expediency resulting
+on the whole better than any other method. He had not learned that the
+majority in a democracy has no more right to tyrannize over a minority
+than, under a different system, the latter would have to oppress the
+former; and that, if there is a moral principle at stake, the saying
+that the voice of the people is the voice of God may be quite as untrue,
+and do quite as much mischief, as the old theory of the divine right of
+kings. The distinguishing feature of our American governmental system is
+the freedom of the individual; it is quite as important to prevent his
+being oppressed by many men as it is to save him from the tyranny of
+one.
+
+This speech on the re-charter showed a great deal of wide reading and
+much information; but a good part of it was sheer declamation, in the
+turgid, pompous style that Benton, as well as a great many other
+American public speakers, was apt to mistake for genuine oratory. His
+subsequent speech on the currency, however, was much better. This was
+likewise delivered on the occasion of asking leave to present a joint
+resolution, which leave was refused. The branch draft system was the
+object of the assault. These branch drafts were for even sums of small
+denomination, circulating like bank-notes; they were drawn on the parent
+bank at Philadelphia to the order of some officer of the branch bank and
+were indorsed by the latter to bearer. Thus paper was issued at one
+place which was payable at another and a distant place; and among other
+results there ensued a constant inflation of credit. They were very
+mischievous in their workings; they had none of the marks of convertible
+bank-notes or money, and so long as credit was active there could be no
+check on the inflation of the currency by them. Payment could be
+voluntarily made at the branch banks whence issued, but if it was
+refused the owner had only the right to go to Philadelphia and sue the
+directors there. Most of these drafts were issued at the most remote and
+inaccessible branches, the payment of them being, therefore, much
+delayed by distance and difficulty; nor were the directors liable for
+excessive issues. They constituted the bulk of all the paper seen in
+circulation; they were supposed to be equivalent to money, but being
+bills of exchange they were merely negotiable instruments; they did not
+have the properties of bank-notes, which are constantly and directly
+interchangeable with money. In their issue Biddle had laid himself open
+to attack; and in defending them he certainly did not always speak the
+truth, willfully concealing or coloring facts. Moreover, his
+self-satisfaction and the foolish pride in his own power, which he could
+not conceal, led him into making imprudent boasts as to the great power
+the Bank could exercise over other local banks, and over the general
+prosperity of the country, while dilating upon its good conduct in not
+using this power to the disadvantage of the public. All this was playing
+into Benton's hands. He showed some of the evils of the branch draft
+system, although apparently not seeing others that were quite as
+important. He attacked the Bank for some real and many imaginary
+wrongdoings; and quoted Biddle himself as an authority for the existence
+of powers dangerous to the welfare of the state.
+
+The advocates of the Bank were still in the majority in both houses of
+Congress, and soon began preparations for pushing through a bill for the
+re-charter. The issue began to become political. Webster, Clay, and most
+of the other anti-administration men were for the Bank; and so when the
+convention of the National Republicans, who soon afterwards definitely
+assumed the name of Whigs, took place, they declared heartily in its
+favor, and nominated for the presidency its most enthusiastic
+supporter, Henry Clay. The Bank itself unquestionably preferred not to
+be dragged into politics; but Clay, thinking he saw a chance for a
+successful stroke, fastened upon it, and the convention that nominated
+him made the fight against Jackson on the ground that he was hostile to
+the Bank. Even had this not already been the case no more certain method
+of insuring his hostility could have been adopted.
+
+Still, however, many of Jackson's supporters were also advocates of
+re-charter; and the bill for that purpose commanded the majority in
+Congress. Benton took the lead in organizing the opposition, not with
+the hope of preventing its passage, but "to attack incessantly, assail
+at all points, display the evil of the institution, rouse the people,
+and prepare them to sustain the veto." In other words, he was preparing
+for an appeal to the people, and working to secure an anti-Bank majority
+in the next Congress. He instigated and prepared the investigation into
+the affairs of the Bank, which was made in the House, and he led the
+harassing parliamentary warfare carried on against the re-chartering
+bill in the Senate. He himself seems to have superintended the
+preparation of the charges which were investigated by the House. A great
+flurry was made over them, Benton and all his friends claiming that
+they were fully substantiated; but the only real point scored was that
+against the branch drafts. Benton, with the majority of the committee of
+investigation, had the loosest ideas as to what a bank ought to do, loud
+though they were in denunciation of what this particular Bank was
+alleged to have done.
+
+Webster made the great argument in favor of the re-charter bill. Benton
+took the lead in opposition, stating, what was probably true,--that the
+bill was brought up so long before the charter expired for political
+reasons, and criticising it as premature; a criticism unfortunately
+applicable with even greater force to Jackson's message. His speech was
+largely mere talking against time, and he wandered widely from the
+subject. Among other things he invoked the aid of the principle of
+states'-rights, because the Bank then had power to establish branches in
+any state, whether the latter liked it or not, and free from state
+taxation. He also appealed to the Western members as such, insisting
+that the Bank discriminated against their section of the country in
+favor of the East; the facts being that the shrewdness and commercial
+morality of the Northeast, particularly of New England, saved them from
+the evils brought on the Westerners by the foolishness with which they
+abused their credit and the laxness with which they looked on monetary
+obligations. But in spite of all that Benton could do the bill passed
+both houses, the Senate voting in its favor by twenty-eight ayes against
+twenty nays.
+
+Jackson, who never feared anything, and was more than ready to accept
+the fight which was in some measure forced on him, yet which in some
+degree he had courted, promptly vetoed the bill in a message which
+stated some truths forcibly and fearlessly, which developed some very
+queer constitutional and financial theories, and which contained a
+number of absurdities, evidently put in, not for the benefit of the
+Senate, but to influence voters at the coming presidential election. The
+leaders of the opposition felt obliged to make a show of trying to pass
+the bill over the veto in order to get a chance to answer Jackson.
+Webster again opened the argument. Clay made the fiercest onslaught,
+assailing the president personally, besides attacking the veto power,
+and trying to discredit its use. But the presidential power of veto is
+among the best features of our government, and Benton had no difficulty
+in making a good defense of it; although many of the arguments adduced
+by him in its favor were entirely unsound, being based on the wholly
+groundless assumption that the function of the president corresponded
+to that of the ancient Roman tribune of the people, and was supposed to
+be exercised in the interests of the people to control the
+legislature--thus willfully overlooking the fact that the legislature
+also was elected by the people. When on his ultra-democratic hobby
+Benton always rode very loose in the saddle, and with little knowledge
+of where he was going. Clay and Benton alike drew all sorts of analogies
+between the state of affairs in the United States and that formerly
+prevailing in France, England, and above all in the much-suffering
+republics of antiquity. Benton insisted that the Bank had wickedly
+persuaded the West to get in debt to it so as to have that section in
+its power, and that the Western debt had been created with a view to
+political engineering; the fact being that the Westerners had run into
+debt purely by their own fault, and that the Bank itself was seriously
+alarmed at the condition of its Western branches. The currency being in
+much worse shape in the West than in the Northeast, gold and silver
+naturally moved towards the latter place; and this result of their own
+shortcomings was again held up as a grievance of the Westerners against
+the Bank. He also read a severe lecture on the interests of party
+discipline to the Democrats who had voted for the re-charter, assuring
+them that they could not continue to be both for the Bank and for
+Jackson. The Jacksonian Democracy, nominally the party of the multitude,
+was in reality the nearest approach the United States has ever seen to
+the "one man power;" and to break with Jackson was to break with the
+Democratic party. The alternative of expulsion or of turning a
+somersault being thus plainly presented to the recalcitrant members,
+they for the most part chose the latter, and performed the required feat
+of legislative acrobatics with the most unobtrusive and submissive
+meekness. The debate concluded with a sharp and undignified interchange
+of personalities between the Missouri and Kentucky senators, Clay giving
+Benton the lie direct, and the latter retorting in kind. Each side, of
+course, predicted the utter ruin of the country, if the other prevailed.
+Benton said that, if the Bank conquered, the result would be the
+establishment of an oligarchy, and then of a monarchy, and finally the
+death of the Republic by corruption. Webster stated as his belief that,
+if the sentiments of the veto message received general approbation, the
+Constitution could not possibly survive its fiftieth year. Webster,
+however, in that debate, showed to good advantage. Benton was no match
+for him, either as a thinker or as a speaker; but with the real leader
+of the Whig party, Henry Clay, he never had much cause to fear
+comparison.
+
+All the state banks were of course rabidly in favor of Jackson; and the
+presidential election of 1832 was largely fought on the bank issue. In
+Pennsylvania, however, the feeling for the Bank was only less strong
+than that for Jackson; and accordingly that Boeotian community sapiently
+cast its electoral votes for the latter, while instructing its senators
+and representatives to support the former. But the complete and hopeless
+defeat of Clay by Jackson sealed the fate of the Bank. Jackson was not
+even content to let it die naturally by the lapse of its charter. His
+attitude towards it so far had been one for which much could be said;
+indeed, very good grounds can be shown for thinking his veto proper. But
+of the impropriety of his next step there could be no possible question.
+Congress had passed a resolution declaring its belief in the safety of
+the United States deposits in the Bank; but the president, in the summer
+of 1833, removed these deposits and placed them in certain state banks.
+He experienced some difficulty in getting a secretary of the treasury
+who would take such a step; finally he found one in Taney.
+
+The Bank memorialized Congress at once; and the anti-administration
+majority in the Senate forthwith took up the quarrel. They first
+rejected Jackson's nominations for bank directors, and then refused to
+confirm Taney himself. Two years later Jackson made the latter Chief
+Justice of the Supreme Court, in which position he lived to do even more
+mischief than he had time or opportunity to accomplish as secretary of
+the treasury.
+
+Benton was the administration champion in the Senate. Opposed to him
+were Webster and Clay, as leaders of the Whigs, supported for the time
+being by Calhoun. The feeling of Clay and Calhoun against the president
+was bitterly personal, and was repaid by his rancorous hatred. But
+Webster, though he was really on most questions even more antagonistic
+to the ideas of the Jacksonian school, always remained personally on
+good terms with its leaders.
+
+Clay introduced a resolution directing the return of the deposits;
+Benton opposed it; it passed by a vote of twenty-eight to eighteen, but
+was lost in the House. Clay then introduced a resolution demanding to
+know from the president whether the paper alleged to have been published
+by his authority as having been read to the cabinet, in relation to the
+removal of the deposits, was genuine or not; and, if it was, asking for
+a copy. Benton opposed the motion, which nevertheless passed. But the
+president refused to accede to the demand. Meanwhile the new departure
+in banking, inaugurated by the president, was working badly. One of the
+main grounds for removing the deposits was the allegation that they were
+used to debauch politics. This was never proved against the old United
+States Bank; but under Jackson's administration, which corrupted the
+public service in every way, the deposits became fruitful sources of
+political reward and bribery.
+
+Clay then introduced his famous resolution censuring the president for
+his action, and supported it in a long and fiery speech; a speech which,
+like most of Clay's, was received by his followers at the time with
+rapture, but in which this generation fails to find the sign of that
+remarkable ability with which his own contemporaries credited the great
+Kentuckian. He attacked Jackson with fierce invective, painting him as
+an unscrupulous tyrant, who was inaugurating a revolution in the
+government of the Union. But he was outdone by Calhoun, who, with
+continual interludes of complacent references to the good already done
+by the Nullifiers, assailed Jackson as one of a band of artful, corrupt,
+and cunning politicians, and drew a picture even more lurid than Clay's
+of the future of the country, and the danger of impending revolution.
+Webster's speeches were more self-contained in tone. Benton was the only
+Jacksonian senator who could contend with the great Nullifier and the
+two great Whigs; and he replied at length, and in much the same style as
+they had spoken.
+
+The Senate was flooded with petitions in favor of the Bank, which were
+presented with suitable speeches by the leading Whigs. Benton ridiculed
+the exaggerated tone of alarm in which these petitions were drawn, and
+declared that the panic, excitement, and suffering existing in business
+circles throughout the country were due to the deliberate design of the
+Bank, and afforded a fresh proof that the latter was a dangerous power
+to the state.
+
+The resolution of censure was at last passed by a vote of twenty-six to
+twenty, and Jackson, in a fury, sent in a written protest against it,
+which the Senate refused to receive. The excitement all over the country
+was intense throughout the struggle. The suffering, which was really
+caused by the president's act, but which was attributed by his
+supporters to the machinations of the Bank, was very real; even Benton
+admitted this, although contending that it was not a natural result of
+the policy pursued, but had been artificially excited--or, as he very
+clumsily phrased it, "though fictitious and forged, yet the distress
+was real, and did an immensity of damage." Neither Jackson nor Benton
+yielded an inch to the outside pressure; the latter was the soul of the
+fight in Congress, making over thirty speeches during the struggle.
+
+During the debate on receiving the president's protest, Benton gave
+notice of his intention at an early day to move to expunge from the
+journal the resolution of censure. This idea was entirely his own, and
+he gave the notice without having consulted anybody. It was, however, a
+motion after Jackson's own heart, as the latter now began to look upon
+the affair as purely personal to himself. His party accepted this view
+of the matter with a servile alacrity only surpassed by the way in which
+its leaders themselves bowed down before the mob; and for the next two
+years the state elections were concerned purely with personal politics,
+the main point at issue in the choice for every United States senator
+being, whether he would or would not support Benton's expunging
+resolution. The whole affair seems to us so puerile that we can hardly
+understand the importance attached to it by the actors themselves. But
+the men who happened at that period to be the leaders in public affairs
+were peculiarly and frankly incapable of separating in their minds
+matters merely affecting themselves from matters affecting their
+constituents. Each firmly believed that if he was not the whole state,
+he was at least a most important fraction of it; and this was as plainly
+seen in Webster's colossal egoism and the frank vanity of Henry Clay as
+in Benton's ponderous self-consciousness and the all-pervading
+personality of Andrew Jackson.
+
+Some of the speeches on the expunging resolution show delicious,
+although entirely unconscious, humor. If there ever was a wholly
+irrational state of mind it was that in which the Jacksonians
+perpetually kept themselves. Every canvass on Jackson's behalf was one
+of sound, fury, and excitement, of appeal to the passions, prejudices,
+and feelings, but never the reason, of the people. A speech for him was
+generally a mere frantic denunciation of whatever and whoever was
+opposed to him, coupled with fulsome adulation of "the old hero." His
+supporters rarely indeed spoke to the cool judgment of the country, for
+the very excellent reason that the cool judgment of the country was apt
+to be against them. Such being the case, it is amusing to read in
+Benton's speech on receiving the protest the following sentences,
+apparently uttered in solemn good faith, and with sublime
+unconsciousness of irony:--
+
+ To such a community [the American body politic]--in an appeal on a
+ great question of constitutional law to the understandings of such a
+ people--declamation, passion, epithets, opprobrious language, will
+ stand for nothing. They will float harmless and unheeded through the
+ empty air, and strike in vain upon the ear of a sober and
+ dispassionate tribunal. Indignation, real or affected; wrath,
+ however hot; fury, however enraged; asseverations, however violent;
+ denunciation, however furious, will avail nothing. Facts, inexorable
+ facts, are all that will be attended to; reason, calm and
+ self-possessed, is all that will be listened to.
+
+The description of the mass of Jacksonian voters as forming "a sober and
+dispassionate tribunal" is an artistic touch of fancy quite unique, but
+admirably characteristic of Benton, whose statements always rose
+vigorously to the necessities of the occasion.
+
+Webster, in an effort to make the best of untoward circumstances,
+brought in a bill to re-charter the Bank for a short period, at the same
+time doing away with some of the features that were objectionable in the
+old charter. This bill might have passed, had it not been opposed by the
+extreme Bank men, including Clay and Calhoun. In the course of the
+debate over it Benton delivered a very elaborate and carefully studied
+speech in favor of hard money and a currency of the precious metals; a
+speech which is to this day well worth careful reading. Some of his
+financial theories were crude and confused; but on the main question he
+was perfectly sound. Both he and Jackson deserve great credit for having
+done much to impress the popular mind with the benefit of hard, that is
+to say honest, money. Benton was the strongest hard-money man then in
+public life, being, indeed, popularly nicknamed "Old Bullion." He
+thoroughly appreciated that a metallic currency was of more vital
+importance to the laboring men and to men of small capital generally
+than to any of the richer classes. A metallic currency is always surer
+and safer than a paper currency; where it exists a laboring man
+dependent on his wages need fear less than any other member of the
+community the evils of bad banking. Benton's idea of the danger to the
+masses from "the money power" was exaggerated; but in advocating a sound
+gold currency he took the surest way to overcome any possible dangerous
+tendency. A craze for "soft," or dishonest, money--a greenback movement,
+or one for short weight silver dollars--works more to the disadvantage
+of the whole mass of the people than even to that of the capitalists; it
+is a move directly in the interests of "the money power," which its
+loud-mouthed advocates are ostensibly opposing in the interests of
+democracy.
+
+Benton continued his speeches. The panic was now subsiding; there had
+not been time for Jackson's ruinous policy of making deposits in
+numerous state banks, and thereby encouraging wild inflation of credit,
+to bear fruit and, as it afterwards did, involve the whole country in
+financial disaster. Therefore Benton was able to exult greatly over the
+favorable showing of affairs in the report of the secretary of the
+treasury. He also procured the passage of a gold currency law, which,
+however, fixed the ratio of value between gold and silver at sixteen to
+one; an improper proportion, but one which had prevailed for three
+centuries in the Spanish-American countries, from which he copied it. In
+consequence of this law gold, long banished, became once more a
+circulating medium of exchange.
+
+The Bank of the United States afterwards was turned into the State Bank
+of Pennsylvania; it was badly managed and finally became insolvent. The
+Jacksonians accepted its downfall as a vindication of their policy; but
+in reality it was due to causes not operative at the time of the great
+struggle between the president and the Senate over its continued
+existence. Certainly by no possible financial policy could it have
+produced such widespread ruin and distress as did the system introduced
+by Jackson.
+
+Long after the Bank controversy had lost all practical bearing it
+continued to be agitated by the chief parties to it, who still felt sore
+from the various encounters. Jackson assailed it again in his message; a
+friendly committee of the Senate investigated it and reported in its
+favor, besides going out of their way to rake up charges against Jackson
+and Benton. The latter replied in a long speech, and became involved in
+personalities with the chairman, Tyler of Virginia. Neither side paid
+attention to any but the partisan aspect of the question, and the
+discussions were absolutely profitless.
+
+The whole matter was threshed over again and again, long after nothing
+but chaff was left, during the debates on Benton's expunging resolution.
+Few now would defend this resolution. The original resolution of censure
+may have been of doubtful propriety; but it was passed, was entered on
+the record, and had become a part of the journal of the Senate. It would
+have been perfectly proper to pass another resolution condemning or
+reversing the original one, and approving the course of the president;
+but it was in the highest degree improper to set about what was in form
+falsifying the record. Still, Benton found plenty of precedents in the
+annals of other legislative bodies for what he proposed to do, and the
+country, as a whole, backed him up heartily. He was further stimulated
+by the knowledge that there was probably no other legislative act in
+which Jackson took such intense interest, or which could so gratify his
+pride; the mortification to Clay and Calhoun would be equally great.
+Benton's motion failed more than once, but the complexion of the Senate
+was rapidly changed by the various states substituting Democratic for
+Whig or anti-Jackson senators. Some of the changes were made, as in
+Virginia, by senators refusing to vote for the expunging resolution, as
+required by the state legislatures, and then resigning their seats,
+pursuant to a ridiculous theory of the ultra Democrats, which, if
+carried out, would completely nullify the provision for a six year's
+senatorial term. Finally, at the very close of Jackson's administration,
+Benton found himself with a fair majority behind him, and made the final
+move. His speech was of course mainly filled with a highly colored
+account of the blessings wrought for the American people by Andrew
+Jackson, and equally of course the latter was compared at length to a
+variety of ancient Roman worthies. The final scene in the Senate had an
+element of the comic about it. The expungers held a caucus and agreed to
+sit the session out until the resolution was passed; and with prudent
+forethought Benton, well aware that when hungry and tired his followers
+might show less inflexibility of purpose, provided in an adjoining
+committee-room "an ample supply of cold hams, turkeys, rounds of beef,
+pickles, wines, and cups of hot coffee," wherewith to inspirit the
+faint-hearted.
+
+Fortified by the refreshments, the expungers won a complete victory. If
+the language of Jackson's admirers was overdrawn and strained to the
+last degree in lauding him for every virtue that he had or had not, it
+must be remembered that his opponents went quite as far wrong on the
+other side in their denunciations and extravagant prophecies of gloom.
+Webster made a very dignified and forcible speech in closing the
+argument against the resolution, but Calhoun and Clay were much less
+moderate,--the latter drawing a vivid picture of a rapidly approaching
+reign of lawless military violence, and asserting that his opponents had
+"extinguished one of the brightest and purest lights that ever burnt at
+the altar of civil liberty." As a proper finale Jackson, to show his
+appreciation, gave a great dinner to the expungers and their wives,
+Benton sitting at the head of the table. Jackson and Benton solemnly
+thought that they were taking part in a great act of justice, and were
+amusingly unable to see the comic side of their acts. They probably
+really believed most of their own denunciations of the Bank, and very
+possibly thought that the wickedness of its followers might tempt them
+to do any desperate deed. At any rate they enjoyed posing alike to
+themselves and to the public as persons of antique virtue, who had
+risked both life and reputation in a hazardous but successful attempt to
+save the liberties of the people from the vast and hostile forces of the
+aristocratic "money power."
+
+The best verdict on the expunging resolution was given by Webster when
+he characterized the whole affair as one which, if it were not regarded
+as a ruthless violation of a sacred instrument, would appear to be
+little elevated above the character of a contemptible farce.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+THE DISTRIBUTION OF THE SURPLUS.
+
+
+Benton was supremely self-satisfied with the part he had played in the
+struggle with the Bank. But very few thinking men would now admit that
+his actions, as a whole, on the occasion in question, were to his
+credit, although in the matter of the branch drafts he was perfectly
+right, and in that of the re-charter at least occupied defensible
+ground. His general views on monetary matters, however, were sound, and
+on some of the financial questions that shortly arose he occupied a
+rather lonely pre-eminence of good sense among his fellow senators; such
+being particularly the case as regards the various mischievous schemes
+in relation to disposing of the public lands, and of the money drawn
+from their sale. The revenue derived from all sources, including these
+sales of public lands, had for some years been much in excess of the
+governmental expenses, and a surplus had accumulated in the treasury.
+This surplus worked more damage than any deficit would have done.
+
+There were gold mines in the Southern States, which had been growing
+more and more productive; and, as the cost of freighting the bullion was
+excessive, a bill was introduced to establish branch mints at New
+Orleans and in the gold regions of Georgia and North Carolina. Benton
+advocated this strongly, as a constitutional right of the South and
+West, and as greatly in the interest of those two sections; and also as
+being another move in favor of a hard-money currency as opposed to one
+of paper. There was strong opposition to the bill; many of the Whigs
+having been carried so far by their heated devotion to the United States
+Bank in its quarrel that they had become paper-money men. But the vote
+was neither sectional nor partisan in its character. Clay led the
+opposition, while Webster supported Benton.
+
+Before this time propositions to distribute among the states the revenue
+from the public lands had become common; and they were succeeded by
+propositions to distribute the lands themselves, and then by others to
+distribute all the surplus revenue. Calhoun finally introduced an
+amendment to the Constitution to enable the surplus in the treasury
+during the next eight years to be distributed among the various states;
+the estimate being that for the time mentioned there would be about nine
+millions surplus annually. Benton attacked the proposal very ably,
+showing the viciousness of a scheme which would degrade every state
+government into the position of a mendicant, and would allow money to be
+collected from the citizens with one hand in order to be given back to
+them with the other; and also denying that the surplus would reach
+anything like the dimensions indicated. He ridiculed the idea of making
+a constitutional amendment to cover so short a period of time; and
+stated that he would greatly prefer to see the price paid for public
+lands by incoming settlers reduced, and what surplus there was expended
+on strengthening the defenses of the United States against foreign
+powers. This last proposition was eminently proper. We were then, as
+always, in our chronic state of utter defenselessness against any
+hostile attack, and yet were in imminent danger of getting embroiled
+with at least one great power--France. Our danger is always that we
+shall spend too little, and not too much, in keeping ourselves prepared
+for foreign war. Calhoun's resolution was a total failure, and was never
+even brought to a vote.
+
+Benton's proposed method of using the surplus came in with peculiar
+propriety on account of the conduct of the Whigs and Nullifiers in
+joining to oppose the appropriation of three millions of dollars for
+purposes of defense, which was provided for in the general fortification
+bill. The House passed this bill by a great majority. It was eminently
+proper that we should at once take steps to provide for the very
+possible contingency of a war with France, as the relations with that
+power were growing more threatening every day; but the opposition of the
+anti-Jackson men to the administration and to all its measures had
+become so embittered that they were willing to run the risk of seriously
+damaging the national credit and honor, if they could thereby score a
+point against their political adversaries. Accordingly, under the lead
+of Webster, Clay, and Calhoun, they defeated the bill in the Senate, in
+spite of all that could be done to save it by Benton, who, whatever his
+faults, was always patriotic. The appropriation had been very irregular
+in form, and under ordinary circumstances there would have been good
+justification for inquiring into it before permitting its passage; but
+under the circumstances its defeat at the moment was most unfortunate.
+For the president had been pressing France, even to the point of
+tolerably plain threats, in order to induce or compel her to fulfill the
+conditions of the recent treaty by which she had bound herself to pay a
+considerable indemnity, long owing by her to the United States for
+depredations on our commerce. Now she menaced war, avowedly on the
+ground that we were unprepared to resist her; and this vote in the
+Senate naturally led the French government to suppose that Jackson was
+not sustained by the country in the vigorous position which he had
+assumed. In speaking on the message of the president which alluded to
+this state of affairs, Benton strongly advocated our standing firmly for
+our rights, making a good speech, which showed much historical learning.
+He severely reproached the anti-administration senators for their
+previous conduct in causing the loss of the defense appropriation bill,
+and for preferring to do worse than waste the surplus by distributing it
+among the different states instead of applying it according to the
+provisions of that wise measure.
+
+This brought on a bitter wrangle, in which Benton certainly had the best
+of it. Calhoun was in favor of humiliating non-resistance; he never
+advocated warlike measures when the dignity of the nation was at stake,
+fond though he was of threatening violence on behalf of slavery or that
+form of secession known as nullification. Benton quoted from speeches in
+the French Chamber of Deputies to show that the French were encouraged
+to take the position that they did on account of the action of the
+Senate, and the disposition shown by a majority among the senators
+rather to pull down the president in a party struggle than to uphold him
+in his efforts to save the national honor in a contest with France. A
+curious feature of his speech was that in which he warned the latter
+power that, in the event of a conflict, it would have to do with a
+branch of the same race which, "from the days of Agincourt and Crecy, of
+Blenheim and Ramillies, down to the days of Salamanca and Waterloo, has
+always known perfectly well how to deal with the impetuous and fiery
+courage of the French." This sudden out-cropping of what, in Bentonian
+English, might be called Pan-Anglo-Saxon sentiment was all the more
+surprising inasmuch as both Benton himself and the party to which he
+belonged were strongly anti-English in their way of looking at our
+foreign policy, at least so far as North America was concerned. In the
+end France yielded, though trying to maintain her dignity by stating
+that she had not done so, and the United States received what was due
+them.
+
+Benton strongly opposed the payment by the United States of the private
+claims of its citizens for damages arising from the French spoliations
+at the end of the last century. He pointed out that the effort to pay
+such claims, scores of years after the time of their accruing, rarely
+benefits any of the parties originally in interest, and can only do real
+service to dishonest speculators. His speech on this matter would not be
+bad reading for some of the pension-jobbing congressmen of the present
+day, and their supporters; but as concerned these French claims he could
+have been easily answered.
+
+In the controversy over the bill introduced by Clay, to distribute the
+revenue derived from the public lands among the states for the next five
+years, Benton showed to great advantage compared both to the introducer
+of the bill himself, and to Webster, his supporter. He had all along
+taken the view of the land question that would be natural to a
+far-seeing Western statesman desirous of encouraging immigration. He
+wished the public lands to be sold in small parcels to actual settlers,
+at prices that would allow any poor man who was thrifty to take up a
+claim. He had already introduced a bill to sell them at graduated
+prices, the minimum being established at a dollar and twenty-five cents
+an acre; but if land remained unsold at this rate for three years it was
+then to be sold for what it would bring in the market. This bill passed
+the Senate, but failed in the House.
+
+In opposing Clay's distribution scheme Benton again brought forward his
+plan of using the surplus to provide for the national defenses; and in
+his speech showed the strongly national turn of his mind, saying:--
+
+ In this great system of national defense the whole Union is equally
+ interested; for the country, in all that concerns its defenses, is
+ but a unit, and every section is interested in the defense of every
+ other section, and every individual citizen is interested in the
+ defense of the whole population. It is in vain to say that the navy
+ is on the sea, and the fortifications on the sea-board, and that the
+ citizens in the interior states, or in the valley of the
+ Mississippi, have no interest in these remote defenses. Such an idea
+ is mistaken and delusive; the inhabitant of Missouri or of Indiana
+ has a direct interest in keeping open the mouths of the rivers,
+ defending the sea-port towns, and preserving a naval force that will
+ protect the produce of his labor in crossing the ocean and arriving
+ safely in foreign markets.
+
+Benton's patriotism always included the whole country in spite of the
+strength of his local sympathies.
+
+The bill passed the Senate by a rather close vote, and went to the
+House, where it soon become evident that it was doomed to failure. There
+was another bill, practically of much the same import, before the
+Senate, providing for the distribution of the surplus among the states
+in proportion to their electoral votes, but omitting the excellent
+proviso concerning the defenses. To suit the views of Calhoun and the
+sticklers for strict construction generally, the form of this rival bill
+was changed, so that the "distribution" purported to be a "deposit"
+merely; the money being nominally only loaned to the states, who pledged
+their faith to return it when Congress should call for it. As it was of
+course evident that such a loan would never be repaid, the substitution
+of "deposit" for "distribution" can only be regarded as a verbal change
+to give the doctrinaires a loop-hole for escape from their previous
+position; they all took advantage of it, and the bill received
+overwhelming support, and was passed by both houses.
+
+Benton, however, stood out against it to the last, and in a very
+powerful speech foretold the evils which the plan would surely work. He
+scornfully exposed the way in which some of the members were trying, by
+a trick of wording, to hide the nature of the bill they were enacting
+into a law, and thus to seem to justify themselves for the support they
+were giving it. "It is in name a deposit; in form, a loan; in essence
+and design, a distribution," said Benton. He ridiculed the attitude of
+the hair-splitting strict constructionists, like Calhoun, who had
+always pretended most scrupulously to respect the exact wording of the
+Constitution, and who had previously refused to vote for distribution on
+the ground that it was unconstitutional:--
+
+ At the commencement of the present session a proposition was made
+ [by Calhoun] to amend the Constitution, to permit this identical
+ distribution to be made. That proposition is now upon our calendar,
+ for the action of Congress. All at once it is discovered that a
+ change of name will do as well as a change of the Constitution.
+ Strike out the word "distribute" and insert the word "deposit," and
+ incontinently the impediment is removed; the constitutional
+ difficulty is surmounted, and the distribution can be made.
+
+He showed that to the states themselves the moneys distributed would
+either be useless, or else--and much more probably--they would be
+fruitful sources of corruption and political debauchery. He was quite
+right. It would have been very much better to have destroyed the surplus
+than to have distributed it as was actually done. None of the states
+gained any real benefit by the transaction; most were seriously harmed.
+At the best, the money was squandered in the rage for public
+improvements that then possessed the whole people; often it was stolen
+outright, or never accounted for. In the one case, it was an incentive
+to extravagance; in the other, it was a corruption fund. Yet the
+popular feeling was strongly in favor of the measure at the time, and
+Benton was almost the only public man of note who dared to resist it. On
+this occasion, as in the closing act of the struggle with the
+Nullifiers, he showed more backbone than did his great chief; for
+Jackson signed the bill, although criticising it most forcibly and
+pungently.
+
+The success of this measure naturally encouraged the presentation of
+others. Clay attempted to revive his land-money distribution bill, but
+was defeated, mainly through Benton's efforts. Three or four other
+similar schemes, including one of Calhoun's, also failed. Finally a
+clause providing for a further "deposit" of surplus moneys with the
+states was tacked to a bill appropriating money for defenses, thereby
+loading it down so that it was eventually lost. In the Senate the
+"deposit" amendment was finally struck out, in spite of the opposition
+of Clay, Calhoun, and Webster. Throughout the whole discussion of the
+distribution of the surplus Benton certainly shines by comparison with
+any one of his three great senatorial rivals.
+
+He shows to equally great advantage compared to them in the part taken
+by him in reference to Jackson's so-called specie circulars. The craze
+for speculation had affected the sales of public lands, which were
+increasing at an extraordinary rate, nearly twenty-five million dollars'
+worth being sold in 1836. As a rule, the payments were made in the notes
+of irresponsible banks, gotten up in many cases by the land speculators
+themselves. The sales were running up to five millions a month, with
+prospect of a boundless increase, so that all the public land bade fair
+to be converted into inconvertible paper. Benton had foreseen the evil
+results attending such a change, and, though well aware that he was
+opposing powerful interests in his own section of the country, had
+already tried to put a stop to it by law. In his speech he had stated
+that the unprecedented increase in the sale of public lands was due to
+the accommodations received by speculators from worthless banks, whose
+notes in small denominations would be taken to some distant part of the
+country, whence it would be a long time before they were returned and
+presented for payment. The speculators, with paper of which the real
+value was much below par, could outbid settlers and cultivators who
+could only offer specie, or notes that were its equivalent. He went on
+to say that "the effect was equally injurious to every interest
+concerned--except the banks and the speculators: it was injurious to the
+treasury, which was filling up with paper; to the new states, which
+were flooded with paper; and to settlers and cultivators, who were
+outbid by speculators loaded with this borrowed paper. A return to
+specie payments for lands was the remedy for all these evils."
+
+Benton's reasoning was perfectly sound. The effects on settlers, on the
+new states, and on the government itself were precisely such as he
+described, and the proposed remedy was the right one. But his bill
+failed; for the Whigs, including even Webster, had by this time worked
+themselves up until they were fairly crazy at the mere mention of
+paper-money banks.
+
+Jackson, however, not daunted by the fate of the bill, got Benton to
+draw up a treasury order, and had it issued. This served the same
+purpose, as it forbade the land-offices to receive anything but gold and
+silver in payment for land. It was not issued until Congress had
+adjourned, for fear that body might counteract it by a law; and this was
+precisely what was attempted at the next session, when a joint
+resolution was passed rescinding the order, and practically endeavoring
+to impose the worthless paper currency of the states upon the federal
+government. Benton stood almost alone in the fight he made against this
+resolution, although the right of the matter was so plainly on his
+side. In his speech he foretold clearly the coming of the great
+financial crisis that was then near at hand. The resolution, however,
+amounted to nothing, as it turned out, for it was passed so late in the
+session that the president, by simply withholding his signature from it,
+was enabled to prevent it from having effect.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+THE SLAVE QUESTION APPEARS IN POLITICS.
+
+
+Towards the close of Jackson's administration, slavery for the first
+time made its permanent appearance in national politics; although for
+some years yet it had little or no influence in shaping the course of
+political movements. In 1833 the abolition societies of the North came
+into prominence; they had been started a couple of years previously.
+
+Black slavery was such a grossly anachronistic and un-American form of
+evil, that it is difficult to discuss calmly the efforts to abolish it,
+and to remember that many of these efforts were calculated to do, and
+actually did, more harm than good. We are also very apt to forget that
+it was perfectly possible and reasonable for enlightened and virtuous
+men, who fully recognized it as an evil, yet to prefer its continuance
+to having it interfered with in a way that would produce even worse
+results. Black slavery in Hayti was characterized by worse abuse than
+ever was the case in the United States; yet, looking at the condition
+of that republic now, it may well be questioned whether it would not
+have been greatly to her benefit in the end to have had slavery continue
+a century or so longer,--its ultimate extinction being certain,--rather
+than to have had her attain freedom as she actually did, with the
+results that have flowed from her action. When an evil of colossal size
+exists, it is often the case that there is no possible way of dealing
+with it that will not itself be fraught with baleful results. Nor can
+the ultra-philanthropic method be always, or even often, accepted as the
+best. If there is one question upon which the philanthropists of the
+present day, especially the more emotional ones, are agreed, it is that
+any law restricting Chinese immigration is an outrage; yet it seems
+incredible that any man of even moderate intelligence should not see
+that no greater calamity could now befall the United States than to have
+the Pacific slope fill up with a Mongolian population.
+
+The cause of the Abolitionists has had such a halo shed round it by the
+after course of events, which they themselves in reality did very little
+to shape, that it has been usual to speak of them with absurdly
+exaggerated praise. Their courage, and for the most part their
+sincerity, cannot be too highly spoken of, but their share in
+abolishing slavery was far less than has commonly been represented; any
+single non-abolitionist politician, like Lincoln or Seward, did more
+than all the professional Abolitionists combined really to bring about
+its destruction. The abolition societies were only in a very restricted
+degree the causes of the growing feeling in the North against slavery;
+they are rather to be regarded as themselves manifestations or
+accompaniments of that feeling. The anti-slavery outburst in the
+Northern States over the admission of Missouri took place a dozen years
+before there was an abolition society in existence; and the influence of
+the professional abolitionists upon the growth of the anti-slavery
+sentiment as often as not merely warped it and twisted it out of proper
+shape,--as when at one time they showed a strong inclination to adopt
+disunion views, although it was self-evident that by no possibility
+could slavery be abolished unless the Union was preserved. Their
+tendency towards impracticable methods was well shown in the position
+they assumed towards him who was not only the greatest American, but
+also the greatest man, of the nineteenth century; for during all the
+terrible four years that sad, strong, patient Lincoln worked and
+suffered for the people, he had to dread the influence of the extreme
+Abolitionists only less than that of the Copperheads. Many of their
+leaders possessed no good qualities beyond their fearlessness and
+truth--qualities that were also possessed by the Southern fire-eaters.
+They belonged to that class of men that is always engaged in some
+agitation or other; only it happened that in this particular agitation
+they were right. Wendell Phillips may be taken as a very good type of
+the whole. His services against slavery prior to the war should always
+be remembered with gratitude; but after the war, and until the day of
+his death, his position on almost every public question was either
+mischievous or ridiculous, and usually both.
+
+When the abolitionist movement started it was avowedly designed to be
+cosmopolitan in character; the originators looked down upon any merely
+national or patriotic feeling. This again deservedly took away from
+their influence. In fact, it would have been most unfortunate had the
+majority of the Northerners been from the beginning in hearty accord
+with the Abolitionists; at the best it would have resulted at that time
+in the disruption of the Union and the perpetuation of slavery in the
+South.
+
+But after all is said, the fact remains, that on the main issue the
+Abolitionists were at least working in the right direction. Sooner or
+later, by one means or another, slavery had to go. It is beyond doubt a
+misfortune that in certain districts the bulk of the population should
+be composed of densely ignorant negroes, often criminal or vicious in
+their instincts; but such is the case, and the best, and indeed the only
+proper course to pursue, is to treat them with precisely the same
+justice that is meted out to whites. The effort to do so in time
+immediately past has not resulted so successfully as was hoped and
+expected; but nevertheless no other way would have worked as well.
+
+Slavery was chiefly responsible for the streak of coarse and brutal
+barbarism which ran through the Southern character, and which marked the
+ferocious outcry instantly raised by the whole Southern press against
+the Abolitionists. There had been an abortive negro rising in Virginia
+almost at the same time that the abolitionist movement first came into
+prominence; and this fact added to the rage and terror with which the
+South regarded the latter. The clamor against the North was deafening;
+and though it soon subsided for the time being, it never afterwards
+entirely died away. As has been shown already, there had always been a
+strong separatist feeling in the South; but hitherto its manifestations
+had been local and sporadic, never affecting all the states at the same
+time; for it had never happened that the cause which called forth any
+particular manifestation was one bearing on the whole South alike. The
+alien and sedition laws were more fiercely resented in Virginia and
+Kentucky than in South Carolina; the tariff, which so angered the
+latter, pleased Louisiana; and Georgia and Alabama alone were affected
+by the presence of great Indian communities within their borders. But
+slavery was an interest common to the whole South. When it was felt to
+be in any way menaced, all Southerners came together for its protection;
+and, from the time of the rise of the Abolitionists onward, the
+separatist movement throughout the South began to identify itself with
+the maintenance of slavery, and gradually to develop greater and greater
+strength. Its growth was furthered and hastened by the actions of the
+more ambitious and unscrupulous of the Southern politicians, who saw
+that it offered a chance for them to push themselves forward, and who
+were perfectly willing to wreak almost irreparable harm to the nation if
+by so doing they could advance their own selfish interests. It was in
+reference to these politicians that Benton quoted with approval a letter
+from ex-President Madison, which ran:--
+
+ The danger is not to be concealed, that the sympathy arising from
+ known causes, and the inculcated impression of a permanent
+ incompatibility of interests between the South and the North may put
+ it in the power of popular leaders, aspiring to the highest
+ stations, to unite the South, on some critical occasion, in a course
+ that will end by creating a new theatre of great, though inferior,
+ interest. In pursuing this course the first and most obvious step is
+ nullification, the next secession, and the last a farewell
+ separation.
+
+This was a pretty good forecast of the crisis that was precipitated by
+the greedy and reckless ambition of the secessionist leaders in 1860.
+The moral difference between Benedict Arnold on the one hand, and Aaron
+Burr or Jefferson Davis on the other, is precisely the difference that
+obtains between a politician who sells his vote for money and one who
+supports a bad measure in consideration of being given some high
+political position.
+
+The Abolitionists immediately contrived to bring themselves before the
+notice of Congress in two ways; by the presentation of petitions for the
+abolition of slavery in the District of Columbia, and by sending out to
+the Southern States a shoal of abolition pamphlets, newspapers, and
+rather ridiculous illustrated cuts. What the precise point of the last
+proceeding was no one can tell; the circulation of such writings as
+theirs in the South could not possibly serve any good purpose. But they
+had a right to send what they wished, and the conduct of many of the
+Southerners in trying to get a federal law passed to prohibit their
+writings from being carried in the mail was as wrong as it was foolish;
+while the brutal clamor raised in the South against the whole North as
+well as against the Abolitionists, and the conduct of certain Southern
+legislatures in practically setting prices on the heads of the leaders
+in the objectionable movement, in turn angered the North and gave the
+Abolitionists ten-fold greater strength than they would otherwise have
+had.
+
+The question first arose upon the presentation of a perfectly proper and
+respectful petition sent to the Senate by a society of Pennsylvania
+Quakers, and praying for the abolition of slavery in the District of
+Columbia. The District was solely under the control of Congress, and was
+the property of the nation at large, so that Congress was the proper and
+the only body to which any petition concerning the affairs of the
+District could be sent; and if the right of petition meant anything, it
+certainly meant that the people, or any portion thereof, should have the
+right to petition their representatives in regard to their own affairs.
+Yet certain Southern extremists, under the lead of Calhoun, were
+anxious to refuse to receive the paper. Benton voted in favor of
+receiving it, and was followed in his action by a number of other
+Southern senators. He spoke at length on the subject, and quite
+moderately, even crediting the petitioners, or many of them, with being
+"good people, aiming at benevolent objects, and endeavoring to
+ameliorate the condition of one part of the human race, without
+inflicting calamities on another part," which was going very far indeed
+for a slave-holding senator of that time. He was of course totally
+opposed to abolition and the Abolitionists, and showed that the only
+immediate effect of the movement had been to make the lot of the slaves
+still worse, and for the moment to do away with any chance of
+intelligently discussing the question of emancipation. For, like many
+other Southerners, he fondly cherished the idea of gradual peaceful
+emancipation,--an idea which the course of events made wholly visionary,
+but which, under the circumstances, might well have been realized. He
+proceeded to give most questionable praise to the North for some acts as
+outrageous and disgraceful as were ever perpetrated by its citizens,
+stating that--
+
+ Their conduct was above all praise, above all thanks, above all
+ gratitude. They had chased off the foreign emissaries, silenced the
+ gabbling tongues of female dupes, and dispersed the assemblages,
+ whether fanatical, visionary, or incendiary, of all that congregated
+ to preach against evils that affected others, not themselves; and to
+ propose remedies to aggravate the disease which they had pretended
+ to cure. They had acted with a noble spirit. They had exerted a
+ vigor beyond all law. They had obeyed the enactments, not of the
+ statute-book, but of the heart.
+
+These fervent encomiums were fully warranted by the acts of various
+Northern mobs, that had maltreated abolitionist speakers, broken up
+anti-slavery meetings, and committed numerous other deeds of lawless
+violence. But however flattered the Northerners of that generation may
+have been, in feeling that they thoroughly deserved Benton's eulogy, it
+is doubtful if their descendants will take quite the same pride in
+looking back to it. An amusing incident of the debate was Calhoun's
+attack upon one of the most subservient allies the South ever had in the
+Northern States; he caused to be sent up to the desk and read an
+abolition paper published in New Hampshire, which contained a bitter
+assault upon Franklin Pierce, then a member of Congress. Nominally he
+took this course to show that there was much greater strength in the
+abolition movement, and therefore much greater danger to the South, than
+the Northern senators were willing to admit; in reality he seems to
+have acted partly from wanton malice, partly from overbearing contempt
+for the truckling allies and apologists of slavery in the North, and
+partly from a desire not to see the discussion die out, but rather, in
+spite of his continual profession to the contrary, to see it maintained
+as a standing subject of irritation. He wished to refuse to receive the
+petitions, on the ground that they touched a subject that ought not even
+to be discussed; yet he must have known well that he was acting in the
+very way most fitted to give rise to discussion,--a fact that was
+pointed out to him by Benton, in a caustic speech. He also took the
+ground that the question of emancipation affected the states
+exclusively, and that Congress had no more jurisdiction over the subject
+in the District of Columbia than she had in the State of North Carolina.
+This precious contribution to the true interpretation of the
+Constitution was so farcically and palpably false that it is incredible
+that he should himself have believed what he was saying. He was still
+smarting from the nullification controversy; he had seceded from his
+party, and was sore with disappointed ambition; and it seems very
+improbable that he was honest in his professions of regret at seeing
+questions come up which would disturb the Union. On the contrary, much
+of the opposition he was continually making to supposititious federal
+and Northern encroachments on the rights of the South must have been
+merely factious, and it seems likely that, partly from a feeling of
+revenge and partly with the hope of gratifying his ambition, he was
+anxious to do all he could to work the South up to the highest pitch of
+irritation, and keep her there until there was a dissolution of the
+Union. Benton evidently thought that this was the case; and in reading
+the constant threats of nullification and secession which run through
+all Calhoun's speeches, and the innumerable references he makes to the
+alleged fact that he had come off victorious in his treasonable struggle
+over the tariff in 1833, it is difficult not to accept Benton's view of
+the matter. He always spoke of Calhoun with extreme aversion, and there
+were probably moments when he was inclined heartily to sympathize with
+Jackson's death-bed regret that he had not hung the South Carolina
+Nullifier. Doubtless in private life, or as regards any financial
+matters, Calhoun's conduct was always blameless; but it may well be that
+he has received far more credit for purity of motive in his public
+conduct than his actions fairly entitle him to.
+
+Calhoun was also greatly exercised over the circulation of abolition
+documents in the South. At his request a committee of five was appointed
+to draft a bill on the subject; he was chairman, and three of the other
+four members were from the Slave States; yet his report was so extreme
+that only one of the latter would sign it with him. He introduced into
+it a long argument to the effect that the Constitution was a mere
+compact between sovereign states, and inferentially that nullification
+and secession were justifiable and constitutional; and then drew a vivid
+picture of the unspeakable horrors with which, as he contended, the
+action of the Northern Abolitionists menaced the South. The bill
+subjected to penalties any postmaster who should knowingly receive and
+put into the mail any publication touching slavery, to go into any state
+which had forbidden by law the circulation of such a publication. In
+discussing this bill he asserted that Congress, in refusing to pass it,
+would be cooeperating with the Abolitionists; and then he went on to
+threaten as usual that in such case nullification or secession would
+become necessary. Benton had become pretty well tired of these threats,
+his attachment to the Union even exceeding his dislike to seeing slavery
+meddled with; and he headed the list of half a dozen Southern senators
+who joined with the bulk of the Northerners in defeating the bill,
+which was lost by a vote of twenty-five to nineteen. A few of the
+Northern "dough-faces" voted with Calhoun. There is a painfully striking
+contrast between the courage shown by Benton, a slave-holder with a
+slave-holding constituency, in opposing this bill, and the obsequious
+subserviency to the extreme Southern feeling shown on the same occasion
+by Wright, Van Buren, and Buchanan--fit representatives of the sordid
+and odious political organizations of New York and Pennsylvania.
+
+Several other questions came up towards the end of Jackson's
+administration which were more or less remotely affected by the feeling
+about slavery. Benton succeeded in getting a bill through to extend the
+boundaries of the State of Missouri so as to take in territory lying
+northwest of her previous limit, the Indian title to which was
+extinguished by treaty. This annexed land lay north of the boundary for
+slave territory established by the Missouri Compromise; but Benton
+experienced no difficulty in getting his bill through. It was not,
+however, in the least a move designed in the interests of the slave
+power. Missouri's feeling was precisely that which would actuate Oregon
+or Washington Territory to-day, if either wished to annex part of
+Northern Idaho.
+
+The territories of Arkansas and Michigan had applied for admission into
+the Union as states; and as one would be a free and the other a slave
+state, it was deemed proper that they should come in together. Benton
+himself urged the admission of the free state of Michigan, while the
+interests of Arkansas were confided to Buchanan of Pennsylvania. The
+slavery question entered but little into the matter; although some
+objections were raised on that score, as well as on account of the
+irregular manner in which the would-be states had acted in preparing for
+admission. The real ground of opposition to the admission of the two new
+states was political, as it was known that they could both be relied
+upon for Democratic majorities at the approaching presidential election.
+Many Whigs, therefore, both from the North and the South, opposed it.
+
+The final removal of the Cherokees from Georgia and Alabama was brought
+about in 1836 by means of a treaty with those Indians. Largely through
+the instrumentality of Benton, and in spite of the opposition of Clay,
+Calhoun, and Webster, this instrument was ratified in the Senate by the
+close vote of thirty-one to fifteen. Although new slave territory was
+thus acquired, the vote on the treaty was factional and not sectional,
+being equally divided between the Northern and the Southern States,
+Calhoun and six other Southern senators opposing it, chiefly from
+hostility to the administration. The removal of the Indians was probably
+a necessity; undoubtedly it worked hardship in individual instances, but
+on the whole it did not in the least retard the civilization of the
+tribe, which was fully paid for its losses; and moreover, in its new
+home, continued to make progress in every way until it became involved
+in the great civil war, and received a setback from which it has not yet
+recovered. These Cherokees were almost the last Indians left in any
+number east of the Mississippi, and their removal solved the Indian
+problem so far as the old states were concerned.
+
+Later on Benton went to some trouble to disprove the common statement
+that we have robbed the original Indian occupants of their lands. He
+showed by actual statistics that up to 1840 we had paid to the Indians
+eighty-five millions of dollars for land purchases, which was over five
+times as much as the United States gave the great Napoleon for
+Louisiana; and about three times as much as we paid France, Spain, and
+Mexico together for the purchase of Louisiana, Florida, and California;
+while the amount of land received in return would not equal any one of
+these purchases, and was but a fractional part of Louisiana or
+California. We paid the Cherokees for their territory exactly as much as
+we paid the French, at the height of their power, for Louisiana; while
+as to the Creek and Choctaw nations, we paid each more for their lands
+than we paid for Louisiana and Florida combined. The dealings of the
+government with the Indian have often been unwise, and sometimes unjust;
+but they are very far indeed from being so black as is commonly
+represented, especially when the tremendous difficulties of the case are
+taken into account.
+
+Far more important than any of these matters was the acknowledgment of
+the independence of Texas; and in this, as well as in the troubles with
+Mexico which sprang from it, slavery again played a prominent part,
+although not nearly so important at first as has commonly been
+represented. Doubtless the slave-holders worked hard to secure
+additional territory out of which to form new slave states; but Texas
+and California would have been in the end taken by us, had there not
+been a single slave in the Mississippi valley. The greed for the
+conquest of new lands which characterized the Western people had nothing
+whatever to do with the fact that some of them owned slaves. Long before
+there had been so much as the faintest foreshadowing of the importance
+which the slavery question was to assume, the West had been eagerly
+pressing on to territorial conquest, and had been chafing and fretting
+at the restraint put upon it, and at the limits set to its strivings by
+the treaties established with foreign powers. The first settlers beyond
+the Alleghanies, and their immediate successors, who moved down along
+the banks of the Ohio, the Cumberland, and the Tennessee, and thence out
+to the Mississippi itself, were not generally slave-holders; but they
+were all as anxious to wrest the Mississippi valley from the control of
+the French as their descendants were to overrun the Spanish lands lying
+along the Rio Grande. In other words, slavery had very little to do with
+the Western aggressions on Mexican territory, however it might influence
+the views of Southern statesmen as to lending support to the Western
+schemes.
+
+The territorial boundaries of all the great powers originally claiming
+the soil of the West--France, Spain, and the United States--were very
+ill-defined, there being no actual possession of the lands in dispute,
+and each power making a great showing on its own map. If the extreme
+views of any one were admitted, its adversary, for the time being,
+would have had nothing. Thus before the treaty of 1819 with Spain our
+nominal boundaries and those of the latter power in the West overlapped
+each other; and the extreme Western men persisted in saying that we had
+given up some of the territory which belonged to us because we had
+consented to adopt a middle line of division, and had not insisted
+upon being allowed the full extent of our claims. Benton always took
+this view of it, insisting that we had given up our rights by the
+adoption of this treaty. Many Southerners improved on this idea, and
+spoke of the desirability of "re-annexing" the territory we had
+surrendered,--endeavoring by the use of this very inappropriate word
+to give a color of right to their proceedings. As a matter of fact it
+was inevitable, as well as in the highest degree desirable for the good
+of humanity at large, that the American people should ultimately crowd
+out the Mexicans from their sparsely populated Northern provinces. But
+it was quite as desirable that this should not be done in the interests
+of slavery.
+
+American settlers had begun to press into the outlying Spanish province
+of Texas before the treaty of 1819 was ratified. Their numbers went on
+increasing, and at first the Mexican government, having achieved
+independence of Spain, encouraged their incoming. But it soon saw that
+their presence boded danger, and forbade further immigration; without
+effect, however, as the settlers and adventurers came thronging in as
+fast as ever. The Americans had brought their slaves with them, and when
+the Mexican government issued a decree liberating all slaves, they
+refused to be bound by it; and this decree was among the reasons alleged
+for their revolt. It has been represented as the chief if not the sole
+cause of the rebellion; but in reality it was not the cause at all; it
+was merely one of the occasions. Long before slavery had been abolished
+in Mexico, and before it had become an exciting question in the United
+States, the infant colony of Texas, when but a few months old, had made
+an abortive attempt at insurrection. Any one who has ever been on the
+frontier, and who knows anything whatever of the domineering, masterful
+spirit and bitter race prejudices of the white frontiersmen, will
+acknowledge at once that it was out of the question that the Texans
+should long continue under Mexican rule; and it would have been a great
+misfortune if they had. It was out of the question to expect them to
+submit to the mastery of the weaker race, which they were supplanting.
+Whatever might be the pretexts alleged for revolt, the real reasons were
+to be found in the deeply-marked difference of race, and in the absolute
+unfitness of the Mexicans then to govern themselves, to say nothing of
+governing others. During the dozen years that the American colony in
+Texas formed part of Mexico, the government of the latter went through
+revolution after revolution,--republic, empire, and military
+dictatorship following one another in bewildering succession. A state of
+things like this in the central government, especially when the latter
+belonged to a race alien in blood, language, religion, and habits of
+life, would warrant any community in determining to shift for itself.
+Such would probably have been the result even on people as sober and
+peaceable as the Texan settlers were warlike, reckless, and overbearing.
+
+But the majority of those who fought for Texan independence were not men
+who had already settled in that territory, but, on the contrary, were
+adventurers from the States, who had come to help their kinsmen and to
+win for themselves, by their own prowess, homes on what was then Mexican
+soil. It may as well be frankly admitted that the conduct of the
+American frontiersmen all through this contest can be justified on no
+possible plea of international morality or law. Still, we cannot judge
+them by the same standard we should apply to the dealings between highly
+civilized powers of approximately the same grade of virtue and
+intelligence. Two nations may be contemporaneous so far as mere years
+go, and yet, for all that, may be existing among surroundings which
+practically are centuries apart. The nineteenth century on the banks of
+the Thames, the Seine, and the Rhine, or even of the Hudson and the
+Potomac, was one thing; the nineteenth century in the valley of the Rio
+Grande was another and quite a different thing.
+
+The conquest of Texas should properly be classed with conquests like
+those of the Norse sea-rovers. The virtues and faults alike of the
+Texans were those of a barbaric age. They were restless, brave, and
+eager for adventure, excitement, and plunder; they were warlike,
+resolute, and enterprising; they had all the marks of a young and hardy
+race, flushed with the pride of strength and self-confidence. On the
+other hand they showed again and again the barbaric vies of
+boastfulness, ignorance, and cruelty; and they were utterly careless of
+the rights of others, looking upon the possessions of all weaker races
+as simply their natural prey. A band of settlers entering Texas was
+troubled by no greater scruples of conscience than, a thousand years
+before, a ship-load of Knut's followers might have felt at landing in
+England; and when they were engaged in warfare with the Mexicans they
+could count with certainty upon assistance from their kinsfolk who had
+been left behind, and for the same reasons that had enabled Rolf's
+Norsemen on the sea-coast of France to rely confidently on Scandinavian
+help in their quarrels with their Karling over-lords. The great Texan
+hero, Houston, who drank hard and fought hard, who was mighty in battle
+and crafty in council, with his reckless, boastful courage and his
+thirst for changes and risks of all kinds, his propensity for private
+brawling, and his queerly blended impulses for good and evil, might,
+with very superficial alterations of character, stand as the type of an
+old-world Viking--plus the virtue of a deep and earnestly patriotic
+attachment to his whole country. Indeed his career was as picturesque
+and romantic as that of Harold Hardraada himself, and, to boot, was much
+more important in its results.
+
+Thus the Texan struggle for independence stirred up the greatest
+sympathy and enthusiasm in the United States. The administration
+remained nominally neutral, but obviously sympathized with the Texans,
+permitting arms and men to be sent to their help, without hindrance, and
+indeed doing not a little discreditable bullying in the diplomatic
+dealing with Mexico, which that unfortunate community had her hands too
+full to resent. Still we did not commit a more flagrant breach of
+neutrality than, for instance, England was at the same time engaged in
+committing in reference to the civil wars in Spain. The victory of San
+Jacinto, in which Houston literally annihilated a Mexican force twice
+the strength of his own, virtually decided the contest; and the Senate
+at once passed a resolution recognizing the independence of Texas.
+Calhoun wished that body to go farther, and forthwith admit Texas as a
+state into the Union; but Benton and his colleagues were not prepared to
+take such a step at so early a date, although intending of course that
+in the end she should be admitted. There was little opposition to the
+recognition of Texan independence, although a few members of the lower
+house, headed by Adams, voted against it. While a cabinet officer, and
+afterwards as president, Adams had done all that he could to procure by
+purchase or treaty the very land which was afterwards the cause of our
+troubles with Mexico.
+
+Much the longest and most elaborate speech in favor of the recognition
+of Texan independence was made by Benton, to whom the subject appealed
+very strongly. He announced emphatically that he spoke as a Western
+senator, voicing the feeling of the West; and he was right. The
+opposition to the growth of our country on its southwestern frontier
+was almost confined to the Northeast; the West as a whole, free states
+as well as slave, heartily favored the movement. The settlers of Texas
+had come mainly, it is true, from the slave states; but there were also
+many who had been born north of the Ohio. It was a matter of comment
+that the guns used at San Jacinto had come from Cincinnati--and so had
+some of those who served them.
+
+In Benton's speech he began by pointing out the impropriety of doing
+what Calhoun had done in attempting to complicate the question of the
+recognition of Texan independence with the admission of Texas as a
+state. He then proceeded to claim for us a good deal more credit than we
+were entitled to for our efforts to preserve neutrality; drew a very
+true picture of the commercial bonds that united us to Mexico, and of
+the necessity that they should not be lightly broken; gave a spirited
+sketch of the course of the war hitherto, condemning without stint the
+horrible butcheries committed by the Mexicans, but touching gingerly on
+the savage revenge taken by the Americans in their turn; and ended by a
+eulogy of the Texans themselves, and their leaders.
+
+It was the age of "spread-eagle" speeches, and many of Benton's were no
+exception to the rule. As a people we were yet in a condition of raw,
+crude immaturity; and our very sensitiveness to foreign criticism--a
+sensitiveness which we now find it difficult to understand--and the
+realization of our own awkwardness made us inclined to brag about and
+exaggerate our deeds. Our public speakers and writers acquired the
+abominable habit of speaking of everything and everybody in the United
+States in the superlative; and therefore, as we claimed the highest rank
+for all our fourth-rate men, we put it out of our power to do justice to
+the really first-rate ones; and on account of our continual
+exaggerations we were not believed by others, and hardly even believed
+ourselves, when we presented estimates that were truthful. When every
+public speaker was declared to be a Demosthenes or a Cicero, people
+failed to realize that we actually had, in Webster, the greatest orator
+of the century; and when every general who whipped an Indian tribe was
+likened to Napoleon, we left ourselves no words with which properly to
+characterize the really heroic deeds done from time to time in the grim
+frontier warfare. All Benton's oratory took on this lurid coloring; and
+in the present matter his final eulogy of the Texan warriors was greatly
+strained, though it would hardly have been in his power to pay too high
+a tribute to some of the deeds they had done. It was the heroic age of
+the Southwest; though, as with every other heroic age, there were plenty
+of failings, vices, and weaknesses visible, if the stand-point of
+observation was only close enough.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+THE CHILDREN'S TEETH ARE SET ON EDGE.
+
+
+In his dealings with the Bank and his disposal of the deposits Jackson
+ate sour grapes to his heart's content; and now the teeth of his adopted
+child Van Buren were to be set on edge.
+
+Van Buren was the first product of what are now called "machine
+politics" that was put into the presidential chair. He owed his
+elevation solely to his own dexterous political manipulation, and to the
+fact that, for his own selfish ends, and knowing perfectly well their
+folly, he had yet favored or connived at all the actions into which the
+administration had been led either through Jackson's ignorance and
+violence, or by the crafty unscrupulousness and limited knowledge of the
+Kitchen Cabinet. The people at large would never have thought of him for
+president of their own accord; but he had become Jackson's political
+legatee, partly because he had personally endeared himself to the
+latter, and partly because the politicians felt that he was a man whom
+they could trust. The Jacksonian Democracy was already completely ruled
+by a machine, of which the most important cogs were the countless
+office-holders, whom the spoils system had already converted into a band
+of well-drilled political mercenaries. A political machine can only be
+brought to a state of high perfection in a party containing very many
+ignorant and uneducated voters; and the Jacksonian Democracy held in its
+ranks the mass of the ignorance of the country. Besides this such an
+organization requires, in order that it may do its most effective work,
+to have as its leader and figure-head a man who really has a great hold
+on the people at large, and who yet can be managed by such politicians
+as possess the requisite adroitness; and Jackson fulfilled both these
+conditions. The famous Kitchen Cabinet was so called because its members
+held no official positions, and yet were known to have Jackson more
+under their influence than was the case with his nominal advisers. They
+stood as the first representatives of a type common enough afterwards,
+and of which Thurlow Weed was perhaps the best example. They were men
+who held no public position, and yet devoted their whole time to
+politics, and pulled the strings in obedience to which the apparent
+public leaders moved.
+
+Jackson liked Van Buren because the latter had served him both
+personally and politically--indeed Jackson was incapable of
+distinguishing between a political and a personal service. This liking,
+however, would not alone have advanced Van Buren's interests, if the
+latter, who was himself a master in the New York state machine, had not
+also succeeded in enlisting the good-will and self-interest of the
+members of the Kitchen Cabinet and the other intimate advisers of the
+president. These first got Jackson himself thoroughly committed to Van
+Buren, and then used his name and enormous influence with the masses,
+coupled with their own mastery of machine methods, to bring about the
+New Yorker's nomination. In both these moves they had been helped, and
+Van Buren's chances had been immensely improved, by an incident that had
+seemed at the time very unfortunate for the latter. When he was
+secretary of state, in carrying on negotiations with Great Britain
+relative to the West India trade, he had so far forgotten what was due
+to the dignity of the nation as to allude disparagingly, while thus
+communicating with a foreign power, to the course pursued by the
+previous administration. This extension of party lines into our
+foreign diplomacy was discreditable to the whole country. The
+anti-administration men bitterly resented it, and emphasized their
+resentment by rejecting the nomination of Van Buren when Jackson wished
+to make him minister to England. Their action was perfectly proper, and
+Van Buren, by right, should have suffered for his undignified and
+unpatriotic conduct. But instead of this, and in accordance with the
+eternal unfitness of things, what really happened was that his rejection
+by the Senate actually helped him; for Jackson promptly made the quarrel
+his own, and the masses blindly followed their idol. Benton exultingly
+and truthfully said that the president's foes had succeeded in breaking
+a minister only to make a president.
+
+Van Buren faithfully served the mammon of unrighteousness, both in his
+own state and, later on, at Washington; and he had his reward, for he
+was advanced to the highest offices in the gift of the nation. He had no
+reason to blame his own conduct for his final downfall; he got just as
+far along as he could possibly get; he succeeded because of, and not in
+spite of, his moral shortcomings; if he had always governed his actions
+by a high moral standard he would probably never have been heard of.
+Still, there is some comfort in reflecting that, exactly as he was made
+president for no virtue of his own, but simply on account of being
+Jackson's heir, so he was turned out of the office, not for personal
+failure, but because he was taken as scapegoat, and had the sins of his
+political fathers visited on his own head.
+
+The opposition to the election of Van Buren was very much disorganized,
+the Whig party not yet having solidified,--indeed it always remained a
+somewhat fluid body. The election did not have the slightest sectional
+significance, slavery not entering into it, and both Northern and
+Southern States voting without the least reference to the geographical
+belongings of the candidates. He was the last true Jacksonian
+Democrat--Union Democrat--who became president; the South Carolina
+separatists and many of their fellows refused to vote for him. The
+Democrats who came after him, on the contrary, all had leanings to the
+separatist element which so soon obtained absolute control of the party,
+to the fierce indignation of men like Benton, Houston, and the other old
+Jacksonians, whose sincere devotion to the Union will always entitle
+them to the gratitude of every true American. As far as slavery was
+concerned, however, the Southerners had hitherto had nothing whatever to
+complain of in Van Buren's attitude. He was careful to inform them in
+his inaugural address that he would not sanction any attempt to
+interfere with the institution, whether by abolishing it in the
+District of Columbia or in any other way distasteful to the South. He
+also expressed a general hope that he would be able throughout to follow
+in the footsteps of Jackson.
+
+He had hardly been elected before the ruinous financial policy to which
+he had been party, but of which the effects, it must in justice be said,
+were aggravated by many of the actions of the Whigs, began to bear fruit
+after its kind. The use made of the surplus was bad enough, but the
+withdrawal of the United States deposits from one responsible bank and
+their distribution among scores of others, many of which were in the
+most rickety condition, was a step better calculated than any other to
+bring about a financial crash. It gave a stimulus to extravagance, and
+evoked the wildest spirit of speculation that the country had yet seen.
+The local banks, to whom the custody of the public moneys had been
+intrusted, used them as funds which they and their customers could
+hazard for the chance of gain; and the gambling spirit, always existent
+in the American mercantile community, was galvanized into furious life.
+The public dues were payable in the paper of these deposit banks and of
+the countless others that were even more irresponsible. The deposit
+banks thus became filled up with a motley mass of more or less worthless
+bank paper, which thus formed the "surplus," of which the distribution
+had caused Congress so much worry. Their condition was desperate, as
+they had been managed with the most reckless disregard for the morrow.
+Many of them had hardly kept as much specie in hand as would amount to
+one fiftieth of the aggregate of their deposits and other immediate
+liabilities.
+
+The people themselves were of course primarily responsible for the then
+existing state of affairs; but the government had done all in its power
+to make matters worse. Panics were certain to occur more or less often
+in so speculative and venturesome a mercantile community, where there
+was such heedless trust in the future and such recklessness in the use
+of credit. But the government, by its actions, immensely increased the
+severity of this particular panic, and became the prime factor in
+precipitating its advent. Benton tried to throw the blame mainly on the
+bankers and politicians, who, he alleged, had formed an alliance for the
+overthrow of the administration; but he made the plea more
+half-heartedly than usual, and probably in his secret soul acknowledged
+its puerility.
+
+The mass of the people were still happy in the belief that all things
+were working well, and that their show of unexampled prosperity and
+business activity denoted a permanent and healthy condition. Yet all the
+signs pointed to a general collapse at no distant date; an era of
+general bank suspensions, of depreciated currency, and of insolvency of
+the federal treasury was at hand. No one but Benton, however, seemed
+able to read the signs aright, and his foreboding utterances were
+laughed at or treated with scorn by his fellow statesmen. He recalled
+the memory of the times of 1818-19, when the treasury reports of one
+year showed a superfluity of revenue of which there was no want, and
+those of the next showed a deficit which required to be relieved by a
+loan; and he foretold an infinitely worse result from the inflation of
+the paper system, saying:--
+
+ Are we not at this moment, and from the same cause, realizing the
+ first part--the elusive and treacherous part--of this picture? and
+ must not the other, the sad and real sequel, speedily follow? The
+ day of revulsion in its effects may be more or less disastrous; but
+ come it must. The present bloat in the paper system cannot continue;
+ violent contraction must follow enormous expansion; a scene of
+ distress and suffering must ensue--to come of itself out of the
+ present state of things, without being stimulated and helped on by
+ our unwise legislation.... _I_ am one of those who _promised_ gold,
+ not paper; _I did not join in putting down the Bank of the United_
+ _States to put up a wilderness of local banks. I did not join in
+ putting down the currency of a national bank to put up a national
+ paper currency of a thousand local banks._ I did not strike Caesar to
+ make Antony master of Rome.
+
+These last sentences referred to the passage of the act repealing the
+specie circular and making the notes of the banks receivable in payment
+of federal dues. The act was most mischievous, and Benton's criticisms
+both of it and of the great Whig senator who pressed it were perfectly
+just; but they apply with quite as much weight to Jackson's dealings
+with the deposits, which Benton had defended.
+
+Benton foresaw the coming of the panic so clearly, and was so
+particularly uneasy about the immediate effects upon the governmental
+treasury, that he not only spoke publicly on the matter in the Senate,
+but even broached the subject in the course of a private conversation
+with the president-elect, to get him to try to make what preparations he
+could. Van Buren, cool, skillful, and far-sighted politician though he
+was, on this occasion showed that he was infected with the common
+delusion as to the solidity of the country's business prosperity. He was
+very friendly with Benton, and was trying to get him to take a position
+in his cabinet, which the latter refused, preferring service in the
+Senate; but now he listened with scant courtesy to the warning, and
+paid no heed to it. Benton, an intensely proud man, would not speak
+again; and everything went on as before. The law distributing the
+surplus among the states began to take effect; under its operations
+drafts for millions of dollars were made on the banks containing the
+deposits, and these banks, already sinking, were utterly unable to honor
+them. It would have been impossible, under any circumstances, for the
+president to ward off the blow, but he might at least, by a little
+forethought and preparation, have saved the government from some galling
+humiliations. Had Benton's advice been followed, the moneys called for
+by the appropriation acts might have been drawn from the banks, and the
+disbursing officers might have been prevented from depositing in them
+the sums which they drew from the treasury to provide for their ordinary
+expenses; thus the government would have been spared the disgrace of
+being obliged to stop the actual daily payments to the public servants;
+and the nation would not have seen such a spectacle as its rulers
+presented when they had not a dollar with which to pay even a day
+laborer, while at the same time a law was standing on the statute-book
+providing for the distribution of forty millions of nominal surplus.
+
+No effort was made to stave off even so much of the impending disaster
+as was at that late date preventable; and a few days after Van Buren's
+inauguration the country was in the throes of the worst and most
+widespread financial panic it has ever seen. The distress was fairly
+appalling both in its intensity and in its universal distribution. All
+the banks stopped payment, and bankruptcy was universal. Bank paper
+depreciated with frightful rapidity, especially in the West; specie
+increased in value so that all the coin in the country, down to the
+lowest denomination, was almost immediately taken out of circulation,
+being either hoarded, or gathered for shipment abroad as bullion. For
+small change every kind of device was made use of,--tokens, bank-bills
+for a few cents each, or brass and iron counters.
+
+Benton and others pretended to believe that the panic was the result of
+a deep-laid plot on the part of the rich classes, who controlled the
+banks, to excite popular hostility against the Jacksonian Democracy, on
+account of the caste antagonism which these same richer classes were
+supposed to feel towards the much-vaunted "party of the people;" and as
+Benton's mental vision was singularly warped in regard to some subjects,
+it is possible that the belief was not altogether a pretense. It is
+entirely unnecessary now seriously to discuss the proposition that it
+would be possible to drag the commercial classes into so widespread and
+profoundly secret a conspiracy, with such a vague end in view, and with
+the certainty that they themselves would be, from a business
+stand-point, the main sufferers.
+
+The efforts made by Benton and the other Jacksonians to stem the tide of
+public feeling and direct it through the well-worn channel of suspicious
+fear of, and anger at, the banks, as the true authors of the general
+wretchedness, were unavailing; the stream swelled into a torrent and ran
+like a mill-race in the opposite way. The popular clamor against the
+administration was deafening; and if much of it was based on good
+grounds, much of it was also unreasonable. But a very few years before
+the Jacksonians had appealed to a senseless public dislike of the
+so-called "money power," in order to help themselves to victory; and now
+they had the chagrin of seeing an only less irrational outcry raised
+against themselves in turn, and used to oust them from their places,
+with the same effectiveness which had previously attended their own
+frothy and loud-mouthed declamations. The people were more than ready to
+listen to any one who could point out, or pretend to point out, the
+authors of, and the reasons for, the calamities that had befallen them.
+Their condition was pitiable; and this was especially true in the newer
+and Western states, where in many places there was absolutely no money
+at all in circulation, even the men of means not being able to get
+enough coin or its equivalent to make the most ordinary purchases. Trade
+was at a complete stand-still; laborers were thrown out of employment
+and left almost starving; farmers, merchants, mechanics, craftsmen of
+every sort,--all alike were in the direst distress. They naturally, in
+seeking relief, turned to the government, it being almost always the
+case that the existing administration receives more credit if the
+country is prosperous, and greater blame if it is not, than in either
+case it is rightfully entitled to. The Democracy was now held to strict
+reckoning, not only for some of its numerous real sins but also for a
+good many imaginary ones; and the change in the political aspect of many
+of the commonwealths was astounding. Jackson's own home State of
+Tennessee became strongly Whig; and Van Buren had the mortification of
+seeing New York follow suit; two stinging blows to the president and the
+ex-president. The distress was a godsend to the Whig politicians. They
+fairly raved in their anger against the administration, and denounced
+all its acts, good and bad alike, with fluent and incoherent
+impartiality. Indeed, in their speeches, and in the petitions which they
+circulated and then sent to the president, they used language that was
+to the last degree absurd in its violence and exaggeration, and drew
+descriptions of the iniquities of the rulers of the country which were
+so overwrought as to be merely ridiculous. The speeches about the panic,
+and in reference to the proposed laws to alleviate it, were remarkable
+for their inflation, even in that age of windy oratory.
+
+Van Buren, Benton, and their associates stood bravely up against the
+storm of indignation which swept over the whole country, and lost
+neither head nor nerve. They needed both to extricate themselves with
+any credit from the position in which they were placed. In deference to
+the urgent wish of almost all the people an extra session of Congress
+was called especially to deal with the panic. Van Buren's message to
+this body was a really statesmanlike document, going exhaustively into
+the subject of the national finances. The Democrats still held the
+majority in both houses, but there was so large a floating vote, and the
+margins were so narrow, as to make the administration feel that its hold
+was precarious.
+
+The first thing to be done was to provide for the immediate wants of
+the government, which had not enough money to pay even its most
+necessary running expenses. To make this temporary provision two plans
+were proposed. The fourth instalment of the surplus--ten millions--was
+due to the states. As there was really no surplus, but a deficit
+instead, it was proposed to repeal the deposit law so far as it affected
+their fourth payment; and treasury notes were to be issued to provide
+for immediate and pressing needs.
+
+The Whigs frantically attacked the president's proposals, and held him
+and his party accountable for all the evils of the panic; and in truth
+it was right enough to hold them so accountable for part; but, after
+all, the harm was largely due to causes existing throughout the
+civilized world, and especially to the speculative folly rife among the
+whole American people. But it is always an easy and a comfortable thing
+to hold others responsible for what is primarily our own fault.
+
+Benton did not believe, as a matter of principle, in the issue of
+treasury notes, but supported the bill for that purpose on account of
+the sore straits the administration was in, and its dire need of
+assistance from any source. He treated it as a disagreeable but
+temporary makeshift, only allowable on the ground of the sternest and
+most grinding necessity, He stated that he supported the issue only
+because the treasury notes were made out in such a form that they could
+not become currency; they were merely loan notes. Their chief
+characteristic was that they bore interest; they were transferable only
+by indorsement; were payable at a fixed time; were not reissuable, nor
+of small denominations; and were to be canceled when paid. Such being
+the case he favored their issue, but expressly stated that he only did
+so on account of the urgency of the governmental wants; and that he
+disapproved of any such issue until the ordinary resources of taxes and
+loans had been tried to the utmost and failed. "I distrust, dislike, and
+would fain eschew this treasury-note resource; I prefer the direct loans
+of 1820-21. I could only bring myself to support this present measure
+when it was urged that there was not time to carry a loan through in its
+forms; nor even then would I consent to it until every feature of a
+currency character had been eradicated from the bill."
+
+A sharp struggle took place over the bill brought in by the friends of
+the administration and advocated by Benton, to repeal the obligation to
+deposit the fourth instalment of the surplus with the states. This
+scheme of a distribution, thinly disguised under the name of deposit to
+soothe the feelings of Calhoun and the other strict constructionist
+pundits, had worked nothing but mischief from the start; and now that
+there was no surplus to distribute, it would seem incredible that there
+should have been opposition to its partial repeal. Yet Webster, Clay,
+and their followers strenuously opposed even such repeal. It is possible
+that their motives were honest, but much more probable that they were
+actuated by partisan hostility to the administration, or that they
+believed they would increase their own popularity by favoring a plan
+that seemingly distributed money as a gift among the states. The bill
+was finally amended so as to make it imperative to pay this fourth
+instalment in a couple of years; yet it was not then paid, since on the
+date appointed the national treasury was bankrupt and the states could
+therefore never get the money,--which was the only satisfactory incident
+in the whole proceeding. The financial theories of Jackson and Benton
+were crude and vicious, it is true, but Webster, Clay, and most other
+public men of the day seem to have held ideas on the subject that were
+almost, if not quite, as mischievous.
+
+The great financial measures advocated by the administration of Van
+Buren, and championed with especial zeal by Benton, were those providing
+for an independent treasury and for hard-money payments; that is,
+providing that the government should receive nothing but gold and silver
+for its revenues, and that this gold and silver should be kept by its
+own officers in real, not constructive, treasuries,--in strong
+buildings, with special officers to hold the keys. The treasury was to
+be at Washington, with branches or sub-treasuries at the principal
+points of collection and disbursement.
+
+These measures, if successful, meant that there would be a total
+separation of the federal government from all banks; in the political
+language of the times they became known as those for the divorce of bank
+and state. Hitherto the local banks chosen by Jackson to receive the
+deposits had been actively hostile to Biddle's great bank and to its
+friends; but self-interest now united them all in violent opposition to
+the new scheme. Webster, Clay, and the Whigs generally fought it
+bitterly in the Senate; but Calhoun now left his recent allies and
+joined with Benton in securing its passage. However, it was for the time
+being defeated in the House of Representatives. Most of the opposition
+to it was characterized by sheer loud-mouthed demagogy--cries that the
+government was too aristocratic to accept the money that was thought
+good enough for the people, and similar claptrap. Benton made a very
+earnest plea for hard money, and especially denounced the doctrine that
+it was the government's duty to interfere in any way in private
+business; for, as usual in times of general distress, a good many people
+had a vague idea that in some way the government ought to step in and
+relieve them from the consequences of their own folly.
+
+Meanwhile the banks had been endeavoring to resume specie payment. Those
+of New York had taken steps in that direction but little more than three
+months after the suspension. Their weaker Western neighbors, however,
+were not yet in condition to follow suit; and the great bank at
+Philadelphia also at first refused to come in with them. But the New
+York banks persisted in their purpose, resumed payment a year after they
+had suspended, and eventually the others had to fall into line; the
+reluctance to do so being of course attributed by Benton to "the
+factious and wicked machinations" of a "powerful combined political and
+moneyed confederation"--a shadowy and spectral creation of vivid
+Jacksonian imaginations, in the existence of which he persisted in
+believing.
+
+Clay, always active as the friend of the banks, introduced a resolution,
+nominally to quicken the approach of resumption, but really to help out
+precisely those weak banks which did not deserve help, making the notes
+of the resuming banks receivable in payment of all dues to the federal
+government. This was offered after the banks of New York had resumed,
+and when all the other solvent banks were on the point of resuming also;
+so its nominal purpose was already accomplished, as Benton, in a caustic
+speech, pointed out. He then tore the resolution to shreds, showing that
+it would be of especial benefit to the insolvent and unsound banks, and
+would insure a repetition of the worst evils under which the country was
+already suffering. He made it clear that the proposition practically was
+to force the government to receive paper promises to pay from banks that
+were certain to fail, and therefore to force the government in turn to
+pay out this worthless paper to its honest creditors. Benton's speech
+was an excellent one, and Clay's resolution was defeated.
+
+All through this bank controversy, and the other controversies relating
+to it, Benton took the leading part, as mouthpiece of the
+administration. He heartily supported the suggestion of the president,
+that a stringent bankrupt law against the banks should be passed.
+Webster stood out as the principal opponent of this measure, basing his
+objections mainly upon constitutional grounds; that is, questioning the
+right, rather than the expediency, of the proposed remedy. Benton
+answered him at length in a speech showing an immense amount of careful
+and painstaking study and a wide range of historical reading and legal
+knowledge; he replied point by point, and more than held his own with
+his great antagonist. His speech was an exhaustive study of the history
+and scope of bankruptcy laws against corporations. Benton's capacity for
+work was at all times immense; he delighted in it for its own sake, and
+took a most justifiable pride in his wide reading, and especially in his
+full acquaintance with history, both ancient and modern. He was very
+fond of illustrating his speeches on American affairs with continual
+allusions and references to events in foreign countries or in old times,
+which he considered to be more or less parallel to those he was
+discussing; and indeed he often dragged in these comparisons when there
+was no particular need for such a display of his knowledge. He could
+fairly be called a learned man, for he had studied very many subjects
+deeply and thoroughly; and though he was too self-conscious and pompous
+in his utterances not to incur more than the suspicion of pedantry, yet
+the fact remains that hardly any other man has ever sat in the Senate
+whose range of information was as wide as his.
+
+He made another powerful and carefully wrought speech in favor of what
+he called the act to provide for the divorce of bank and state. This
+bill, as finally drawn, consisted of two distinct parts, one portion
+making provision for the keeping of the public moneys in an independent
+treasury, and the other for the hard-money currency, which was all that
+the government was to accept in payment of revenue dues. This last
+provision, however, was struck out, and the bill thereby lost the
+support of Calhoun, who, with Webster, Clay, and the other Whigs, voted
+against it; but, mainly through Benton's efforts, it passed the Senate,
+although by a very slender majority. Benton, in his speech, dwelt with
+especial admiration on the working of the monetary system of France, and
+held it up as well worthy to be copied by us. Most of the points he made
+were certainly good ones, although he overestimated the beneficent
+results that would spring from the adoption of the proposed system,
+believing that it would put an end for the future to all panics and
+commercial convulsions. In reality it would have removed only one of the
+many causes which go to produce the latter, leaving the others free to
+work as before; the people at large, not the government, were mainly to
+blame, and even with them it was in some respects their misfortune as
+much as their fault. Benton's error, however, was natural; like most
+other men he was unable fully to realize that hardly any phenomenon,
+even the most simple, can be said to spring from one cause only, and not
+from a complex and interwoven tissue of causation--and a panic is one of
+the least simple and most complex of mercantile phenomena. Benton's
+deep-rooted distrust of and hostility to such banking as then existed in
+the United States certainly had good grounds for existence.
+
+This distrust was shown again when the bill for the re-charter of the
+district banks came up. The specie basis of many of them had been
+allowed to become altogether too low; and Benton showed himself more
+keenly alive than any other public man to the danger of such a state of
+things, and argued strongly that a basis of specie amounting to one
+third the total of liabilities was the only safe proportion, and should
+be enforced by law. He made a most forcible argument, using numerous and
+apt illustrations to show the need of his amendment.
+
+Nor was the tireless Missouri senator satisfied even yet; for he
+introduced a resolution asking leave to bring in a bill to tax the
+circulation of banks and bankers, and of all corporations, companies, or
+individuals, issuing paper currency. One object of the bill was to raise
+revenue; but even more he aimed at the regulation of the currency by
+the suppression of small notes; and for this end the tax was proposed to
+be made heaviest on notes under twenty dollars, and to be annually
+augmented until it had accomplished its object and they had been driven
+out of circulation. In advocating his measure he used, as was perhaps
+unavoidable, some arguments that savored strongly of demagogy; but on
+the whole he made a strong appeal, using as precedents for the law he
+wished to see enacted both the then existing banking laws in England and
+those that had obtained previously in the history of the United States.
+
+Taken altogether, while the Jacksonians, during the period of Van
+Buren's presidency, rightly suffered for their previous financial
+misdeeds, yet so far as their actions at the time were concerned, they
+showed to greater advantage than the Whigs. Nor did they waver in their
+purpose even when the tide of popular feeling changed. The great
+financial measure of the administration, in which Benton was most
+interested, the independent treasury bill, he succeeded in getting
+through the Senate twice; the first time it was lost in the House of
+Representatives; but on the second occasion, towards the close of Van
+Buren's term, firmness and perseverance met their reward. The bill
+passed the Senate by an increased majority, scraped through the House
+after a bitter contest, and became a law. It developed the system known
+as that of the sub-Treasury, which has proved satisfactory to the
+present day.
+
+It was during Van Buren's term that Biddle's great bank, so long the
+pivot on which turned the fortunes of political parties, finally
+tottered to its fall. It was ruined by unwise and reckless management;
+and Benton sang a paean over its downfall, exulting in its fate as a
+justification of all that he had said and done. Yet there can be little
+doubt that its mismanagement became gross only after all connection with
+the national government had ceased; and its end, attributable to causes
+not originally existent or likely to exist, can hardly be rightly
+considered in passing judgment upon the actions of the Jacksonians in
+reference to it.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+LAST DAYS OF THE JACKSONIAN DEMOCRACY.
+
+
+The difficulty and duration of a war with an Indian tribe depend less
+upon the numbers of the tribe itself than upon the nature of the ground
+it inhabits. The two Indian tribes that have caused the most irritating
+and prolonged struggle are the Apaches, who live in the vast, waterless,
+mountainous deserts of Arizona and New Mexico, and whom we are at this
+present moment engaged in subduing, and the Seminoles, who, from among
+the impenetrable swamps of Florida, bade the whole United States army
+defiance for seven long years; and this although neither Seminoles nor
+Apaches ever brought much force into the field, nor inflicted such
+defeats upon us as have other Indian tribes, like the Creeks and Sioux.
+
+The conflict with the Seminoles was one of the legacies left by Jackson
+to Van Buren; it lasted as long as the Revolutionary War, cost thirty
+millions of dollars, and baffled the efforts of several generals and
+numerous troops, who had previously shown themselves equal to any in
+the world. The expense, length, and ill-success of the struggle, and a
+strong feeling that the Seminoles had been wronged, made it a great
+handle for attack on the administration; and the defense was taken up by
+Benton, who always accepted completely the Western estimate of any form
+of the Indian question.
+
+As is usually the case in Indian wars there had been much wrong done by
+each side; but in this instance we were the more to blame, although the
+Indians themselves were far from being merely harmless and suffering
+innocents. The Seminoles were being deprived of their lands in pursuance
+of the general policy of removing all the Indians west of the
+Mississippi. They had agreed to go, under pressure, and influenced,
+probably, by fraudulent representations; but they declined to fulfill
+their agreement. If they had been treated wisely and firmly they might
+probably have been allowed to remain without serious injury to the
+surrounding whites. But no such treatment was attempted, and as a result
+we were plunged in one of the most harassing Indian wars we ever waged.
+In their gloomy, tangled swamps, and among the unknown and untrodden
+recesses of the everglades the Indians found a secure asylum; and they
+issued from their haunts to burn and ravage almost all the settled part
+of Florida, fairly depopulating five counties; while the soldiers could
+rarely overtake them, and when they did, were placed at such a
+disadvantage that the Indians repulsed or cut off detachment after
+detachment, generally making a merciless and complete slaughter of each.
+The great Seminole leader, Osceola, was captured only by deliberate
+treachery and breach of faith on our part, and the Indians were worn out
+rather than conquered. This was partly owing to their remarkable
+capacities as bush-fighters, but infinitely more to the nature of their
+territory.
+
+Our troops generally fought with great bravery; but there is very little
+else in the struggle, either as regards its origin or the manner in
+which it was carried on, to which an American can look back with any
+satisfaction. We usually group all our Indian wars together, in speaking
+of their justice or injustice; and thereby show flagrant ignorance. The
+Sioux and Cheyennes, for instance, have more often been sinning than
+sinned against; for example, the so-called Chivington or Sandy Creek
+Massacre, in spite of certain most objectionable details, was on the
+whole as righteous and beneficial a deed as ever took place on the
+frontier. On the other hand, the most cruel wrongs have been perpetrated
+by whites upon perfectly peaceable and unoffending tribes like those of
+California, or the Nez Perces. Yet the emasculated professional
+humanitarians mourn as much over one set of Indians as over the
+other--and indeed, on all points connected with Indian management, are
+as untrustworthy and unsafe leaders as would be an equal number of the
+most brutal white borderers. But the Seminole War was one of those where
+the Eastern, or humanitarian view was more nearly correct than was any
+other; although even here the case was far from being entirely
+one-sided.
+
+Benton made an elaborate but not always candid defense of the
+administration, both as to the origin and as to the prosecution of the
+war. He attempted to show that the Seminoles had agreed to go West, had
+broken their treaty without any reason, had perpetrated causeless
+massacres, had followed up their successes with merciless butcheries,
+which last statement was true; and that Osceola had forfeited all claim
+or right to have a flag of truce protect him. There was a certain
+justice in his position even on these questions, and when he came to
+defend the conduct of our soldiers he had the right entirely with him.
+They were led by the same commander, and belonged to the same regiments,
+that in Canada had shown themselves equal to the famous British
+infantry; they had to contend with the country, rather than with their
+enemies, as the sweltering heat, the stagnant lagoons, the quaking
+morasses, and the dense forests of Florida made it almost impossible for
+an army to carry on a successful campaign. Moreover, the Seminoles were
+well armed; and many tribes of North American Indians show themselves,
+when with good weapons and on their own ground, more dangerous
+antagonists than would be an equal number of the best European troops.
+Indeed, under such conditions they can only be contended with on equal
+terms if the opposing white force is made up of frontiersmen who are as
+good woodsmen and riflemen as themselves, and who, moreover, have been
+drilled by some man like Jackson, who knows how to handle them to the
+best advantage, both in disciplining their lawless courage and in
+forcing them to act under orders and together,--the lack of which
+discipline and power of supporting each other has often rendered an
+assemblage of formidable individual border-fighters a mere disorderly
+mob when brought into the field.
+
+The war dragged on tediously. The troops--regulars, volunteers, and
+militia alike--fought the Indians again and again; there were pitched
+battles, surprises, ambuscades, and assaults on places of unknown
+strength; hundreds of soldiers were slain in battle or by treachery,
+hundreds of settlers were slaughtered in their homes, or as they fled
+from them; the bloody Indian forays reached even to the outskirts of
+Tallahatchee and to within sight of the walls of quaint old St.
+Augustine. Little by little, however, the power of the Seminoles was
+broken; their war bands were scattered and driven from the field,
+hundreds of their number were slain in fight, and five times as many
+surrendered and were taken west of the Mississippi. The white troops
+marched through Florida down to and into the everglades, and crossed it
+backwards and forwards, from the Gulf of Mexico to the Atlantic Ocean;
+they hunted their foes from morass to morass and from hummock to
+hummock; they mapped out the whole hitherto unknown country; they
+established numerous posts; opened hundreds of miles of wagon road; and
+built very many causeways and bridges. But they could not end the war.
+The bands of Indians broke up and entirely ceased to offer resistance to
+bodies of armed whites; but as individuals they continued as dangerous
+to the settlers as ever, prowling out at night like wild beasts from
+their fastnesses in the dark and fetid swamps, murdering, burning, and
+ravaging in all the outlying settlements, and destroying every lonely
+farm-house or homestead.
+
+There was but one way in which the war could be finally ended, and that
+was to have the territory occupied by armed settlers; in other words, to
+have it won and held exactly as almost all the land of the United States
+has been in the beginning. Benton introduced a bill to bring this about,
+giving to every such settler a good inheritance in the soil as a reward
+for his enterprise, toil, and danger; and the war was finished only by
+the adoption of this method. He supported his bill in a very effective
+speech, showing that the proposed way was the only one by which a
+permanent conquest could be effected; he himself had, when young, seen
+it put into execution in Tennessee and Kentucky, where the armed
+settlers, with their homesteads in the soil, formed the vanguard of the
+white advance: where the rifle-bearing backwoodsmen went forth to fight
+and to cultivate, living in assemblages of block-houses at first and
+separating into individual settlements afterwards. The work had to be
+done with axe, spade, and rifle alike. Benton rightly insisted that
+there was no longer need of a large army in Florida:--
+
+ Why, the men who are there now can find nobody to fight! It is two
+ years since a fight has been had. Ten men who will avoid surprises
+ and ambuscades can now go from one end of Florida to the other. As
+ warriors, these Indians no longer appear; it is only as assassins,
+ as robbers, as incendiaries, that they lurk about. What is now
+ wanted is not an army to fight, but settlers and cultivators to take
+ possession and keep possession; and the armed cultivator is the man
+ for that. The block-house is the first house to be built in an
+ Indian country; the stockade the first fence to be put up. Within
+ that block-house, or within a hollow square of block-houses, two
+ miles long on each side, two hundred yards apart, and inclosing a
+ good field, safe habitations are to be found for families.
+ Cultivation and defense then go hand in hand. The heart of the
+ Indian sickens when he hears the crowing of the cock, the barking of
+ the dog, the sound of the axe, and the crack of the rifle. These are
+ the true evidences of the dominion of the white man; these are the
+ proofs that the owner has come and means to stay, and then the
+ Indians feel it to be time for them to go. While soldiers alone are
+ in the country they feel their presence to be temporary; that they
+ are mere sojourners in the land, and sooner or later must go away.
+ It is the settler alone, the armed settler, whose presence announces
+ the dominion, the permanent dominion, of the white man.
+
+Benton's ideas were right, and were acted upon. It is impossible even to
+subdue an Indian tribe by the army alone; the latter can only pave the
+way for and partially protect the armed settlers who are to hold the
+soil.
+
+Benton continued to take a great interest in the disposal of the public
+lands, as was natural in a senator from the West, where the bulk of
+these lands lay. He was always a great advocate of a homestead law.
+During Van Buren's administration, he succeeded in getting two or three
+bills on the subject through the Senate. One of these allowed lands that
+had been five years in the market to be reduced in price to a dollar an
+acre, and if they stood five years longer to go down to seventy-five
+cents. The bill was greatly to the interest of the Western farmer in the
+newer, although not necessarily the newest, parts of the country. The
+man who went on the newest land was in turn provided for by the
+preemption bill, which secured the privilege of first purchase to the
+actual settler on any lands to which the Indian title had been
+extinguished; to be paid for at the minimum price of public lands at the
+time. An effort was made to confine the benefits of this proposed law to
+citizens of the United States, excluding unnaturalized foreigners from
+its action. Benton, as representing the new states, who desired
+immigrants of every kind, whether foreign or native, successfully
+opposed this. He pointed out that there was no question of conferring
+political rights, which involved the management of the government, and
+which should not be conferred until the foreigner had become a
+naturalized citizen; it was merely a question of allowing the alien a
+right to maintain himself and to support his family. He especially
+opposed the amendment on account of the class of foreigners it would
+affect. Aliens who wished to take up public lands were not paupers or
+criminals, and did not belong to the shiftless and squalid foreign mob
+that drifted into the great cities of the sea-board and the interior;
+but on the contrary were among our most enterprising, hardy, and thrifty
+citizens, who had struck out for themselves into the remote parts of the
+new states and had there begun to bring the wilderness into subjection.
+Such men deserved to be encouraged in every way, and should receive from
+the preemption laws the same benefits that would enure to native-born
+citizens. The third bill introduced, which passed the Senate but failed
+in the House, was one to permit the public lands sold to be immediately
+taxed by the states in which they lay. Originally these lands had been
+sold upon credit, the total amount not being paid, nor the title passed,
+until five years after the sale; and during this time it would have been
+unjust to tax them, as failure in paying the installments to the
+government would have let the lands revert to the latter; but when the
+cash system was substituted for credit Benton believed that there was no
+longer reason why the new lands should not bear their share of the
+state burdens.
+
+During Van Buren's administration the standard of public honesty, which
+had been lowering with frightful rapidity ever since, with Adams, the
+men of high moral tone had gone out of power, went almost as far down as
+it could go; although things certainly did not change for the better
+under Tyler and Polk. Not only was there the most impudent and
+unblushing rascality among the public servants of the nation, but the
+people themselves, through their representatives in the state
+legislatures, went to work to swindle their honest creditors. Many
+states, in the rage for public improvements, had contracted debts which
+they now refused to pay; in many cases they were unable, or at least so
+professed themselves, even to pay the annual interest. The debts of the
+states were largely held abroad; they had been converted into stock and
+held in shares, which had gone into a great number of hands, and now, of
+course, became greatly depreciated in value. It is a painful and
+shameful page in our history; and every man connected with the
+repudiation of the states' debts ought, if remembered at all, to be
+remembered only with scorn and contempt. However, time has gradually
+shrouded from our sight both the names of the leaders in the
+repudiation and the names of the victims whom they swindled. Two alone,
+one in each class, will always be kept in mind. Before Jefferson Davis
+took his place among the arch-traitors in our annals he had already long
+been known as one of the chief repudiators; it was not unnatural that to
+dishonesty towards the creditors of the public he should afterwards add
+treachery towards the public itself. The one most prominent victim was
+described by Benton himself: "The Reverend Sydney Smith, of witty
+memory, but amiable withal, was accustomed to lose all his amiability,
+but no part of his wit, when he spoke of his Pennsylvania bonds--which,
+in fact, was very often."
+
+Many of the bond-holders, however, did not manifest their grief by
+caustic wit, but looked to more substantial relief; and did their best
+to bring about the assumption of the state debts, in some form, whether
+open or disguised, by the federal government. The British capitalists
+united with many American capitalists to work for some such action; and
+there were plenty of people in the states willing enough to see it done.
+Of course it would have been criminal folly on the part of the federal
+government to take any such step; and Benton determined to meet and
+check the effort at the very beginning. The London Bankers' Circular had
+contained a proposition recommending that the Congress of the United
+States should guarantee, or otherwise provide for, the ultimate payment
+of the debts which the states had contracted for state or local
+purposes. Benton introduced a series of resolutions declaring utter
+opposition to the proposal, both on the ground of expediency and on that
+of constitutionality. The resolutions were perfectly proper in their
+purpose, but were disfigured by that cheap species of demagogy which
+consists in denouncing purely supposititious foreign interference,
+complicated by an allusion to Benton's especial pet terror, the
+inevitable money power. As he put it: "Foreign interference and
+influence are far more dangerous in the invidious intervention of the
+moneyed power than in the forcible invasions of fleets and armies."
+
+An attempt was made directly to reverse the effect of the resolutions by
+amending them so as to provide that the public land revenue should be
+divided among the states, to help them in the payment of these debts.
+Both Webster and Clay supported this amendment, but it was fortunately
+beaten by a large vote.
+
+Benton's speech, like the resolutions in support of which he spoke, was
+right in its purpose, but contained much matter that was beside the
+mark. He had worked himself into such a condition over the
+supposititious intrigues of the "money power"--an attack on which is
+almost always sure to be popular--that he was very certain to discover
+evidence of their existence on all, even the most unlikely, occasions;
+and it is difficult to think that he was not himself aware how overdrawn
+was his prophecy of the probable interference of foreign powers in our
+affairs, if the resolutions he had presented were not adopted.
+
+The tariff had once more begun to give trouble, and the South was again
+complaining of its workings, aware that she was falling always more to
+the rear in the race for prosperity, and blindly attributing her failure
+to everything but the true reason,--the existence of slavery. Even
+Benton himself showed a curiously pathetic eagerness to prove both to
+others and himself that the cause of the increasing disparity in growth,
+and incompatibility in interest between the two sections, must be due to
+some temporary and artificial cause, and endeavored to hide from all
+eyes, even from his own, the fact that the existence of slavery was
+working, slowly but surely, and with steadily increasing rapidity, to
+rend in sunder the Union which he loved and served with such heartfelt
+devotion. He tried to prove that the main cause of discontent was to be
+found in the tariff and other laws, which favored the North at the
+expense of the South. At the same time he entered an eloquent plea for a
+warmer feeling between the sections, and pointed out the absolute
+hopelessness of attempting to better the situation in any way by
+disunion. The great Missourian could look back with fond pride and
+regret to the condition of the South as it was during and immediately
+after the colonial days, when it was the seat of wealth, power, high
+living, and free-handed hospitality, and was filled to overflowing with
+the abounding life of its eager and turbulent sons. The change for the
+worse in its relative condition was real and great. He reproved his
+fellow-Southerners for attributing this change to a single cause, the
+unequal working of the federal government, "which gave all the benefits
+of the Union to the South and all its burdens to the North;" he claimed
+that it was due to many other causes as well. Yet those whom he rebuked
+were as near right as he was; for the change _was_ due in the main to
+only one cause--but that cause was slavery. It is almost pitiful to see
+the strong, stern, self-reliant statesman refusing, with nervous and
+passionate willfulness, to look the danger in the face, and, instead
+thereof, trying to persuade himself into the belief that "the remedy
+lies in the right working of the Constitution; in the cessation of
+unequal legislation; in the reduction of the inordinate expenses of the
+government; in its return to the simple, limited, and economical machine
+it was intended to be; and in the revival of fraternal feelings and
+respect for each other's rights and just complaints." Like many another
+man he thought, or tried to think, that by sweeping the dust from the
+door-sill he could somehow stave off the whirling rush of the
+sand-storm.
+
+The compromise tariff of 1833 had abolished all specific duties,
+establishing _ad valorem_ ones in their place; and the result had been
+great uncertainty and injustice in its working. Now whether a protective
+tariff is right or wrong may be open to question; but if it exists at
+all, it should work as simply and with as much certainty and exactitude
+as possible; if its interpretation varies, or if it is continually
+meddled with by Congress, great damage ensues. It is in reality of far
+less importance that a law should be ideally right than that it should
+be certain and steady in its workings. Even supposing that a high tariff
+is all wrong, it would work infinitely better for the country than would
+a series of changes between high and low duties. Benton strongly
+advocated a return to specific duties, as being simpler, surer, and
+better on every account. In commenting on the _ad valorem_ duties, he
+showed how they had been adopted blindly and without discussion by the
+frightened, silent multitude of congressmen and senators, who jumped at
+Clay's compromise bill in 1833 as giving them a loop-hole of escape from
+a situation where they would have had to face evil consequences, no
+matter what stand they took. Benton's comment on men of this stamp
+deserves chronicling, from its justice and biting severity: "It (the
+compromise act) was passed by the aid of the votes of those--always a
+considerable _per centum_ in every public body--to whom the name of
+compromise is an irresistible attraction; amiable men, who would do no
+wrong of themselves, and without whom the designing could also do but
+little wrong."
+
+He not only devoted himself to the general subject of the tariff in
+relation to specific duties, but he also took up several prominent
+abuses. One subject, on which he was never tired of harping with
+monotonous persistency, was the duty on salt. The idea of making salt
+free had become one which he was almost as fond of bringing into every
+discussion, no matter how inappropiate to the matter in hand, as he was
+of making irrelevant and abusive allusions to his much-enduring and
+long-suffering hobby, the iniquitous "money power." Benton had all the
+tenacity of a snapping turtle, and was as firm a believer in the policy
+of "continuous hammering" as Grant himself. His tenacity and his
+pertinacious refusal to abandon any contest, no matter what the odds
+were against him, and no matter how often he had to return to the
+charge, formed two of his most invaluable qualities, and when called
+into play on behalf of such an object as the preservation of the Union,
+cannot receive too high praise at our hands; for they did the country
+services so great and lasting that they should never be forgotten. It
+would have been fortunate indeed if Clay and Webster had possessed the
+fearless, aggressive courage and iron will of the rugged Missourian, who
+was so often pitted against them in the political arena. But when
+Benton's attention was firmly fixed on the accomplishment of something
+comparatively trivial, his dogged, stubborn, and unyielding earnestness
+drew him into making efforts of which the disproportion to the result
+aimed at was rather droll. Nothing could thwart him or turn him aside;
+and though slow to take up an idea, yet, if it was once in his head, to
+drive it out was a simply hopeless task. These qualities were of such
+invaluable use to the state on so many great occasions that we can well
+afford to treat them merely with a good-humored laugh, when we see them
+exercised on behalf of such a piece of foolishness as, for example, the
+expunging resolution.
+
+The repeal of the salt tax, then, was a particular favorite in Benton's
+rather numerous stable of hobbies, because it gave free scope for the
+use of sentimental as well as of economic arguments. He had the right of
+the question, and was not in the least daunted by his numerous rebuffs
+and the unvarying ill success of his efforts. Speaking in 1840, he
+stated that he had been urging the repeal for twelve years; and for the
+purpose of furnishing data with which to compare such a period of time,
+and without the least suspicion that there was anything out of the way
+in the comparison, he added, in a solemn parenthesis, that this was two
+years longer than the siege of Troy lasted. In the same speech was a
+still choicer morsel of eloquence about salt: "The Supreme Ruler of the
+Universe has done everything to supply his creatures with it; man, the
+fleeting shadow of an instant, invested with his little brief authority,
+has done much to deprive them of it." After which he went on to show a
+really extensive acquaintance with the history of salt taxes and
+monopolies, and with the uses and physical structure and surroundings of
+the mineral itself--all which might have taught his hearers that a man
+may combine much erudition with a total lack of the sense of humor. The
+salt tax is dragged, neck and heels, into many of Benton's speeches
+much as Cooper manages, on all possible occasions, throughout his
+novels, to show the unlikeness of the Bay of Naples to the Bay of New
+York--not the only point of resemblance, by the way, between the
+characters of the Missouri statesman and the New York novelist. Whether
+the subject under discussion was the taxation of bank-notes, or the
+abolition of slavery, made very little difference to Benton as to
+introducing an allusion to the salt monopoly. One of his happy arguments
+in favor of the repeal, which was addressed to an exceedingly practical
+and commonplace Congress, was that the early Christian disciples had
+been known as the salt of the earth--a biblical metaphor, which Benton
+kindly assured his hearers was very expressive; and added that a salt
+tax was morally as well as politically wrong, and in fact "was a species
+of impiety."
+
+But in attacking some of the abuses which had developed out of the
+tariff of 1833 Benton made a very shrewd and practical speech, without
+permitting himself to indulge in any such intellectual pranks as
+accompanied his salt orations. He especially aimed at reducing the
+drawbacks on sugar, molasses, and one or two other articles. In
+accordance with our whole clumsy, hap-hazard system of dealing with the
+tariff we had originally put very high duties on the articles in
+question, and then had allowed correspondingly heavy drawbacks; and yet,
+when in 1833, by Clay's famous compromise tariff bill, the duties were
+reduced to a fractional part of what they had previously been, no
+parallel reduction was made in the drawbacks, although Benton (supported
+by Webster) made a vain effort even then, while the compromise bill was
+on its passage, to have the injustice remedied. As a consequence, the
+exporters of sugar and rum, instead of drawing back the exact amounts
+paid into the treasury, drew back several times as much; and the
+ridiculous result was that certain exporters were paid a naked bounty
+out of the treasury, and received pay for doing and suffering nothing.
+In 1839 the drawback paid on the exportation of refined sugar exceeded
+the amount of revenue derived from imported sugar by over twenty
+thousand dollars. Benton showed this clearly, by unimpeachable
+statistics, and went on to prove that in that year the whole amount of
+the revenue from brown and clayed sugar, plus the above-mentioned twenty
+thousand dollars, was paid over to twenty-nine sugar refiners; and that
+these men thus "drew back" from the treasury what they had never put
+into it. Abuses equally gross existed in relation to various other
+articles. But in spite of the clear justice of his case Benton was able
+at first to make but little impression on Congress; and it was some time
+before matters were straightened out, as all the protective interests
+felt obliged to make common cause with each other, no matter what evils
+might be perpetrated by their taking such action.
+
+Towards the close of Van Buren's administration, when he was being
+assailed on every side, as well for what Jackson as for what he himself
+had done or left undone, one of the chief accusations brought against
+him was that he had squandered the public money, and that, since Adams
+had been ousted from the presidency, the expenses of running the
+government had increased out of all proportion to what was proper. There
+was good ground for their complaint, as the waste and peculation in some
+of the departments had been very great; but Benton, in an elaborate
+defense of both Jackson and Van Buren, succeeded in showing that at
+least certain of the accusations were unfounded--although he had to
+stretch a point or two in trying to make good his claim that the
+administration was really economical, being reduced to the rather lame
+expedient of ruling out about two thirds of the expenditures on the
+ground that they were "extraordinary."
+
+The charge of extravagance was one of the least of the charges urged
+against the Jacksonian Democrats during the last days of their rule.
+While they had been in power the character of the public service had
+deteriorated frightfully, both as regarded its efficiency and infinitely
+more as regarded its honesty; and under Van Buren the amount of money
+stolen by the public officers, compared to the amount handed in to the
+treasury, was greater than ever before or since. For this the
+Jacksonians were solely and absolutely responsible; they drove out the
+merit system of making appointments, and introduced the "spoils" system
+in its place; and under the latter they chose a peculiarly dishonest and
+incapable set of officers, whose sole recommendation was to be found in
+the knavish trickery and low cunning that enabled them to manage the
+ignorant voters who formed the backbone of Jackson's party. The
+statesmen of the Democracy in after days forgot the good deeds of the
+Jacksonians; they lost their attachment to the Union, and abandoned
+their championship of hard money; but they never ceased to cling to the
+worst legacy their predecessors had left them. The engrafting of the
+"spoils" system on our government was, of all the results of Jacksonian
+rule, the one which was most permanent in its effects.
+
+All these causes--the corruption of the public officials, the
+extravagance of the government, and the widespread distress, which might
+be regarded as the aftermath of its ruinous financial policy--combined
+with others that were as little to the discredit of the Jacksonians as
+they were to the credit of the Whigs, brought about the overthrow of the
+former. There was much poetic justice in the fact that the presidential
+election which decided their fate was conducted on as purely irrational
+principles, and was as merely one of sound and fury, as had been the
+case in the election twelve years previously, when they came into power.
+The Whigs, having exhausted their language in denouncing their opponents
+for nominating a man like Andrew Jackson, proceeded to look about in
+their own party to find one who should come as near him as possible in
+all the attributes that had given him so deep a hold on the people; and
+they succeeded perfectly when they pitched on the old Indian fighter,
+Harrison. "Tippecanoe" proved quite as effective a war-cry in bringing
+about the downfall of the Jacksonians as "Old Hickory" had shown itself
+to be a dozen years previously in raising them up. General Harrison had
+already shown himself to be a good soldier, and a loyal and honest
+public servant, although by no means standing in the first rank either
+as regards war-craft or state-craft; but the mass of his supporters
+apparently considered the facts, or supposed facts, that he lived in a
+log-cabin the walls of which were decorated with coon-skins, and that he
+drank hard cider from a gourd, as being more important than his capacity
+as a statesman or his past services to the nation.
+
+The Whigs having thus taken a shaft from the Jacksonians' quiver, it was
+rather amusing to see the latter, in their turn, hold up their hands in
+horror at the iniquity of what would now be called a "hurrah" canvass;
+blandly ignoring the fact that it was simply a copy of their own
+successful proceedings. Says Benton, with amusing gravity: "The class of
+inducements addressed to the passions and imaginations of the people was
+such as history blushes to record," a remark that provokes criticism,
+when it is remembered that Benton had been himself a prominent actor on
+the Jacksonian side in the campaigns of '28 and '32, when it was
+exclusively to "the passions and imaginations of the people" that all
+arguments were addressed.
+
+The Democrats did not long remain out of power; and they kept the
+control of the governmental policy in their hands pretty steadily until
+the time of the civil war; nevertheless it is true that with the defeat
+of Van Buren the Jacksonian Democracy, as such, lost forever its grip on
+the direction of national affairs. When, under Polk, the Democrats came
+back, they came under the lead of the very men whom the original
+Jacksonians had opposed and kept down. With all their faults, Jackson
+and Benton were strong Union men, and under them their party was a Union
+party. Calhoun and South Carolina, and the disunionists in the other
+Southern States were their bitter foes. But the disunion and extreme
+slavery elements within the Democratic ranks were increasing rapidly all
+the time; and they had obtained complete and final control when the
+party reappeared as victors after their defeat in 1840. Until Van
+Buren's overthrow the nationalists had held the upper hand in shaping
+Democratic policy; but after that event the leadership of the party
+passed completely into the hands of the separatists.
+
+The defeat of Van Buren marks an era in more ways than one. During his
+administration slavery played a less prominent part in politics than did
+many other matters; this was never so again. His administration was the
+last in which this question, or the question springing from it, did not
+overtop and dwarf in importance all others. Again, the presidential
+election of 1840 was the last into which slavery did not enter as a most
+important, and in fact as the vital and determining factor. In the
+contest between Van Buren and Harrison it did not have the least
+influence upon the result. Moreover, Van Buren was the last Democratic
+president who ruled over a Union of states; all his successors, up to
+the time of Lincoln's election, merely held sway over a Union of
+sections. The spirit of separation had identified itself with the
+maintenance of slavery, and the South was rapidly uniting into a compact
+array of states with interests that were hostile to the North on the
+point most vitally affecting the welfare of the whole country.
+
+No great question involving the existence of slavery was brought before
+the attention of Congress during Van Buren's term of office; nor was the
+matter mooted except in the eternal wrangles over receiving the
+abolitionist petitions. Benton kept silent in these discussions,
+although voting to receive the petitions. As he grew older he
+continually grew wiser, and better able to do good legislative work on
+all subjects; but he was not yet able to realize that the slavery
+question was one which could not be kept down, and which was bound to
+force itself into the sphere of national politics. He still insisted
+that it was only dragged before Congress by a few fanatics at the
+North, and that in the South it was made the instrument by which
+designing and unscrupulous men wished to break up the federal republic.
+His devotion to the Union, ever with him the chief and overmastering
+thought, made him regard with horror and aversion any man, at the North
+or at the South, who brought forward a question so fraught with peril to
+its continuance. He kept trying to delude himself into the belief that
+the discussion and the danger would alike gradually die away, and the
+former state of peaceful harmony between the sections, and freedom from
+disunion excitement, would return.
+
+But the time for such an ending already lay in the past; thereafter the
+outlook was to grow steadily darker year by year. Slavery lowered like a
+thunder-storm on the horizon; and though sometimes it might seem for a
+moment to break away, yet in reality it had reached that stage when,
+until the final all-engulfing outburst took place, the clouds were bound
+for evermore to return after the rain.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+THE PRESIDENT WITHOUT A PARTY.
+
+
+The Whigs in 1840 completely overthrew the Democrats, and for the first
+time elected a president and held the majority in both houses of
+Congress. Yet, as it turned out, all that they really accomplished was
+to elect a president without a party, for Harrison died when he had
+hardly more than sat in the presidential chair, and was succeeded by the
+vice-president, Tyler of Virginia.
+
+Harrison was a true Whig; he was, when nominated, a prominent member of
+the Whig party, although of course not to be compared with its great
+leader, Henry Clay, or with its most mighty intellectual chief and
+champion in the Northeast, Daniel Webster, whose mutual rivalry had done
+much to make his nomination possible. Tyler, however, could hardly be
+called a Whig at all; on the contrary, he belonged rightfully in the
+ranks of those extreme Democrats who were farthest removed from the Whig
+standard, and who were as much displeased with the Union sentiments of
+the Jacksonians as they were with the personal tyranny of Jackson
+himself. He was properly nothing but a dissatisfied Democrat, who hated
+the Jacksonians, and had been nominated only because the Whig
+politicians wished to strengthen their ticket and insure its election by
+bidding for the votes of the discontented in the ranks of their foes.
+Now a chance stroke of death put the presidency in the hands of one who
+represented this, the smallest, element in the coalition that overthrew
+Van Buren.
+
+The principles of the Whigs were hazily outlined at the best, and the
+party was never a very creditable organization; indeed, throughout its
+career, it could be most easily defined as the opposition to the
+Democracy. It was a free constructionist party, believing in giving a
+liberal interpretation to the doctrines of the Constitution; otherwise,
+its principles were purely economic, as it favored a high tariff,
+internal improvements, a bank, and kindred schemes; and its leaders,
+however they might quarrel among themselves, agreed thoroughly in their
+devout hatred of Jackson and all his works.
+
+It was on this last point only that Tyler came in. His principles had
+originally been ultra-Democratic. He had been an extreme strict
+constructionist, had belonged to that wing of the Democracy which
+inclined more and more towards separation, and had thus, on several
+grounds, found himself opposed to Jackson, Benton, and their followers.
+Indeed, he went into opposition to his original party for reasons akin
+to those that influenced Calhoun; and Seward's famous remark about the
+"ill-starred coalition between Whigs and Nullifiers" might with certain
+changes have been applied to the presidential election of 1840 quite as
+well as to the senatorial struggles to which it had reference.
+
+Tyler, however, had little else in common with Calhoun, and least of all
+his intellect. He has been called a mediocre man; but this is
+unwarranted flattery. He was a politician of monumental littleness.
+Owing to the nicely-divided condition of parties, and to the sheer
+accident which threw him into a position of such prominence that it
+allowed him to hold the balance of power between them, he was enabled to
+turn politics completely topsy-turvy; but his chief mental and moral
+attributes were peevishness, fretful obstinacy, inconsistency,
+incapacity to make up his own mind, and the ability to quibble
+indefinitely over the most microscopic and hair-splitting plays upon
+words, together with an inordinate vanity that so blinded him to all
+outside feeling as to make him really think that he stood a chance to be
+renominated for the presidency.
+
+The Whigs, especially in the Senate, under Henry Clay, prepared at once
+to push through various measures that should undo the work of the
+Jacksonians. Clay was boastfully and domineeringly sure of the necessity
+of applying to actual governmental work the economic theories that
+formed the chief stock in trade of his party. But it was precisely on
+these economic theories that Tyler split off from the Whigs. The result
+was that very shortly the real leader of the dominant party, backed by
+almost all his fellow party men in both houses of Congress, was at
+daggers drawn with the nominal Whig president, who in his turn was
+supported only by a "corporal's guard" of followers in the House of
+Representatives, by all the office-holders whom fear of removal reduced
+to obsequious subserviency, and by a knot of obscure politicians who
+used him for their own ends, and worked alternately on his vanity and on
+his fears. The Democrats, led by Benton, played out their own game, and
+were the only parties to the three-cornered fight who came out of it
+with profit. The details now offer rather dry reading, as the economic
+theories of all the contestants were more or less crude, the results of
+the conflict indecisive, and the effects upon our history ephemeral.
+
+Clay began by a heated revival of one of Jackson's worst ideas, namely,
+that when the people elect a president they thereby mark with the seal
+of their approval any and every measure with which that favored mortal
+or his advisers may consider themselves identified, and indorse all his
+and their previous actions. He at once declared that the people had
+shown, by the size of Harrison's majority, that they demanded the repeal
+of the independent treasury act, and the passage of various other laws
+in accordance with some of his own favorite hobbies, two out of three
+voters, as a matter of fact, probably never having given a second
+thought to any of them. Accordingly he proceeded to introduce a whole
+batch of bills, which he alleged that it was only yielding due respect
+to the spirit of Democracy to pass forthwith.
+
+Benton, however, even outdid Clay in paying homage to what he was
+pleased to call the "democratic idea." At this time he speaks of the
+last session of the Twenty-Sixth Congress as being "barren of measures,
+and necessarily so, as being the last of an administration superseded by
+the popular voice and soon to expire; and therefore restricted by a
+sense of propriety, during the brief remainder of its existence, to the
+details of business and the routine of service." According to this
+theory an interregnum of some sixteen weeks would intervene between the
+terms of service of every two presidents. He also speaks of Tyler as
+having, when the legislature of Virginia disapproved of a course he
+wished to follow, resigned his seat "in obedience to the democratic
+principle," which, according to his views, thus completely nullified the
+section of the Constitution providing for a six years' term of service
+in the Senate. In truth Benton, like most other Jacksonian and
+Jeffersonian leaders, became both foolish and illogical when he began to
+talk of the bundle of vague abstractions, which he knew collectively as
+the "democratic principle." Although not so bad as many of his school he
+had yet gradually worked himself up to a belief that it was almost
+impious to pay anything but servile heed to the "will of the majority;"
+and was quite unconscious that to surrender one's own manhood and
+judgment to a belief in the divine right of kings was only one degree
+more ignoble, and was not a shadow more logical, and but little more
+defensible, than it was blindly to deify a majority--not of the whole
+people, but merely of a small fraction consisting of those who happened
+to be of a certain sex, to have reached a certain age, to belong to a
+certain race, and to fulfill some other conditions. In fact there is no
+natural or divine law in the matter at all; how large a portion of the
+population should be trusted with the control of the government is a
+question of expediency merely. In any purely native American community
+manhood suffrage works infinitely better than would any other system of
+government, and throughout our country at large, in spite of the large
+number of ignorant foreign-born or colored voters, it is probably
+preferable as it stands to any modification of it; but there is no more
+"natural right" why a white man over twenty-one should vote than there
+is why a negro woman under eighteen should not. "Civil rights" and
+"personal freedom" are not terms that necessarily imply the right to
+vote. People make mistakes when governing themselves, exactly as they
+make mistakes when governing others; all that can be said is, that in
+the former case their self-interest is on the side of good government,
+whereas in the latter it always may be, and often must be, the reverse;
+so that, when any people reaches a certain stage of mental development
+and of capacity to take care of its own concerns, it is far better that
+it should itself take the reins. The distinctive features of the
+American system are its guarantees of personal independence and
+individual freedom; that is, as far as possible, it guarantees to each
+man his right to live as he chooses and to regulate his own private
+affairs as he wishes, without being interfered with or tyrannized over
+by an individual, or by an oligarchic minority, or by a democratic
+majority; while, when the interests of the whole community are at stake,
+it is found best in the long run to let them be managed in accordance
+with the wishes of the majority of those presumably concerned.
+
+Clay's flourish of trumpets foreboded trouble and disturbance to the
+Jacksonian camp. At last he stood at the head of a party controlling
+both branches of the legislative body, and devoted to his behests; and,
+if a little doubtful about the president, he still believed he could
+frighten him into doing as he was bid. He had long been in the minority,
+and had seen his foes ride roughshod over all he most believed in; and
+now he prepared to pay them back in their own coin and to leave a heavy
+balance on his side of the reckoning. Nor could any Jacksonian have
+shown himself more domineering and influenced by a more insolent
+disregard for the rights of others than Clay did in his hour of triumph.
+On the other side, Benton braced himself with dogged determination for
+the struggle; for he was one of those men who fight a losing or a
+winning battle with equal resolution.
+
+Tyler's first message to Congress read like a pretty good Whig document.
+It did not display any especial signs of his former strict construction
+theories, and gave little hope to the Democrats. The leader of the
+latter, indeed, Benton, commented upon both it and its author with
+rather grandiloquent severity, on account of its latitudinarian bias,
+and of its recommendation of a bank of some sort. However, the ink with
+which the message was written could hardly have been dry before the
+president's mind began to change. He himself probably had very little
+idea what he intended to do, and so contrived to give the Whigs the
+impression that he would act in accordance with their wishes; but the
+leaven had already begun working in his mind, and, not having much to
+work on, soon changed it so completely that he was willing practically
+to eat his own words.
+
+Shortly after Tyler had sent in his message outlining what legislation
+he deemed proper, he being by virtue of his position the nominal and
+titular leader of the Whigs, Clay, who was their real and very positive
+chief, and who was, moreover, determined to assert his chieftainship, in
+his turn laid down a programme for his party to follow, introducing a
+series of resolutions declaring it necessary to pass a bill to repeal
+the sub-treasury act, another to establish a bank, another to distribute
+the proceeds of the public land sales, and one or two more, to which was
+afterwards added a bankruptcy measure.
+
+The sub-treasury bill was first taken up and promptly passed and signed.
+Benton, of course, led the hopeless fight against it, making a long and
+elaborate speech, insisting that the finances were in excellent shape,
+as they were, showing the advantages of hard money, and denouncing the
+bill on account of the extreme suddenness with which it took effect, and
+because it made no provision for any substitute. He also alluded
+caustically to the curious and anomalous bank bill, which was then being
+patched up by the Whig leaders so as to get it into some such shape that
+the president would sign it.
+
+The other three important measures, that is, the bank, distribution, and
+bankruptcy bills, were all passed nearly together; as Benton pointed
+out, they were got through only by a species of bargain and sale, the
+chief supporters of each agreeing to support the other, so as to get
+their own pet measure through. "All must go together or fall together.
+This is the decree out of doors. When the sun dips below the horizon a
+private congress is held; the fate of the measures is decided; a bundle
+is tied together; and while one goes ahead as a bait, another is held
+back as a rod."
+
+The bankruptcy bill went through and was signed. It was urged by all the
+large debtor class, whose ranks had been filled to overflowing by the
+years of wild speculation and general bank suspension and insolvency.
+These debtors were quite numerous enough to constitute an important
+factor in politics, but Benton disregarded them nevertheless, and fought
+the bill as stoutly as he did its companions, alleging that it was a
+gross outrage on honesty and on the rights of property, and was not a
+bankrupt law at all, but practically an insolvent law for the abolition
+of debts at the will of the debtor. He pointed out grave and numerous
+defects of detail, and gave an exhaustive abstract of bankruptcy
+legislation in general; the speech gave evidence of the tireless
+industry and wide range of learning for which Benton was preeminently
+distinguished.
+
+The third bill to be taken up and passed was that providing for the
+distribution of the public lands revenue, and thus indirectly for
+assuming the debts of the states. Tyler, in his message, had
+characteristically stated that, though it would be wholly
+unconstitutional for the federal government to assume the debts of the
+states, yet it would be highly proper for it to give the latter money
+wherewith to pay them. Clay had always been an enthusiastic advocate of
+a distribution bill; and accordingly one was now passed and signed with
+the least possible delay. It was an absolutely indefensible measure. The
+treasury was empty, and loan and tax bills were pending at the very
+moment, in order to supply money for the actual running of the
+government. As Benton pointed out, Congress had been called together (a
+special session having been summoned by Harrison before his death) to
+raise revenue, and the first thing done was to squander it. The
+distribution took place when the treasury reports showed a deficit of
+sixteen millions of dollars. The bill was pushed through mainly by the
+states which had repudiated their debts in whole or in part; and as
+these debts were largely owed abroad, many prominent foreign
+banking-houses and individuals took an active part in lobbying for the
+bill. Benton was emphatically right in his opposition to the measure,
+but he was very wrong in some of the grounds he took. Thus he inveighed
+vigorously against the foreign capitalists who had come to help push the
+bill through Congress; but he did not have anything to say against the
+scoundrelly dishonesty displayed by certain states towards their
+creditors, which had forced these capitalists into the endeavor to
+protect themselves. He also incidentally condemned the original
+assumption by the national government of the debts of the states, at the
+time of the formation of the Constitution, which was an absolute
+necessity; and his constitutional views throughout seem rather strained.
+But he was right beyond cavil on the main point. It was criminal folly
+to give the states the impression that they would be allowed to create
+debts over which Congress could have no control, yet which Congress in
+the end would give them the money to pay. To reward a state for
+repudiating a debt by giving her the wherewithal to pay it was a direct
+and unequivocal encouragement of dishonesty. In every respect the bill
+was wholly improper; and Benton's attitude towards it and towards
+similar schemes was incomparably better than the position of Clay,
+Webster, and the other Whigs.
+
+Both the bankrupt bill and the distribution bill were repealed very
+shortly; the latter before it had time to take effect. This was an
+emphatic indorsement by the public of Benton's views, and a humiliating
+rebuke to the Whig authors of the measures. Indeed, the whole
+legislation of the session was almost absolutely fruitless in its
+results.
+
+One feature of the struggle was an attempt by Clay, promptly and
+successfully resisted by Benton and Calhoun, to institute the hour limit
+for speeches in the Senate. There was a good deal of excuse for Clay's
+motion. The House could cut off debate by the previous question, which
+the Senate could not, and nevertheless had found it necessary to
+establish the hour limit in addition. Of course it is highly undesirable
+that there should not be proper freedom of debate in Congress; but it is
+quite as hurtful to allow a minority to exercise their privileges
+improperly. The previous question is often abused and used tyrannically;
+but on the whole it is a most invaluable aid to legislation. Benton,
+however, waxed hot and wrathful over the proposed change in the Senate
+rules. He, with Calhoun and their followers, had been consuming an
+immense amount of time in speech-making against the Whig measures, and
+in offering amendments; not with any hopes of bettering the bills, but
+for outside effect, and to annoy their opponents. He gives an amusingly
+naive account of their course of action, and the reasons for it,
+substantially as follows:--
+
+ The Democratic senators acted upon a system, and with a thorough
+ organization and a perfect understanding. Being a minority, and able
+ to do nothing, they became assailants, and attacked incessantly;
+ not by formal orations against the whole body of a measure, but by
+ sudden, short, and pungent speeches directed against the vulnerable
+ parts, and pointed by proffered amendments. Amendments were
+ continually offered--a great number being prepared every night and
+ placed in suitable hands for use the next day--always commendably
+ calculated to expose an evil and to present a remedy. Near forty
+ propositions of amendment were offered to the first fiscal agent
+ bill alone--the yeas and nays were taken upon them seven and thirty
+ times. All the other prominent bills--distribution, bankrupt, fiscal
+ corporation, new tariff act, called revenue--were served the same
+ way; every proposed amendment made an issue. There were but
+ twenty-two of us, but every one was a speaker and effective. The
+ "Globe" newspaper was a powerful ally, setting out all we did to the
+ best advantage in strong editorials, and carrying out our speeches,
+ fresh and hot, to the people; and we felt victorious in the midst of
+ unbroken defeats.
+
+It is no wonder that such rank filibustering, coupled with the
+exasperating self-complacency of its originators, should have excited in
+Whig bosoms every desperate emotion short of homicidal mania.
+
+Clay, to cut off such useless talk, gave notice that he would move to
+have the time for debate for each individual restricted; remarking very
+truthfully that he did not believe the people at large would complain of
+the abridgment of speeches in Congress. But the Democratic senators,
+all rather fond of windy orations, fairly foamed at the mouth at what
+they affected to deem such an infringement of their liberties; and
+actually took the inexcusable resolution of bidding defiance to the rule
+if it was adopted, and refusing to obey it, no matter what degree of
+violence their conduct might bring about,--a resolution that was wholly
+unpardonable. Benton was selected to voice their views upon the matter,
+which he did in a long, and not very wise speech; while Calhoun was
+quite as emphatic in his threats of what would happen if attempt should
+be made to enforce the proposed rule. Clay was always much bolder in
+opening a campaign than in carrying it through; and when it came to
+putting his words into deeds, he wholly lacked the nerve which would
+have enabled him to contend with two such men as the senators from
+Missouri and South Carolina. Had he possessed a temperament like that of
+either of his opponents, he would have gone on and have simply forced
+acquiescence; for any legislative body can certainly enforce what rules
+it may choose to make as to the conduct of its own members in addressing
+it; but his courage failed him, and he withdrew from the contest,
+leaving the victory with Democrats.
+
+When the question of the re-charter of the district banks came up, it of
+course gave Benton another chance to attack his favorite foe. He offered
+a very proper amendment, which was voted down, to prohibit the banks
+from issuing a currency of small notes, fixing upon twenty dollars as
+being the lowest limit. This he supported in a strong speech, wherein he
+once again argued at length in favor of a gold and silver currency, and
+showed the evil effects of small bank-notes, which might not be, and
+often were not, redeemable at par. He very properly pointed out that to
+have a sound currency, especially in all the smaller denominations, was
+really of greater interest to the working men than to any one else.
+
+The great measure of the session, however, and the one that was intended
+to be the final crown and glory of the Whig triumph, was the bill to
+establish a new national bank. Among the political theories to which
+Clay clung most closely, only the belief in a bank ranked higher in his
+estimation than his devotion to a protective tariff. The establishment
+of a national bank seemed to him to be the chief object of a Whig
+success; and that it would work immediate and immense benefit to the
+country was with him an article of faith. With both houses of Congress
+under his control, he at once prepared to push his pet measure through,
+impatiently brushing aside all resistance.
+
+But at the very outset difficulty was feared from the action of the
+president. Tyler could not at first make up his mind what to do; or
+rather, he made it up in half a dozen different ways every day. His
+peevishness, vacillation, ambitious vanity, and sheer puzzle-headedness
+made him incline first to the side of his new friends and present
+supporters, the Whigs, and then to that of his old democratic allies,
+whose views on the bank, as on most other questions, he had so often
+openly expressed himself as sharing. But though his mind oscillated like
+a pendulum, yet each time it swung farther and farther over to the side
+of the Democracy, and it began to look as if he would certainly in the
+end come to a halt in the camp of the enemies of the Whigs; his approach
+to this destination was merely hastened by Clay's overbearing violence
+and injudicious taunts.
+
+However, at first Tyler did not dare to come out openly against any and
+all bank laws, but tried to search round for some compromise measure;
+and as he could not invent a compromise in fact, he came to the
+conclusion that one in words would do just as well. He said that his
+conscience would not permit him to sign a bill to establish a bank that
+was called a bank, but that he was willing to sign a bill establishing
+such an institution provided that it was called something else, though
+it should possess all the properties of a bank. Such a proposal opened a
+wide field for the endless quibbling in which his soul delighted.
+
+The secretary of the treasury, in response to a call from the Senate,
+furnished a plan for a bank, having modeled it studiously so as to
+overcome the president's scruples; and a select committee of the Senate
+at once shaped a bill in accordance with the plans. Said Benton: "Even
+the title was made ridiculous to please the president, though not so
+much so as he wished. He objected to the name of bank either in the
+title or the body of the charter, and proposed to style it 'Fiscal
+Institute;' and afterwards the 'Fiscal Agent,' and finally the 'Fiscal
+Corporation.'" Such preposterous folly on the president's part was more
+than the hot-blooded and overbearing Kentuckian could stand; and, in
+spite of his absorbing desire for the success of his measure, and of the
+vital necessity for conciliating Tyler, Clay could not bring himself to
+adopt such a ludicrous title, even though he had seen that the charter
+provided that the institution, whatever it might be styled in form,
+should in fact have all the properties of a bank. After a while,
+however, a compromise title was agreed on, but only a shadow less
+imbecile than the original one proposed by the president; and it was
+agreed to call the measure the "Fiscal Bank" bill.
+
+The president vetoed it, but stated that he was ready to approve any
+similar bill that should be free from the objections he named. Clay
+could not resist reading Tyler a lecture on his misconduct, during the
+course of a speech in the Senate; but the Whigs generally smothered
+their resentment, and set about preparing something which the president
+would sign, and this time concluded that they would humor him to the top
+of his bent, even by choosing a title as ridiculous as he wished; so
+they styled their bill one to establish a "Fiscal Corporation." Benton
+held the title up to well-deserved derision, and showed that, though
+there had been quite an elaborate effort to disguise the form of the
+measure, and to make it purport to establish a bank that should have the
+properties of a treasury, yet that in reality it was simply a revival of
+the old scheme under another name. The Whigs swallowed the sneers of
+their opponents as best they could, and passed their bill.
+
+The president again interposed his veto. An intrigue was going on among
+a few unimportant congressmen and obscure office-holders to form a new
+party with Tyler at its head; and the latter willingly entered into the
+plan, his mind, which was not robust at the best, being completely
+dazzled by his sudden elevation and his wild hopes that he could
+continue to keep the place which he had reached. He had given the Whigs
+reason to expect that he would sign the bill, and had taken none of his
+cabinet into his confidence. So, when his veto came in, it raised a
+perfect whirlwind of wrath and bitter disappointment. His cabinet all
+resigned, except Webster, who stayed to finish the treaty with Great
+Britain; and the Whigs formally read him out of the party. The Democrats
+looked on with huge enjoyment, and patted Tyler on the back, for they
+could see that he was bringing their foes to ruin; but nevertheless they
+despised him heartily, and abandoned him wholly when he had served their
+turn. Left without any support among the regulars of either side, and
+his own proposed third party turning out a still-born abortion, he
+simply played out his puny part until his term ended, and then dropped
+noiselessly out of sight. It is only the position he filled, and not in
+the least his ability, for either good or bad, in filling it, that
+prevents his name from sinking into merciful oblivion.
+
+There was yet one more brief spasm over the bank, however; the president
+sending in a plan for a "Fiscal Agent," to be called a Board of
+Exchequer. Congress contemptuously refused to pay any attention to the
+proposition, Benton showing its utter unworthiness in an excellent
+speech, one of the best that he made on the whole financial question.
+
+Largely owing to the cross purposes at which the president and his party
+were working, the condition of the treasury became very bad. It sought
+to provide for its immediate wants by the issue of treasury notes,
+differing from former notes of the kind in that they were made
+reissuable. Benton at once, and very properly, attacked this proceeding.
+He had a check drawn for a few days' compensation as senator, demanded
+payment in hard money, and when he was given treasury notes instead,
+made a most emphatic protest in the Senate, which was entirely
+effectual, the practically compulsory tender of the paper money being
+forthwith stopped.
+
+It was at this time, also, that bills to subsidize steamship lines were
+first passed, and that the enlarging and abuse of the pension system
+began, which in our own day threatens to become a really crying evil.
+Benton opposed both sets of measures; and in regard to the pension
+matter showed that he would not let himself, by any specious plea of
+exceptional suffering or need for charity, be led into vicious special
+legislation, sure in the end to bring about the breaking down of some of
+the most important principles of government.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+BOUNDARY TROUBLES WITH ENGLAND.
+
+
+Two important controversies with foreign powers became prominent during
+Tyler's presidency; but he had little to do with the settlement of
+either, beyond successively placing in his cabinet the two great
+statesmen who dealt with them. Webster, while secretary of state,
+brought certain of the negotiations with England to a close; and later
+on, Calhoun, while holding the same office, took up Webster's work and
+also grappled with--indeed partly caused--the troubles on the Mexican
+border, and turned them to the advantage of the South and slavery.
+
+Our boundaries were still very ill-defined, except where they were
+formed by the Gulf and the Ocean, the Great Lakes, and the river St.
+John. Even in the Northeast, where huge stretches of unbroken
+forest-land separated the inhabited portions of Canada from those of New
+England, it was not yet decided how much of this wilderness belonged to
+us and how much to the Canadians; and in the vast, unsettled regions of
+the far West our claims came into direct conflict with those of Mexico
+and of Great Britain. The ownership of these little known and badly
+mapped regions could with great difficulty be decided on grounds of
+absolute and abstract right; the title of each contestant to the land
+was more or less plausible, and at the same time more or less defective.
+The matter was sure to be decided in favor of the strongest; and, say
+what we will about the justice and right of the various claims, the
+honest truth is, that the comparative might of the different nations,
+and not the comparative righteousness of their several causes, was the
+determining factor in the settlement. Mexico lost her northern provinces
+by no law of right, but simply by the law of the longest sword--the same
+law that gave India to England. In both instances the result was greatly
+to the benefit of the conquered peoples and of every one else; though
+there is this wide difference between the two cases: that whereas the
+English rule in India, while it may last for decades or even for
+centuries, must eventually come to an end and leave little trace of its
+existence; on the other hand our conquests from Mexico determined for
+all time the blood, speech, and law of the men who should fill the lands
+we won.
+
+The questions between Great Britain and ourselves were compromised by
+each side accepting about half what it claimed, only because neither was
+willing to push the other to extremities. Englishmen like Palmerston
+might hector and ruffle, and Americans like Benton might swagger and
+bully; but when it came to be a question of actual fighting each people
+recognized the power of the other, and preferred to follow the more
+cautious and peaceful, not to say timid, lead of such statesmen as
+Webster and Lord Melbourne. Had we been no stronger than the Sikhs,
+Oregon and Washington would at present be British possessions; and if
+Great Britain had been as weak as Mexico, she would not now hold a foot
+of territory on the Pacific coast. Either nation might perhaps have
+refused to commit a gross and entirely unprovoked and uncalled-for act
+of aggression; but each, under altered conditions, would have readily
+found excuses for showing much less regard for the claims of the other
+than actually was shown. It would be untrue to say that nations have not
+at times proved themselves capable of acting with great
+disinterestedness and generosity towards other peoples; but such conduct
+is not very common at the best, and although it often may be desirable,
+it certainly is not always so. If the matter in dispute is of great
+importance, and if there is a doubt as to which side is right, then the
+strongest party to the controversy is pretty sure to give itself the
+benefit of that doubt; and international morality will have to take
+tremendous strides in advance before this ceases to be the case.
+
+It is difficult to exaggerate the importance of the treaties and wars by
+means of which we finally gave definite bounds to our territory beyond
+the Mississippi. Contemporary political writers and students, of the
+lesser sort, are always painfully deficient in the sense of historic
+perspective; and to such the struggles for the possession of the unknown
+and dimly outlined western wastes seemed of small consequence compared
+to similar European contests for territorial aggrandizement. Yet, in
+reality, when we look at the far-reaching nature of the results, the
+questions as to what kingdom should receive the fealty of Holstein or
+Lorraine, of Savoy or the Dobrudscha, seem of absolutely trivial
+importance compared to the infinitely more momentous ones as to the
+future race settlement and national ownership of the then lonely and
+unpeopled lands of Texas, California, and Oregon.
+
+Benton, greatly to the credit of his foresight, and largely in
+consequence of his strong nationalist feeling, thoroughly appreciated
+the importance of our geographical extensions. He was the great
+champion of the West and of western development, and a furious partisan
+of every movement in the direction of the enlargement of our western
+boundaries. Many of his expressions, when talking of the greatness of
+our country and of the magnitude of the interests which were being
+decided, not only were grandiloquent in manner, but also seem
+exaggerated and overwrought even as regards matter. But when we think of
+the interests for which he contended, as they were to become, and not as
+they at the moment were, the appearance of exaggeration is lost, and the
+intense feeling of his speeches no longer seems out of place or
+disproportionate to the importance of the subject with which he dealt.
+Without clearly formulating his opinions, even to himself, and while
+sometimes prone to attribute to his country at the moment a greatness
+she was not to possess for two or three generations to come, he,
+nevertheless, had engrained in his very marrow and fibre the knowledge
+that inevitably, and beyond all doubt, the coming years were to be hers.
+He knew that, while other nations held the past, and shared with his own
+the present, yet that to her belonged the still formless and unshaped
+future. More clearly than almost any other statesman he beheld the
+grandeur of the nation loom up, vast and shadowy, through the advancing
+years.
+
+He was keenly alive to the need of our having free chance to spread
+towards the northwest; he very early grasped the idea that in that
+direction we ought to have room for continental development. In his
+earliest years, to be sure, when the Mississippi seemed a river of the
+remote western border, when nobody, not even the hardiest trapper, had
+penetrated the boundless and treeless plains that stretch to the
+foot-hills of the Rockies, and when the boldest thinkers had not dared
+to suppose that we could ever hold together as a people, when once
+scattered over so wide a territory, he had stated in a public speech
+that he considered the mountains to be our natural frontier line to the
+west, and the barrier beyond which we ought not to pass, and had
+expressed his trust that on the Pacific coast there would grow up a
+kindred and friendly Republic. But very soon, as the seemingly
+impossible became the actual, he himself changed, and ever afterwards
+held that we should have, wherever possible, no boundaries but the two
+Oceans.
+
+Benton's violent and aggressive patriotism undoubtedly led him to assume
+positions towards foreign powers that were very repugnant to the quiet,
+peaceable, and order-loving portion of the community, especially when
+he gave vent to the spirit of jealous antagonism which he felt towards
+Great Britain, the power that held sway over the wilderness bordering us
+on the north. Yet the arrogant attitude he assumed was more than
+justified by the destiny of the great Republic; and it would have been
+well for all America if we had insisted even more than we did upon the
+extension northward of our boundaries. Not only the Columbia but also
+the Red River of the North--and the Saskatchewan and Frazer as
+well--should lie wholly within our limits, less for our own sake than
+for the sake of the men who dwell along their banks. Columbia,
+Saskatchewan, and Manitoba would, as states of the American Union, hold
+positions incomparably more important, grander, and more dignified than
+they can ever hope to reach either as independent communities or as
+provincial dependencies of a foreign power that regards them with a
+kindly tolerance somewhat akin to contemptuous indifference. Of course
+no one would wish to see these, or any other settled communities, now
+added to our domain by force; we want no unwilling citizens to enter our
+Union; the time to have taken the lands was before settlers came into
+them. European nations war for the possession of thickly settled
+districts which, if conquered, will for centuries remain alien and
+hostile to the conquerors; we, wiser in our generation, have seized the
+waste solitudes that lay near us, the limitless forests and never ending
+plains, and the valleys of the great, lonely rivers; and have thrust our
+own sons into them to take possession; and a score of years after each
+conquest we see the conquered land teeming with a people that is one
+with ourselves.
+
+Benton felt that all the unoccupied land to the northwest was by right
+our heritage, and he was willing to do battle for it if necessary. He
+was a perfect type of western American statesmanship in his way of
+looking at our foreign relations; he was always unwilling to compromise,
+being of that happy temperament which is absolutely certain that its
+claims are just and righteous in their entirety, and that it would be
+wrong to accept anything less than all that is demanded; he was willing
+to bully if our rights, as he deemed them, were not granted us; and he
+was perfectly ready to fight if the bullying was unsuccessful. True, he
+did not consistently carry through all his theories to their logical
+consequences; but it may well be questioned whether, after all, his
+original attitude towards Great Britain was not wiser, looking to its
+probable remote results, than that which was finally taken by the
+national government, whose policy was on this point largely shaped by
+the feeling among the richer and more educated classes of the Northeast.
+These classes have always been more cautious and timid than any others
+in the Union, especially in their way of looking at possible foreign
+wars, and have never felt much of the spirit which made the West stretch
+out impatiently for new lands. Fortunately they have rarely been able to
+control our territorial growth.
+
+No foot of soil to which we had any title in the Northwest should have
+been given up; we were the people who could use it best, and we ought to
+have taken it all. The prize was well worth winning, and would warrant a
+good deal of risk being run. We had even then grown to be so strong that
+we were almost sure eventually to win in any American contest for
+continental supremacy. We were near by, our foes far away--for the
+contest over the Columbia would have been settled in Canada. We should
+have had hard fighting to be sure, but sooner or later the result would
+have been in our favor. There were no better soldiers in the world than
+the men of Balaclava and Inkerman, but the victors of Buena Vista and
+Chapultepec were as good. Scott and Taylor were not great generals, but
+they were, at least, the equals of Lord Raglan; and we did not have in
+our service any such examples of abnormal military inaptitude as Lords
+Lucan and Cardigan and their kind.
+
+It was of course to be expected that men like Benton would bitterly
+oppose the famous Ashburton treaty, which was Webster's crowning work
+while secretary of state, and the only conspicuous success of Tyler's
+administration. The Ashburton treaty was essentially a compromise
+between the extreme claims of the two contestants, as was natural where
+the claims were based on very unsubstantial grounds and the contestants
+were of somewhat the same strength. It was most beneficial in its
+immediate effects; and that it was a perfectly dignified and proper
+treaty for America to make is best proved by the virulent hostility with
+which Palmerston and his followers assailed it as a "surrender" on the
+part of England, while Englishmen of the same stamp are to this day
+never tired of lamenting the fact that they have allowed our western
+boundaries to be pushed so far to the north. But there appears to be
+much excuse for Benton's attitude, when we look at the treaty as one in
+a chain of incidents, and with regard to its future results. Our
+territorial quarrels with Great Britain were not like those between most
+other powers. It was for the interest of the whole western hemisphere
+that no European nation should have extensive possessions between the
+Atlantic and the Pacific; and by right we should have given ourselves
+the benefit of every doubt in all territorial questions, and have shown
+ourselves ready to make prompt appeal to the sword whenever it became
+necessary as a last resort.
+
+Still, as regards the Ashburton treaty itself, it must be admitted that
+much of Benton's opposition was merely factious and partisan, on account
+of its being a Whig measure; and his speeches on the subject contain a
+number of arguments that are not very creditable to him.
+
+Some of his remarks referred to a matter which had been already a cause
+of great excitement during Van Buren's administration, and on which he
+had spoken more than once. This was the destruction of the steamer
+Caroline by the British during the abortive Canadian insurrection of
+1837. Much sympathy had been felt for the rebels by the Americans along
+the border, and some of them had employed the Caroline in conveying
+stores to the insurgents; and in revenge a party of British troops
+surprised and destroyed her one night while she was lying in an American
+port. This was a gross and flagrant violation of our rights, and was
+promptly resented by Van Buren, who had done what he could to maintain
+order along the border, and had been successful in his efforts. Benton
+had supported the president in preventing a breach of neutrality on our
+part, and was fiercely indignant when the breach was committed by the
+other side. Reparation was demanded forthwith. The British government at
+first made evasive replies. After a while a very foolish personage named
+McLeod, a British subject, who boasted that he had taken part in the
+affair, ventured into New York and was promptly imprisoned by the state
+authorities. His boastings, fortunately for him, proved to be totally
+unfounded, and he was acquitted by the jury before whom he was taken,
+after a detention of several months in prison. But meanwhile the British
+government demanded his release--adopting a very different tone with
+Tyler and the Whigs from that which they had been using towards Van
+Buren, who still could conjure with Jackson's terrible name. The United
+States agreed to release McLeod, but New York refused to deliver him up;
+and before the question was decided he was acquitted, as said above. It
+was clearly wrong for a state to interfere in a disagreement between the
+nation and a foreign power; and on the other hand the federal
+authorities did not show as much firmness in their dealings with
+England as they should have shown. Benton, true to certain of his
+states-rights theories and in pursuance of his policy of antagonism to
+Great Britain, warmly supported the attitude of New York, alleging that
+the United States had no right to interfere with her disposal of McLeod;
+and asserting that while if the citizens of one country committed an
+outrage upon another it was necessary to apply to the sovereign for
+redress, yet that if the wrong-doers came into the country which had
+been aggrieved they might be seized and punished; and he exultingly
+referred to Jackson's conduct at the time of the first Seminole War,
+when he hung off-hand two British subjects whom he accused of inciting
+the Indians against us, Great Britain not making any protest. The
+Caroline matter was finally settled in the Ashburton treaty, the British
+making a formal but very guarded apology for her destruction,--an
+apology which did not satisfy Benton in the least.
+
+It is little to Benton's credit, however, that, while thus courting
+foreign wars, he yet opposed the efforts of the Whigs to give us a
+better navy. Our navy was then good of its kind, but altogether too
+small. Benton's opposition to its increase seems to have proceeded
+partly from mere bitter partisanship, partly from sheer ignorance, and
+partly from the doctrinaire dread of any kind of standing military or
+naval force, which he had inherited, with a good many similar ideas,
+from the Jeffersonians.
+
+He attacked the whole treaty, article by article, when it came up for
+ratification in the Senate, making an extremely lengthy and elaborate
+speech, or rather set of speeches, against it. Much of his objection,
+especially to the part compromising the territorial claims of the two
+governments, was well founded; but much was also factious and
+groundless. The most important point of all that was in controversy, the
+ownership of Oregon, was left unsettled; but, as will be shown farther
+on, this was wise. He made this omission a base or pretext for the
+charge that the treaty was gotten up in the interests of the
+East,--although with frank lack of logic he also opposed it because it
+sacrificed the interests of Maine,--and that it was detrimental to the
+South and West; and he did his best to excite sectional feeling against
+it. He also protested against the omission of all reference to the
+impressment of American sailors by British vessels; and this was a valid
+ground of opposition,--although Webster had really settled the matter by
+writing a formal note to the British government, in which he practically
+gave official notice that any attempt to revive the practice would be
+repelled by force of arms.
+
+Benton occupied a much less tenable position when he came to the
+question of slavery, and inveighed against the treaty because it did not
+provide for the return of fugitive slaves, or of slaves taken from
+American coasting vessels when the latter happened to be obliged to put
+into West Indian ports, and because it did contain a provision that we
+ourselves should keep in commission a squadron on the coast of Africa to
+cooeperate with the British in the suppression of the slave-trade.
+Benton's object in attacking the treaty on this point was to excite the
+South to a degree that would make the senators from that section refuse
+to join in ratifying it; but the attempt was a flat failure. It is
+hardly to be supposed that he himself was as indignant over this
+question as he pretended to be. He must have realized that, so long as
+we had among ourselves an institution so wholly barbarous and out of
+date as slavery, just so long we should have to expect foreign powers to
+treat us rather cavalierly on that one point. Whatever we might say
+among ourselves as to the rights of property or the necessity of
+preserving the Union by refraining from the disturbance of slavery, it
+was certain that foreign nations would place the manhood and liberty of
+the slave above the vested interest of the master--all the more readily
+because they were jealous of the Union and anxious to see it break up,
+and were naturally delighted to take the side of abstract justice and
+humanity, when to do so was at the expense of outsiders and redounded to
+their own credit, without causing them the least pecuniary loss or
+personal inconvenience. The attitude of slave-holders towards freedom in
+the abstract was grotesque in its lack of logic; but the attitude of
+many other classes of men, both abroad and at home, towards it was
+equally full of a grimly unconscious humor. The southern planters, who
+loudly sympathized with Kossuth and the Hungarians, were entirely
+unconscious that their tyranny over their own black bondsmen made their
+attacks upon Austria's despotism absurd; and Germans, who were shocked
+at our holding the blacks in slavery, could not think of freedom in
+their own country without a shudder. On one night the Democrats of the
+Northern States would hold a mass meeting to further the cause of Irish
+freedom, on the next night the same men would break up another meeting
+held to help along the freeing of the negroes; while the English
+aristocracy held up its hands in horror at American slavery and set its
+face like a flint against all efforts to do Ireland tardy and incomplete
+justice.
+
+Again, in his opposition to the extradition clause of the treaty,
+Benton was certainly wrong. Nothing is clearer than that nations ought
+to combine to prevent criminals from escaping punishment merely by
+fleeing over an imaginary line; the crime is against all society, and
+society should unite to punish it. Especially is there need of the most
+stringent extradition laws between countries whose people have the same
+speech and legal system, as with the United States and Great Britain.
+Indeed, it is a pity that our extradition laws are not more stringent.
+But Benton saw, or affected to see, in the extradition clause, a menace
+to political refugees, and based his opposition to it mainly on this
+ground. He also quoted on his side the inevitable Jefferson; for
+Jefferson, or rather the highly idealized conception of what Jefferson
+had been, shared with the "demos krateo principle" the honor of being
+one of the twin fetiches to which Benton, in common with most of his
+fellow-Democrats, especially delighted to bow down.
+
+But when he came to the parts of the treaty that defined our
+northeastern boundary and so much of our northwestern boundary as lay
+near the Great Lakes, Benton occupied far more defensible ground; and
+the parts of his speech referring to these questions were very strong
+indeed. He attempted to show that in the matter of the Maine frontier
+we had surrendered very much more than there was any need of our doing,
+and that the British claim was unfounded; and there seems now to be good
+reason for thinking him right, although it must be admitted that in
+agreeing to the original line in earlier treaties the British had acted
+entirely under a misapprehension as to where it would go. Benton was
+also able to make a good point against Webster for finally agreeing to
+surrender so much of Maine's claim by showing the opposition the latter
+had made, while in the Senate, to a similar but less objectionable
+clause in a treaty which Jackson's administration had then been trying
+to get through. Again Webster had, in defending the surrender of certain
+of our claims along the boundary west of Lake Superior, stated that the
+country was not very valuable, as it was useless for agricultural
+purposes; and Benton had taken him up sharply on this point, saying that
+we wanted the land anyhow, whether it produced corn and potatoes or only
+furs and lumber. The amounts of territory as to which our claims were
+compromised were not very large compared to the extent of the Pacific
+coast lands which were still left in dispute; and it was perhaps well
+that the treaty was ratified; but certainly there is much to be said on
+Benton's side so far as his opposition to the proposed frontier was
+concerned.
+
+However, he was only able to rally eight other senators to his support,
+and the treaty went through the Senate triumphantly. It encountered an
+even more bitter opposition in Parliament, where Palmerston headed a
+series of furious attacks upon it, for reasons the precise opposite of
+those which Benton alleged, arguing that England received much less,
+instead of much more, than her due, and thereby showing Webster's
+position in a very much better light than that in which it would
+otherwise have appeared. Eventually the British government ratified the
+treaty.
+
+The Ashburton treaty did not touch on the Oregon matter at all; nor was
+this dealt with by Webster while he was secretary of state. But it came
+before the Senate at that time, and later on Calhoun took it up, when
+filling Webster's place in the cabinet, although a final decision was
+not reached until during Polk's presidency. Webster did not appreciate
+the importance of Oregon in the least, and moreover came from a section
+of the country that was not inclined to insist on territorial expansion
+at the hazard of a war, in which the merchants of the sea-board would be
+the chief sufferers. Calhoun, it is true, came from a peculiarly
+militant and bellicose state, but on the other hand from a section that
+was not very anxious to see the free North acquire new territory. So it
+happened that neither of Tyler's two great secretaries felt called upon
+to insist too vehemently upon going to extremes in defense of our
+rights, or supposed rights, along the Pacific coast; and though in the
+end the balance was struck pretty evenly between our claims and those of
+our neighbor, yet it is to be regretted that we did not stand out
+stiffly for the whole of our demand. Our title was certainly not
+perfect, but it was to the full as good as, or better than, Great
+Britain's; and it would have been better in the end had we insisted upon
+the whole territory being given to us, no matter what price we had to
+pay.
+
+The politico-social line of division between the East and the West had
+been gradually growing fainter as that between the North and South grew
+deeper; but on the Oregon question it again became prominent.
+Southeastern Democrats, like the Carolinian McDuffie, spoke as
+slightingly of the value of Oregon, and were as little inclined to risk
+a war for its possession, as the most peace-loving Whigs of New England;
+while the intense western feeling against giving up any of our rights on
+the Pacific coast was best expressed by the two senators from the slave
+state of Missouri. Benton was not restrained in his desire to add to
+the might of the Union by any fear of the possible future effect upon
+the political power of the Slave States. Although a slave-holder and the
+representative of slave-holders, he was fully alive to the evils of
+slavery, though as yet not seeing clearly how all-important a question
+it had become. The preservation and extension of the Union and obedience
+to the spirit of Democracy were the chief articles of his political
+creed, and to these he always subordinated all others. When, in speaking
+of slavery, he made use, as he sometimes did, of expressions that were
+not far removed from those of men really devoted to the slave interests,
+it was almost always because he had some ulterior object in view, or for
+factional ends; for unfortunately his standard of political propriety
+was not sufficiently high to prevent his trying to make use of any
+weapon, good or bad, with which to overturn his political foes. In
+protesting against the Ashburton treaty, he outdid even such slavery
+champions as Calhoun in the extravagance of his ideas as to what we
+should demand of foreign powers in reference to their treatment of our
+"peculiar institution"; but he seems to have done this merely because
+thereby he got an additional handle of attack against the Whig measures.
+The same thing was true earlier of his fulmination against Clay's
+proposed Panama Congress; and even before that, in attacking Adams for
+his supposed part in the treaty whereby we established the line of our
+Spanish frontier, he dragged slavery into the question, not, apparently,
+because he really particularly wished to see our slave territory
+extended, but because he thought that he might use the slavery cry to
+excite in one other section of the country a feeling as strong as that
+which the West already felt in regard to territorial expansion
+generally. Indeed, his whole conduct throughout the Oregon controversy,
+especially when taken in connection with the fact that he stood out for
+Maine's frontier rights more stoutly than the Maine representatives
+themselves, shows how free from sectional bias was his way of looking at
+our geographical growth.
+
+The territory along the Pacific coast lying between California on the
+south and Alaska on the north--"Oregon," as it was comprehensively
+called--had been a source of dispute for some time between the United
+States and Great Britain. After some negotiations both had agreed with
+Russia to recognize the line of 54 deg. 40' as the southern boundary of the
+latter's possessions; and Mexico's undisputed possession of California
+gave an equally well marked southern limit, at the forty-second
+parallel. All between was in dispute. The British had trading posts at
+the mouth of the Columbia, which they emphatically asserted to be
+theirs; we, on the other hand, claimed an absolutely clear title up to
+the forty-ninth parallel, a couple of hundred miles north of the mouth
+of the Columbia, and asserted that for all the balance of the territory
+up to the Russian possessions our title was at any rate better than that
+of the British. In 1818 a treaty had been made providing for the joint
+occupation of the territory by the two powers, as neither was willing to
+give up its claim to the whole, or at the time at all understood the
+value of the possession, then entirely unpeopled. This treaty of joint
+occupancy had remained in force ever since. Under it the British had
+built great trading stations, and used the whole country in the
+interests of certain fur companies. The Americans, in spite of some vain
+efforts, were unable to compete with them in this line; but, what was
+infinitely more important, had begun, even prior to 1840, to establish
+actual settlers along the banks of the rivers, some missionaries being
+the first to come in. As long, however, as the territory remained
+sparsely settled, and the communication with it chiefly by sea, the hold
+of Great Britain gave promise of being the stronger. But the aspect of
+affairs was totally changed when in 1842 a huge caravan of over a
+thousand Americans made the journey overland from the frontiers of
+Missouri, taking with them their wives and their children, their flocks
+and herds, carrying their long rifles on their shoulders, and their axes
+and spades in the great canvas-topped wagons. The next year, two
+thousand more settlers of the same sort in their turn crossed the vast
+plains, wound their way among the Rocky Mountains through the pass
+explored by Fremont, Benton's son-in-law, and after suffering every kind
+of hardship and danger, and warding off the attacks of hostile Indians,
+descended the western slope of the great water-shed to join their
+fellows by the banks of the Columbia. When American settlers were once
+in actual possession of the disputed territory, it became evident that
+the period of Great Britain's undisputed sway was over.
+
+The government of the United States, meanwhile, was so far from helping
+these settlers that it on the contrary rather threw obstacles in their
+way. As usual with us, the individual activity of the citizens
+themselves, who all acted independently and with that peculiar
+self-reliance that is the chief American characteristic, outstripped the
+activity of their representatives, who were obliged all to act together,
+and who were therefore held back by each other,--our Constitution,
+while giving free scope for individual freedom, wisely providing such
+checks as to make our governmental system eminently conservative in its
+workings. Tyler's administration did not wish to embroil itself with
+England; so it refused any aid to the settlers, and declined to give
+them grants of land, as under the joint occupancy treaty that would have
+given England offense and cause for complaint. But Benton and the other
+Westerners were perfectly willing to offend England, if by so doing they
+could help America to obtain Oregon, and were too rash and headstrong to
+count the cost of their actions. Accordingly, a bill was introduced
+providing for the settlement of Oregon, and giving each settler six
+hundred and forty acres, and additional land if he had a family; so that
+every inducement was held out to the emigrants, the West wanting to
+protect and encourage them by all the means in its power. The laws and
+jurisdiction of the Territory of Iowa were to be extended to all the
+settlers on the Pacific coast, who hitherto had governed themselves
+merely by a system of mutual agreements.
+
+The bill was, of course, strongly opposed, especially on account of the
+clause giving land to the settlers. It passed the Senate by a close
+vote, but failed in the House. Naturally Benton was one of its chief
+supporters, and spoke at length in its favor. He seized the kernel of
+the matter when, in advocating the granting of land, he spoke of
+immigration as "the only thing which can save the country from the
+British, acting through their powerful agent, the Hudson's Bay Company."
+He then blew a lusty note of defiance to Great Britain herself:--
+
+ I think she will take offense, do what we may in relation to this
+ territory. She wants it herself, and means to quarrel for it, if she
+ does not fight for it.... I grant that she will take offense, but
+ that is not the question with me. Has she a _right_ to take offense?
+ That is my question! And this being decided in the negative, I
+ neither fear nor calculate consequences.... Courage will keep her
+ off, fear will bring her upon us. The assertion of our rights will
+ command her respect; the fear to assert them will bring us her
+ contempt.... Neither nations nor individuals ever escaped danger by
+ fearing it. They must face it and defy it. An abandonment of a right
+ for fear of bringing on an attack, instead of keeping it off, will
+ inevitably bring on the outrage that is dreaded.
+
+He was right enough in his disposition to resent the hectoring spirit
+which, at that time, characterized Great Britain's foreign policy; but
+he was all wrong in condemning delay, and stating that if things were
+left as they were time would work against us, and not for us.
+
+In this respect Calhoun, who opposed the bill, was much wiser. He
+advocated a policy of "masterly inactivity," foreseeing that time was
+everything to us, inasmuch as the land was sure in the end to belong to
+that nation whose people had settled in it, and we alone were able to
+furnish a constantly increasing stream of immigrants. Later on, however,
+Calhoun abandoned this policy, probably mainly influenced by fear of the
+extension of free territory, and consented to a compromise with Great
+Britain. The true course to have pursued would have been to have
+combined the ideas of both Benton and Calhoun, and to have gone farther
+than either; that is, we should have allowed the question to remain
+unsettled as long as was possible, because every year saw an increasing
+American population in the coveted lands, and rendered the ultimate
+decision surer to be for us. When it was impossible to postpone the
+question longer, we should have insisted upon its being settled entirely
+in our favor, no matter at what cost. The unsuccessful attempts, made by
+Benton and his supporters, to persuade the Senate to pass a resolution,
+requiring that notice of the termination of the joint occupancy treaty
+should forthwith be given, were certainly ill-advised.
+
+However, even Benton was not willing to go to the length to which
+certain Western men went, who insisted upon all or nothing. He had
+become alarmed and angry over the intrigue for the admission of Texas
+and the proposed forcible taking away of Mexican territory. The
+Northwestern Democrats wanted all Texas and all Oregon; the Southeastern
+ones wished all the former and part of the latter. Benton then concluded
+that it would be best to take part of each; for, although no friend to
+compromises, yet he was unwilling to jeopardize the safety of the Union
+as it was by seeking to make it still larger. Accordingly, he
+sympathized with the effort made by Calhoun while secretary of state to
+get the British to accept the line of 49 deg. as the frontier; but the
+British government then rejected this proposition. In 1844 the Democrats
+made their campaign upon the issue of "fifty-four forty or fight;" and
+Polk, when elected, felt obliged to insist upon this campaign boundary.
+To this, however, Great Britain naturally would not consent; it was,
+indeed, idle to expect her to do so, unless things should be kept as
+they were until a fairly large American population had grown up along
+the Pacific coast, and had thus put her in a position where she could
+hardly do anything else. Polk's administration was neither capable nor
+warlike, however well disposed to bluster; and the secretary of state,
+the timid, shifty, and selfish politician, Buchanan, naturally fond of
+facing both ways, was the last man to wish to force a quarrel on a
+high-spirited and determined antagonist like England. Accordingly, he
+made up his mind to back down and try for the line of 49 deg., as proposed
+by Calhoun, when in Tyler's cabinet; and the English, for all their
+affected indifference, had been so much impressed by the warlike
+demonstrations in the United States, that they in turn were delighted,
+singing in a much lower key than before the "fifty-four forty" cry had
+been raised; accordingly they withdrew their former pretensions to the
+Columbia River and accepted the offered compromise. Now, however, came
+the question of getting the treaty through the Senate; and Buchanan
+sounded Benton, to see if he would undertake this task.
+
+Benton, worried over the Texas matter, was willing to recede somewhat
+from the very high ground he had taken,--although, of course, he
+insisted that he had been perfectly consistent throughout, and that the
+49th parallel was the line he had all along been striving for. Under his
+lead the proposal for a treaty on the basis indicated was carried
+through the Senate, and the line in consequence ultimately became our
+frontier, in spite of the frantic opposition of the Northwestern
+Democrats, the latter hurling every sort of charge of bad faith and
+treachery at their Southern associates, who had joined with the Whigs
+in defeating them. Benton's speech in support of the proposal was
+pitched much lower than had been his previous ones; and, a little
+forgetful of some of his own remarks, he was especially severe upon
+those members who denounced England and held up a picture of her real or
+supposed designs to excite and frighten the people into needless
+opposition to her.
+
+In its immediate effects the adoption of the 49th parallel as the
+dividing line between the two countries was excellent, and entailed no
+loss of dignity on either. Yet, as there was no particular reason why we
+should show any generosity in our diplomatic dealings with England, it
+may well be questioned whether it would not have been better to have
+left things as they were until we could have taken all. Wars are, of
+course, as a rule to be avoided; but they are far better than certain
+kinds of peace. Every war in which we have been engaged, except the one
+with Mexico, has been justifiable in its origin; and each one, without
+any exception whatever, has left us better off, taking both moral and
+material considerations into account, than we should have been if we had
+not waged it.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+
+THE ABOLITIONISTS DANCE TO THE SLAVE BARONS' PIPING.
+
+
+In 1844 the Whig candidate for the Presidency, Henry Clay, was defeated
+by a Mr. Polk, the nominee of the Democracy. The majorities in several
+of the states were very small; this was the case, for example in New
+York, the change in whose electoral vote would have also changed the
+entire result.
+
+Up to 1860 there were very few political contests in which the dividing
+lines between right and wrong so nearly coincided with those drawn
+between the two opposing parties as in that of 1844. The Democrats
+favored the annexation of Texas, and the addition of new slave territory
+to the Union; the Whigs did not. Almost every good element in the
+country stood behind Clay; the vast majority of intelligent,
+high-minded, upright men supported him. Polk was backed by rabid
+Southern fire-eaters and slavery extensionists, who had deified negro
+bondage and exalted it beyond the Union, the Constitution, and
+everything else; by the almost solid foreign vote, still unfit for the
+duties of American citizenship; by the vicious and criminal classes in
+all the great cities of the North and in New Orleans; by the corrupt
+politicians, who found ignorance and viciousness tools ready forged to
+their hands, wherewith to perpetrate the gigantic frauds without which
+the election would have been lost; and, lastly, he was also backed
+indirectly but most powerfully by the political Abolitionists.
+
+These Abolitionists had formed themselves into the Liberty party, and
+ran Birney for president; and though they polled but little over sixty
+thousand votes, yet as these were drawn almost entirely from the ranks
+of Clay's supporters, they were primarily responsible for his defeat;
+for the defections were sufficiently large to turn the scale in certain
+pivotal and closely contested states, notably New York. Their action in
+this case was wholly evil, alike in its immediate and its remote
+results; they simply played into the hands of the extreme slavery men
+like Calhoun, and became, for the time being, the willing accomplices of
+the latter. Yet they would have accomplished nothing had it not been for
+the frauds and outrages perpetrated by the gangs of native and
+foreign-born ruffians in the great cities, under the leadership of such
+brutal rowdies as Isaiah Rynders.
+
+These three men, Calhoun, Birney, and Isaiah Rynders, may be taken as
+types of the classes that were chiefly instrumental in the election of
+Polk, and that must, therefore, bear the responsibility for all the
+evils attendant thereon, including among them the bloody and unrighteous
+war with Mexico. With the purpose of advancing the cause of abstract
+right, but with the result of sacrificing all that was best, most
+honest, and most high-principled in national politics, the Abolitionists
+joined hands with Northern roughs and Southern slavocrats to elect the
+man who was, excepting Tyler, the very smallest of the line of small
+presidents who came in between Jackson and Lincoln.
+
+Owing to a variety of causes, the Abolitionists have received an immense
+amount of hysterical praise, which they do not deserve, and have been
+credited with deeds done by other men, whom they in reality hampered and
+opposed rather than aided. After 1840 the professed Abolitionists formed
+but a small and comparatively unimportant portion of the forces that
+were working towards the restriction and ultimate destruction of
+slavery; and much of what they did was positively harmful to the cause
+for which they were fighting. Those of their number who considered the
+Constitution as a league with death and hell, and who therefore
+advocated a dissolution of the Union, acted as rationally as would
+anti-polygamists nowadays if, to show their disapproval of Mormonism,
+they should advocate that Utah should be allowed to form a separate
+nation. The only hope of ultimately suppressing slavery lay in the
+preservation of the Union, and every Abolitionist who argued or signed a
+petition for its dissolution was doing as much to perpetuate the evil he
+complained of as if he had been a slave-holder. The Liberty party, in
+running Birney, simply committed a political crime, evil in almost all
+its consequences; they in no sense paved the way for the Republican
+party, or helped forward the anti-slavery cause, or hurt the existing
+organizations. Their effect on the Democracy was _nil_; and all they
+were able to accomplish with the Whigs was to make them put forward for
+the ensuing campaign a slave-holder from Louisiana, with whom they were
+successful. Such were the remote results of their conduct; the immediate
+evils they produced have already been alluded to. They bore considerable
+resemblance--except that, after all, they really did have a principle to
+contend for--to the political prohibitionists of the present day, who go
+into the third party organizations, and are, not even excepting the
+saloon-keepers themselves, the most efficient allies on whom
+intemperance and the liquor traffic can count.
+
+Anti-slavery men like Giddings, who supported Clay, were doing a
+thousand-fold more effective work for the cause they had at heart than
+all the voters who supported Birney; or, to speak more accurately, they
+were doing all they could to advance the cause, and the others were
+doing all they could to hold it back. Lincoln in 1860 occupied more
+nearly the ground held by Clay than that held by Birney; and the men who
+supported the latter in 1844 were the prototypes of those who wished to
+oppose Lincoln in 1860, and only worked less hard because they had less
+chance. The ultra Abolitionists discarded expediency, and claimed to act
+for abstract right, on principle, no matter what the results might be;
+in consequence they accomplished very little, and that as much for harm
+as for good, until they ate their words, went counter to their previous
+course, thereby acknowledging it to be bad, and supported in the
+Republican party the men and principles they had so fiercely condemned.
+The Liberty party was not in any sense the precursor of the Republican
+party, which was based as much on expediency as on abstract right, and
+was therefore able to accomplish good instead of harm. To say that the
+extreme Abolitionists triumphed in Republican success and were causes of
+it, is as absurd as it would be to call prohibitionists successful if,
+after countless futile efforts totally to prohibit the liquor traffic,
+and after savage denunciation of those who try to regulate it, they
+should then turn round and form a comparatively insignificant portion of
+a victorious high-license party.
+
+Many people in speaking of the Abolitionists apparently forget that the
+national government, even under Republican rule, would never have
+meddled with slavery in the various states unless as a war measure, made
+necessary by the rebellion into which the South was led by a variety of
+causes, of which slavery was chief, but among which there were others
+that were also prominent; such as the separatist spirit of certain of
+the communities and the unscrupulous, treacherous ambition of such men
+as Davis, Floyd, and the rest. The Abolitionists' political
+organizations, such as the Liberty party, generally produced very little
+effect either way, and were scarcely thought of during the contests
+waged for freedom in Congress. The men who took a great and effective
+part in the fight against slavery were the men who remained within their
+respective parties; like the Democrats Benton and Wilmot, or the Whigs
+Seward and Stevens. When a new party with more clearly defined
+principles was formed, they, for the most part, went into it; but, like
+all other men who have ever had a really great influence, whether for
+good or bad, on American politics, they did not act independently of
+parties, but on the contrary kept within party lines,--although, of
+course, none of them were mere blind and unreasoning partisans.
+
+The plea that slavery was a question of principle, on which no
+compromise could be accepted, might have been made and could still be
+made on twenty other points,--woman suffrage, for instance. Of course,
+to give women their just rights does not by any means imply that they
+should necessarily be allowed to vote, any more than the bestowal of the
+rights of citizenship upon blacks and aliens must of necessity carry
+with it the same privilege. But there were until lately, and in some
+states there are now, laws on the statute-book in reference to women
+that are in principle as unjust, and that are quite as much the remnants
+of archaic barbarism as was the old slave code; and though it is true
+that they do not work anything like the evil of the latter, they yet
+certainly work evil enough. The same laws that in one Southern state
+gave a master a right to whip a slave also allowed him to whip his wife,
+provided he used a stick no thicker than his little finger; the legal
+permission to do the latter was even more outrageous than that to do the
+former, yet no one considered it a ground for wishing a dissolution of
+the Union or for declaring against the existing parties. The folly of
+voting the Liberty ticket in 1844 differed in degree, but not at all in
+kind, from the folly of voting the Woman Suffrage ticket in 1884.
+
+The intrigue for the annexation of Texas, and for thereby extending the
+slave territory of the Union, had taken shape towards the close of
+Tyler's term of office, while Calhoun was secretary of state. Benton, as
+an aggressive Western man, desirous of seeing our territorial
+possessions extended in any direction, north or south, always hoped that
+in the end Texas might be admitted into the Union; but he disliked
+seeing any premature steps taken, and was no party to the scheme of
+forcing an immediate annexation in the interests of slavery. Such
+immediate annexation was certain, among other things, to bring us into
+grave difficulties not only with Mexico, but also with England, which
+was strongly inclined to take much interest of a practical sort in the
+fate of Texas, and would, of course, have done all it could to bring
+about the abolition of slavery in that state. The Southerners, desirous
+of increasing the slave domain, and always in a state of fierce alarm
+over the proximity of any free state that might excite a servile
+insurrection, were impatient to add the Lone Star Republic of the Rio
+Grande to the number of their states; the Southwesterners fell in with
+them, influenced, though less strongly, by the same motives, and also by
+the lust for new lands and by race hatred towards the Mexicans and
+traditional jealousy of Great Britain; and these latter motives induced
+many Northwesterners to follow suit. By a judicious harping on all these
+strings Jackson himself, whose name was still a mighty power among the
+masses, was induced to write a letter favoring instant and prompt
+annexation.
+
+This letter was really procured for political purposes. Tyler had
+completely identified himself with the Democracy, and especially with
+its extreme separatist wing, to which Calhoun also belonged, and which
+had grown so as to be already almost able to take the reins. The
+separatist chiefs were intriguing for the presidency, and were using
+annexation as a cry that would help them; and, failing in this attempt,
+many of the leaders were willing to break up the Union, and turn the
+Southern States, together with Texas, into a slave-holding confederacy.
+After Benton, the great champion of the old-style Union Democrats was
+Van Buren, who was opposed to immediate annexation, sharing the feeling
+that prevailed throughout the Northeast generally; although in certain
+circles all through the country there were men at work in its favor,
+largely as a mere matter of jobbery and from base motives, on account of
+speculations in Texan land and scrip, into which various capitalists and
+adventurers had gone rather extensively. Jackson, though a Southerner,
+warmly favored Van Buren, and was bitterly opposed to separatists; but
+the latter, by cunningly working on his feelings, without showing their
+own hands, persuaded him to write the letter mentioned, and promptly
+used it to destroy the chances of Van Buren, who was the man they
+chiefly feared; and though Jackson, at last roused to what was going on,
+immediately announced himself as in favor of Van Buren's candidacy, it
+was too late to undo the mischief.
+
+Benton showed on this, as on many other occasions, much keener political
+ideas than his great political chief. He was approached by a politician,
+who himself was either one of those concerned in the presidential
+intrigues, or else one of their dupes, and who tried to win him over to
+take the lead on their side, complimenting him upon his former services
+to the cause of territorial expansion towards the southwest. Ordinarily
+the great Missourian was susceptible enough to such flattery; but on
+this occasion, preoccupied with the idea of an intrigue for the
+presidency, and indignant that there should be an effort made to
+implicate him in it, especially as it was mixed up with schemes of
+stock-jobbing and of disloyalty to the Union, he took fire at once, and
+answered with hot indignation, in words afterwards highly resented by
+his questioner, "that it was on the part of some an intrigue for the
+presidency, and a plot to dissolve the Union; on the part of others, a
+Texas scrip and land speculation; and that he was against it." The
+answer was published in the papers, and brought about a total break
+between Benton and the annexation party.
+
+He was now thoroughly on the alert, and actively opposed at all points
+the schemes of those whom he regarded as concerned in or instigating the
+intrigue. He commented harshly on Tyler's annual message, which made a
+strong plea for annexation, even at the cost of a war both with Great
+Britain and Mexico; also on Calhoun's letter to Lord Aberdeen, which was
+certainly a remarkable diplomatic document,--being a thesis on slavery
+and the benefits resulting from it. Tyler's object was to prepare the
+way for a secret treaty, which should secure the desired object. Benton,
+in the course of some severe strictures on his acts, said, very truly,
+that it was evidently the intention to keep the whole matter as secret
+as possible until the treaty was concluded, "and then to force its
+adoption for the purpose of increasing the area of slave territory, or
+to make its rejection a cause for the secession of the Southern States;
+and in either event and in all cases to make the question of annexation
+a controlling one in the nomination of presidential candidates, and also
+in the election itself."
+
+When the treaty proposed by the administration was rejected, and when it
+became evident that neither Tyler nor Calhoun, the two most prominent
+champions of the extreme separatists, had any chance for the Democratic
+nomination, the disunion side of the intrigue was brought to the front
+in many of the Southern States, beginning of course with South Carolina.
+A movement was made for a convention of the Southern States, to be held
+in the interest of the scheme; the key-note being struck in the cry of
+"Texas or disunion!" But this convention was given up, on account of the
+strong opposition it excited in the so-called "Border States,"--an
+opposition largely stirred up and led by Benton. Once more the haughty
+slave leaders of the Southeast had found that in the Missouri Senator
+they had an opponent whose fearlessness quite equaled their own, and
+whose stubborn temper and strength of purpose made him at least a match
+for themselves, in spite of all their dash and fiery impetuosity. It
+must have sounded strange, indeed, to Northern ears, accustomed to the
+harsh railings and insolent threats of the South Carolina senators, to
+hear one of the latter complaining that Benton's tone in the debate was
+arrogant, overbearing, and dictatorial towards those who were opposed to
+him. This same Senator, McDuffie, had been speaking of the proposed
+Southern meeting at Nashville; and Benton warned him that such a meeting
+would never take place, and that he had mistaken the temper of the
+Tennesseans; and also reminded him that General Jackson was still alive,
+and that the South Carolinians in particular must needs be careful if
+they hoped to agree with his followers, whose name was still legion,
+because he would certainly take the same position towards a disunion
+movement in the interests of slavery that he had already taken towards a
+nullification movement in the interests of free trade. "Preservation of
+the federal Union is as strong in the old Roman's heart now as ever; and
+while, as a Christian, he forgives all that is past (if it were past),
+yet no old tricks under new names! Texas disunion will be to him the
+same as tariff disunion; and if he detects a Texas disunionist nestling
+into his bed, I say again: Woe unto the luckless wight!" Boldly and
+forcibly he went on to paint the real motives of the promoters of the
+scheme, and the real character of the scheme itself; stating that,
+though mixed up with various speculative enterprises and with other
+intrigues, yet disunion was at the bottom of it all, and that already
+the cry had become, "Texas without the Union, rather than the Union
+without Texas!" "Under the pretext of getting Texas into the Union the
+scheme is to get the South out of it. A Southern Confederacy stretching
+from the Atlantic to the Californias ... is the cherished vision of
+disappointed ambition." He bitterly condemned secession, as simply
+disunion begat by nullification, and went on to speak of his own
+attitude in apparently opposing the admission of Texas, which he had
+always desired to see become a part of the Union, and which he had
+always insisted rightfully belonged to us, and to have been given away
+by Monroe's treaty with Spain. "All that is intended and foreseen. The
+intrigue for the presidency was the first act in the drama; the
+dissolution of the Union the second. And I, who hate intrigue and love
+the Union, can only speak of the intriguers and disunionists with warmth
+and indignation. The oldest advocate for the recovery of Texas, I must
+be allowed to speak in just terms of the criminal politicians who
+prostituted the question of its recovery to their own base purposes, and
+delayed its success by degrading and disgracing it. A Western man, and
+coming from a state more than any other interested in the recovery of
+this country, so unaccountably thrown away by the treaty of 1819, I must
+be allowed to feel indignant at seeing Atlantic politicians seizing upon
+it, and making it a sectional question for the purposes of ambition and
+disunion. I have spoken warmly of these plotters and intriguers; but I
+have not permitted their conduct to alter my own, or to relax my zeal
+for the recovery of the sacrificed country. I have helped to reject the
+disunion treaty; and that obstacle being removed, I have brought in the
+bill which will insure the recovery of Texas, with peace and honor, and
+with the Union."
+
+It is important to remember, in speaking of his afterwards voting to
+admit Texas, that this was what he had all along favored, and that he
+now opposed it only on account of special circumstances. In both cases
+he was right; for, slavery or no slavery, it would have been a most
+unfortunate thing for us, and still worse for the Texans, if the latter
+had been allowed to develop into an independent nation. Benton deserves
+the greatest credit for the way in which he withstood the ignorant
+popular feeling of his own section in regard to Tyler's proposed treaty;
+and not only did he show himself able to withstand pressure from behind
+him, but also prompt in resenting threats made by outsiders. When
+McDuffie told him that the remembrance of his attitude on the bill
+would, to his harm, meet him on some future day, like the ghost that
+appeared to Brutus at Philippi, he answered:--
+
+ I can promise the ghost and his backers that if the fight goes
+ against me at this new Philippi, with which I am threatened, and the
+ enemies of the American Union triumph over me as the enemies of
+ Roman liberty triumphed over Brutus and Cassius, I shall not fall
+ upon my sword, as Brutus did, though Cassius be killed, and run it
+ through my own body; but I shall save it and save myself for another
+ day and another use,--for the day when the battle of the disunion of
+ these states is to be fought, not with words but with iron, and for
+ the hearts of the traitors who appear in arms against their country.
+
+Such a stern, defiant, almost prophetic warning did more to help the
+Union cause than volumes of elaborate constitutional argument, and it
+would have been well for the Northern States had they possessed men as
+capable of uttering it as was the iron Westerner. Benton always showed
+at his best when the honor or integrity of the nation was menaced,
+whether by foes from without or by foes from within. On such occasions
+his metal always rang true. When there was any question of breaking
+faith with the Union, or of treachery towards it, his figure always
+loomed up as one of the chief in the ranks of its defenders; and his
+follies and weaknesses sink out of sight when we think of the tremendous
+debt which the country owes him for his sorely tried and unswerving
+loyalty.
+
+The treaty alluded to by Benton in his speech against the abortive
+secession movement was the one made with Texas while Calhoun was
+secretary of state, and submitted to the Senate by Tyler, with a message
+as extraordinary as some of his secretary's utterances. The treaty was
+preposterously unjust and iniquitous. It provided for the annexation of
+Texas, and also of a very large portion of Mexico, to which Texas had no
+possible title, and this without consulting Mexico in any way whatever;
+Calhoun advancing the plea that it was necessary to act immediately on
+account of the danger that Texas was in of falling under the control of
+England, and therefore having slavery abolished within its borders;
+while Tyler blandly announced that we had acquired title to the ceded
+territory--which belonged to one power and was ceded to us by
+another--through his signature to the treaty, and that, pending its
+ratification by the Senate, he had dispatched troops to the scene of
+action to protect the ceded land "from invasion,"--the territory to be
+thus protected from Mexican invasion being then and always having been
+part and parcel of Mexico.
+
+Benton opposed the ratification of the treaty in a very strong speech,
+during which he mercilessly assailed both Tyler and Calhoun. The conduct
+of the former he dismissed with the contemptuous remark that he had
+committed "a caper about equal to the mad freaks with which the
+unfortunate Emperor Paul, of Russia, was accustomed to astonish Europe;"
+and roughly warned him to be careful how he tried to imitate Jackson's
+methods, because in heroic imitations there was no middle ground, and if
+he failed to fill the role of hero he would then perforce find himself
+playing that of harlequin. Calhoun received more attention, for he was
+far more worthy of a foeman's steel than was his nominal superior, and
+Benton exposed at length the willful exaggeration and the perversion of
+the truth of which the Carolinian had been guilty in trying to raise the
+alarm of English interference in Texas, for the purpose of excusing the
+haste with which the treaty was carried through.
+
+He showed at length the outrage we should inflict upon Mexico by seizing
+"two thousand miles of her territory, without a word of explanation with
+her, and by virtue of a treaty with Texas to which she was no party;"
+and he conclusively proved, making use of his own extensive acquaintance
+with history, especially American history, that the old Texas, the only
+territory that the Texans themselves or we could claim with any shadow
+of right, made but a fraction of the territory now "ceded" to us. He
+laughed at the idea of calling the territory Texas, and speaking of its
+forcible cutting off as re-annexation, "Humboldt calls it New Mexico,
+Chihuahua, Coahuila and Nuevo Santander; and the civilized world may
+qualify this _re_-annexation by some odious and terrible epithet ...
+robbery;" then he went on to draw a biting contrast between our
+treatment of Mexico and our treatment of England. "Would we take two
+thousand miles of Canada in the same way? I presume not. And why not?
+Why not treat Great Britain and Mexico alike? Why not march up to
+'fifty-four forty' as courageously as we march upon the Rio Grande?
+Because Great Britain is powerful and Mexico weak,--a reason which may
+fail in policy as much as in morals." Also he ridiculed the flurry of
+fear into which the Southern slave-holders affected to be cast by the
+dread of England's hostility to slavery, when they had just acquiesced
+in making a treaty with her by which we bound ourselves to help to put
+down the slave-trade. He then stated his own position, showing why he
+wished us to have the original Texan lands, if we could get them
+honorably, and without robbing Mexico of new territory; and at the same
+time sneered at Calhoun and Tyler because they had formerly favored the
+Monroe treaty, by which we abandoned our claims to them:--
+
+ We want Texas, that is to say, the Texas of La Salle; and we want it
+ for great natural reasons, obvious as day, and permanent as nature.
+ We want it because it is geographically appurtenant to our division
+ of North America, essential to our political, commercial, and social
+ system, and because it would be detrimental and injurious to us to
+ have it fall into the hands or sink under the domination of any
+ foreign power. For these reasons I was against sacrificing the
+ country when it was thrown away,--and thrown away by those who are
+ now so suddenly possessed of a fury to get it back. For these
+ reasons I am for getting it back whenever it can be done with peace
+ and honor, or even at the price of just war against any intrusive
+ European power; but I am against all disguise and artifice,--against
+ all pretexts,--and especially against weak and groundless pretexts,
+ discreditable to ourselves and offensive to others, too thin and
+ shallow not to be seen through by every beholder, and merely
+ invented to cover unworthy purposes.
+
+The treaty was rejected by an overwhelming vote, although Buchanan led a
+few of his timeserving comrades from the North to the support of the
+extreme Southern element. Benton then tried, but failed, to get through
+a bill providing for a joint agreement between Mexico, Texas, and the
+United States to settle definitely all boundary questions. Meanwhile the
+presidential election occurred, with the result already mentioned. The
+separatist and annexationist Democrats, the extreme slavery wing of the
+party, defeated Van Buren and nominated Polk, who was their man; the
+Whigs nominated Clay, who was heartily opposed to all the schemes of the
+disunion and extreme slavery men, and who, if elected, while he might
+very properly have consented to the admission of Texas with its old
+boundaries, would never have brought on a war nor have attempted to add
+a vast extent of new slave territory to the Union. Clay would have been
+elected, and the slavery disunionists defeated, if in the very nick of
+time the Abolitionists had not stepped in to support the latter, and by
+their blindness in supporting Birney given the triumph to their own most
+bitter opponents. Then the Abolitionists, having played their only
+card, and played it badly, had to sit still and see what evil their acts
+had produced; they had accomplished just as much as men generally do
+accomplish when they dance to the tune that their worst foes play.
+
+Polk's election gave an enormous impulse to the annexation movement, and
+made it doubly and trebly difficult for any one to withstand it. The
+extreme disunion and slavery men, of course, hated Benton, himself a
+Southwesterner from a slave-holding state, with peculiar venom, on
+account of his attitude, very justly regarding him as the main obstacle
+in their path; and the din and outcry raised against all who opposed the
+schemes of the intriguers was directed with especial fury against the
+Missourian. He was accused of being allied to the Whigs, of wishing to
+break up the Democracy, and of many other things. Indeed, Benton's own
+people were very largely against him, and it must always be remembered
+that whereas Northeastern statesmen were certain to be on the popular
+side in taking a stand against the extreme pro-slavery men, Benton's
+position was often just the reverse. With them it was politic to do
+right; with him it was not; and for this reason the praise awarded the
+latter should be beyond measure greater than that awarded to the former.
+
+Still, there can be little question that he was somewhat, even although
+only slightly, influenced by the storm of which he had to bear the
+brunt; indeed, he would have been more than human if he had not been;
+and probably this outside pressure was one among the causes that induced
+him to accept a compromise in the matter, which took effect just before
+Polk was inaugurated. The House of Representatives had passed a
+resolution giving the consent of Congress to the admission of Texas as a
+state, and allowing it the privilege of forming four additional states
+out of its territory, whenever it should see fit. The line of the
+Missouri Compromise, 36 deg. 30', was run through this new territory,
+slavery being prohibited in the lands lying north of it, and permissible
+or not, according to the will of the state seeking admission, in those
+lying south of it. Benton meanwhile had introduced a bill merely
+providing that negotiations should be entered into with Texas for its
+admission, the proposed treaty or articles of agreement to be submitted
+to the Senate or to Congress. He thereby kept the control in the hands
+of the legislature, which the joint resolution did not; and moreover, as
+he said in his speech, he wished to provide for due consideration being
+shown Mexico in the arrangement of the boundary, and for the matter
+being settled by commissioners.
+
+Neither resolution nor bill could get through by itself; and
+accordingly it was proposed to combine both into one measure, leaving
+the president free to choose either plan. To this proposition Benton
+finally consented, it being understood that, as only three days of
+Tyler's term remained, the execution of the act would be left to the
+incoming president, and that the latter would adopt Benton's plans. The
+friends of the admission of Texas assured the doubtful voters that such
+would be the case. Polk himself gave full assurance that he would
+appoint a commission, as provided by Benton's bill, if passed, with the
+House resolution as an alternative; and McDuffie, Calhoun's friend, and
+the senator from South Carolina, announced without reserve that
+Calhoun--for Tyler need not be considered in the matter, after it had
+been committed to the great nullifier--would not have the "audacity" to
+try to take the settlement of the question away from the president, who
+was to be inaugurated on the fourth of March. On the strength of these
+assurances, which, if made good, would, of course, have rendered the
+"alternative" a merely nominal one, Benton supported the measure, which
+was then passed. Contrary to all expectation, Calhoun promptly acted
+upon the legislative clause, and Polk made no effort to undo what the
+former had done. This caused intense chagrin and anger to the
+Bentonians; but they should certainly have taken such a contingency into
+account, and though they might with much show of reason say that they
+had been tricked into acting as they had done, yet it is probable that
+the immense pressure from behind had made Benton too eager to follow any
+way he could find that would take him out of the position into which his
+conscience had led him. No amount of pressure would have made him
+deliberately sanction a wrong; but it did render him a little less wary
+in watching to see that the right was not infringed upon. It was most
+natural that he should be anxious to find a common ground for himself
+and his constituents to stand on; but it is to be regretted that this
+anxiety to find a common ground should have made him willing to trust
+blindly to vague pledges and promises, which he ought to have known
+would not be held in the least binding by those on whose behalf they
+were supposed to be made.
+
+Acting under this compromise measure Texas was admitted, and the
+foundation for our war with Mexico was laid. Calhoun, under whom this
+was done, nevertheless sincerely regretted the war itself, and freely
+condemned Polk's administration for bringing it on; his own position
+being that he desired to obtain without a war what it was impossible we
+should get except at the cost of one. Benton, who had all along
+consistently opposed doing a wrong to Mexico, attacked the whole war
+party, and in a strong and bitter speech accused Calhoun of being the
+cause of the contest; showing plainly that, whatever the ex-secretary of
+state might say in regard to the acts immediately precipitating the
+conflict, he himself was responsible as being in truth their original
+cause. While stating his conviction, however, that Calhoun was the real
+author of the war, Benton added that he did not believe that war was his
+object, although an inevitable incident of the course he had pursued.
+
+Although heartily opposed to the war in its origin, Benton very properly
+believed in prosecuting it with the utmost vigor when once we were
+fairly in; and it was mainly owing to him that the proposed policy of a
+"masterly inactivity" was abandoned, and the scheme of pushing straight
+for the city of Mexico adopted in its stead. Indeed, it was actually
+proposed to make him lieutenant-general, and therefore the
+commander-in-chief of our forces in Mexico; but this was defeated in the
+Senate, very fortunately, as it would have been a great outrage upon
+Scott, Taylor, and every other soldier with real military training. It
+seems extraordinary that Benton himself should not have seen the
+absurdity and wrong of such a proposition.
+
+The wonderful hardihood and daring shown in the various expeditions
+against Mexico, especially in those whereby her northwest territory was
+wrested from her, naturally called forth all Benton's sympathy; and one
+of his best speeches was that made to welcome Doniphan's victorious
+volunteers after their return home from their famous march to
+Chihuahua.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+
+SLAVERY IN THE NEW TERRITORIES.
+
+
+Hardly was Polk elected before it became evident to Benton and the other
+Jacksonians that the days of the old Union or Nationalist Democracy were
+over, and that the separatist and disunion elements within the party had
+obtained the upper hand. The first sign of the new order of things was
+the displacement of Blair, editor of the "Globe," the Democratic
+newspaper organ. Blair was a strong Unionist, and had been bitterly
+hostile to Calhoun and the Nullifiers. He had also opposed Tyler, the
+representative of those states-rights and separatist Democrats, who by
+their hostility to Jackson had been temporarily driven into the Whig
+camp, and who, finding themselves in very uncongenial society, and
+seeing, moreover, that their own principles were gradually coming to the
+front in the old party, had begun drifting back again into it. Polk's
+chances of election were so precarious that he was most anxious to
+conciliate the Separatists; besides which he at heart sympathized with
+their views, and had himself been brought forward in the Democratic
+convention to beat the National candidate, Van Buren. Moreover, Tyler
+withdrew from the contest in his favor; in part payment for which help,
+soon after the election, Blair was turned out, and Ritchie of Virginia,
+a man whose views suited the new Democratic leaders, was put in his
+place; to the indignation not only of Benton, but also of Jackson
+himself, then almost on his death-bed. Of course the break between the
+two wings was as yet by no means complete. Polk needed the Union
+Democrats, and the latter were still in good party standing. Benton
+himself, as has been seen, was offered the command of all the forces in
+Mexico, but the governmental policy, and the attitude of the party in
+Congress after 1844, were widely different from what they had been while
+Jackson's influence was supreme, or while the power he left behind him
+was wielded by a knot of Union men.
+
+From this time the slavery question dwarfed all others, and was the one
+with which Benton, as well as other statesmen, had mainly to deal. He
+had been very loath to acknowledge that it was ever to become of such
+overshadowing importance; until late in his life he had not realized
+that, interwoven with the disunionist movement, it had grown so as to
+become in reality the one and only question before the people; but, this
+once thoroughly understood, he henceforth devoted his tremendous
+energies to the struggle with it. He possessed such phenomenal power of
+application and of study, and his capacity for and his delight in work
+were so extraordinary, that he was able at the same time to grapple with
+many other subjects of importance, and to present them in a way that
+showed he had thoroughly mastered them both in principle and detail,--as
+witness his speech in favor of giving the control of the coast survey to
+the navy; but henceforth the importance of his actions lay in their
+relation to the slavery extension movements.
+
+He had now entered on what may fairly be called the heroic part of his
+career; for it would be difficult to choose any other word to express
+our admiration for the unflinching and defiant courage with which,
+supported only by conscience and by his loving loyalty to the Union, he
+battled for the losing side, although by so doing he jeopardized and
+eventually ruined his political prospects, being finally, as punishment
+for his boldness in opposing the dominant faction of the Missouri
+Democracy, turned out of the Senate, wherein he had passed nearly half
+his life. Indeed, his was one of those natures that show better in
+defeat than in victory. In his career there were many actions that must
+command our unqualified admiration; such were his hostility to the
+Nullifiers, wherein, taking into account his geographical location and
+his refusal to compromise, he did better than any other public man, not
+even excepting Jackson and Webster; his belief in honest money; and his
+attitude towards all questions involving the honor or the maintenance
+and extension of the Union. But in all these matters he was backed more
+or less heartily by his state, and he had served four terms in the
+federal Senate as the leading champion and representative, not alone of
+Missouri, but also of the entire West. When, however, the slavery
+question began to enter upon its final stage, Benton soon found himself
+opposed to a large and growing faction of the Missouri Democracy, which
+increased so rapidly that it soon became dominant. But he never for an
+instant yielded his convictions, even when he saw the ground being thus
+cut from under his feet, fighting for the right as sturdily as ever,
+facing his fate fearlessly, and going down without a murmur. The
+contrast between the conduct towards the slavery disunionists of this
+Democrat from a slave-holding state, with a hostile majority at home
+against him, and the conduct of Webster, a Whig, enthusiastically
+backed by his own free state, in the same issue, is a painful one for
+the latter. Indeed, on any moral point, Benton need have no cause to
+fear comparison with any of his great rivals in the political arena.
+During his career, the United States Senate was perhaps the most
+influential, and certainly the ablest legislative body in the world; and
+after Jackson's presidency came to an end the really great statesmen and
+political leaders of the country were to be found in it, and not in the
+executive chair. The period during which the great Missourian was so
+prominent a figure in our politics, and which lasted up to the time of
+the Civil War, might very appropriately be known in our history as the
+time of the supremacy of the Senate. Such senators as Benton, Webster,
+Clay, and Calhoun, and later on Douglas, Seward, and Sumner, fairly
+towered above presidents like the obscure Southerners, Tyler and Polk,
+or the truckling, timeserving Northern politicians, Pierce and Buchanan.
+During the long interval coming between the two heroic ages of American
+history,--the age of Washington and Franklin, and the age of Lincoln and
+Grant,--it was but rarely that the nation gave its greatest gift to its
+best or its greatest son.
+
+Benton had come into the Senate at the same time that Missouri was
+admitted into the Union, with thanks, therefore, to the same measure,
+the Missouri Compromise bill. This shut out slavery from all territory
+north of the line of 36 deg. 30', and did not make it obligatory even where
+it was permissible; and the immediate cause of Benton's downfall was his
+courage and persistency in defending the terms of this compromise from
+the attacks of the Southern slavery extensionists and disunionists. The
+pro-slavery feeling was running ever higher and higher throughout the
+South; and his stand on this question aroused the most furious anger
+among a constantly increasing number of his constituents, and made him
+the target for bitter and savage assaults on the part of his foes, the
+spirit of hostility against him being carried to such length as finally
+almost to involve him in an open brawl on the floor of the Senate with
+one of his colleagues, Foote, who, like his fellow fire-eaters, found
+that Benton was not a man who could be bullied. Indeed, his iron will
+and magnificent physique both fitted him admirably for such a contest
+against odds, and he seems to have entered into it with a positive zest.
+
+The political Abolitionists having put Polk in power, their action bore
+fruit after its kind, and very soon the question had to be faced, as to
+what should be done with the immense tracts of territory conquered from
+Mexico. Benton opposed, as being needless and harmful, the Wilmot
+Proviso, which forbade the introduction of slavery into any part of the
+territory so acquired. He argued, and produced in evidence the laws and
+Constitution of Mexico, that the soil of California and Mexico was
+already free, and that as slavery would certainly never be, and indeed
+could never be, introduced into either territory, the agitation of the
+question could only result in harm. Calhoun and the other extreme
+slavery leaders welcomed the discussion over this proviso, which led
+Benton to remark that the Abolitionists and the Nullifiers were
+necessary to each other,--the two blades of a pair of shears, neither of
+which could cut until they were joined together.
+
+When Calhoun introduced his famous resolutions declaring that Congress
+had no power to interfere with slavery in the territories, and therefore
+no power to prevent the admission of new states except on the condition
+of their prohibiting slavery within their limits, Benton promptly and
+strongly opposed them as being firebrands needlessly thrown to inflame
+the passions of the extremists, and, moreover, as being disunionist in
+tendency. The following is his own account of what then took place: "Mr.
+Calhoun said he had expected the support of Mr. Benton 'as the
+representative of a slave-holding state.' Mr. Benton answered that it
+was impossible that he could have expected such a thing. 'Then,' said
+Mr. Calhoun, 'I shall know where to find that gentleman.' To which Mr.
+Benton said: 'I shall be found in the right place,--on the side of my
+country and the Union.' This answer, given on that day and on the spot,
+is one of the incidents of his life which Mr. Benton will wish posterity
+to remember." We can easily pardon the vanity which wishes and hopes
+that such an answer, given under such conditions, may be remembered.
+Indeed, Benton's attitude throughout all this period should never be
+forgotten; and the words he spoke in answer to Calhoun marked him as the
+leader among those Southerners who held the nation above any section
+thereof, even their own, and whose courage and self-sacrifice in the
+cause of the Union entitled them to more praise than by right belongs to
+any equal number of Northerners; those Southerners who in the civil war
+furnished Farragut, Thomas, Bristow, and countless others as loyal as
+they were brave. The effect of Benton's teachings and the still
+remaining influence of his intense personality did more than aught else
+to keep Missouri within the Union, when her sister states went out of
+it.
+
+Benton always regarded much of the slavery agitation in the South as
+being political in character, and the result of the schemes of ambitious
+and unscrupulous leaders. He believed that Calhoun had introduced a set
+of resolutions that were totally uncalled for, simply for the purpose of
+carrying a question to the Slave States on which they could be formed
+into a unit against the Free States; and there is much to be said in
+support of his view. Certainly the resolutions mark the beginning of the
+first great slavery agitation throughout the Southern States, which was
+engineered and guided for their own ends by politicians like Jefferson
+Davis. These resolutions were absolutely inconsistent with many of
+Calhoun's previous declarations; and that fact was also sharply
+commented on by Benton in his speeches and writings. He also criticised
+with caustic severity Calhoun's statements that he wished to save the
+Union by forcing the North to take a position so agreeable to the South
+as to make the latter willing not to separate. He showed that Calhoun's
+proposed "constitutional" and "peaceable" methods of bringing this about
+by prohibiting commercial intercourse between the two sections would
+themselves be flagrant breaches of the Constitution and acts of
+disunion,--all the more so as it was proposed to discriminate in favor
+of the Northwest as against the Northeast. Calhoun wished to bring
+about a convention of the Southern States, in order to secure the
+necessary unity of action; and one of the main obstacles to the success
+of the plan was Missouri's refusal to take part in it. Great efforts
+were made to win her over, and to beat down Benton; the extreme
+pro-slavery men honoring him with a hatred more intense than that they
+harbored towards any Northerner. Some of Calhoun's recent biographers
+have credited him with being really a Union man at heart. It seems
+absolutely impossible that this could have been the case; and the
+supposition is certainly not compatible with the belief that he retained
+his right senses. Benton characterizes his system of slavery agitation,
+very truthfully, as being one "to force issues upon the North under the
+pretext of self-defense, and to sectionalize the South, preparatory to
+disunion, through the instrumentality of sectional conventions, composed
+wholly of delegates from the slave-holding states."
+
+When the question of the admission of Oregon came up, Calhoun attempted
+to apply to it a dogma wholly at variance with all his former positions
+on the subject. This was the theory of the self-extension of the slavery
+part of the Constitution to the territories; that is, he held that the
+exclusion of slavery from any part of the new territory was itself a
+subversion of the Constitution. Such a dogma was so monstrous in
+character, so illogical, so inconsistent with all his former theories,
+and so absolutely incompatible with the preservation of the Union, that
+it renders it impossible to believe that his asseverations of devotion
+to the latter were uttered honestly or in good faith. Most modern
+readers will agree with Benton that he deliberately worked to bring
+about secession.
+
+Meanwhile the Missourian had gained an ally of his own stamp in the
+Senate. This was Houston, from the new State of Texas, who represented
+in that state, like Andrew Jackson in Tennessee, and Benton himself in
+Missouri, the old Nationalist Democracy, which held the preservation of
+the Union dear above all other things. Houston was a man after Benton's
+own heart, and was thoroughly Jacksonian in type. He was rough, honest,
+and fearless, a devoted friend and a vengeful enemy, and he promised
+that combination of stubborn courage and capacity of devotion to an
+ideal that renders a man an invaluable ally in a fight against odds for
+principle.
+
+After much discussion and amendment, the Oregon bill, containing a
+radical anti-slavery clause, passed both houses and became a law in
+spite of the violent opposition of some of the Southerners, headed by
+Calhoun, who announced that the great strife between the North and the
+South was ended, and that the time had come for the South to show that,
+though she prized the Union, yet there were matters which she regarded
+as of greater importance than its preservation. His ire was most
+fiercely excited by the action of Benton and Houston in supporting the
+bill, and after his return to South Carolina he denounced them by name
+as traitors to the South,--"a denunciation," says Benton, "which they
+took for a distinction; as what he called treason to the South they knew
+to be allegiance to the Union." When it was proposed to extend by bill
+the Constitution of the United States into the territories, with a view
+to carrying slavery into California, Utah, and New Mexico, Benton was
+again opposed to Calhoun. As a matter of course, too, he was the
+stoutest opponent of the Southern convention and other similar disunion
+movements that were beginning to take shape throughout the South,
+instigated by the two rank secession states of South Carolina and
+Mississippi.
+
+Most of the momentous questions springing out of the war with Mexico
+were left by Polk as legacies to his successor, when the former went out
+of office, after an administration that Benton criticised with extreme
+sharpness, although he tried to shield the president by casting the
+blame for his actions upon his cabinet advisers; characterizing the
+Mexican War as one of "speculation and intrigue," and as the "great
+blot" of his four years' term of office, and ridiculing the theory that
+we were acting in self-defense, or that our soil had been invaded. In
+1848 the Democrats nominated Cass, a Northern pro-slavery politician of
+moderate abilities, and the Whigs put up and elected old Zachary Taylor,
+the rough frontier soldier and Louisiana slave-holder. The political
+Abolitionists again took a hand in the contest, but this time abandoned
+their abolition theories, substituting instead thereof the prohibition
+of slavery in the new territories. They derived much additional
+importance from their alliance with a disappointed politician in the
+pivotal State of New York; and in this case, in sharp contrast to the
+result in 1844, their actions worked good, and not evil. Van Buren,
+chagrined and angered by the way he was treated by the regular
+Democrats, organized a revolt against them, and used the banner of the
+new Free Soil party as one under which to rally his adherents. This
+movement was of consequence mainly in New York, and there it soon became
+little more than a mere fight between the two sections of the Democracy.
+Benton himself visited this all-important state to try to patch up
+matters, but he fortunately failed. The factions proved very nearly
+equal in strength; and as a consequence the Whigs carried the state and
+the election, and once more held the reins of government.
+
+When a Louisiana slave-holder was thus installed in the White House, the
+extreme Southern men may have thought that they were sure of him as an
+ally in their fight against freedom. But, if so, they soon found they
+had reckoned without their host, for the election of Taylor affords a
+curious, though not solitary, instance in which the American people
+builded better than they knew in choosing a chief executive. Nothing
+whatever was known of his political theories, and the Whigs nominated
+him simply because he was a successful soldier, likely to take the
+popular fancy. But once elected he turned out to have the very qualities
+we then most needed in a president,--a stout heart, shrewd common sense,
+and thorough-going devotion to the Union. Although with widely different
+training from Benton, and nominally differing from him in politics, he
+was yet of the same stamp both in character and principles; both were
+Union Southerners, not in the least afraid of openly asserting their
+opinions, and, if necessary, of making them good by their acts. In his
+first and only annual message, Taylor expressed, upon all the important
+questions of the day, views that were exactly similar to those advanced
+before or after by Benton himself in the Senate; and he used similar
+emphasis and plainness of speech. He declared the Union to be the
+greatest of blessings, which he would maintain in every way against
+whatever dangers might threaten it; he advised the admission of
+California, which wished to come in as a free state; he thought that the
+territories of Utah and New Mexico should be left as they were; and he
+warned the Texans, who were blustering about certain alleged rights to
+New Mexican soil, and threatening to take them by force of arms, that
+this could not be permitted, and that the matter would have to be
+settled by the judicial authority of the United States. Benton heartily
+indorsed the message. Naturally, it was bitterly assailed by the
+disunionists under Calhoun; and even Clay, who entirely lacked Taylor's
+backbone, was dissatisfied with it as being too extreme in tone, and
+conflicting with his proposed compromise measures. These same compromise
+measures brought the Kentucky leader into conflict with Benton also,
+especially on the point of their interfering with the immediate
+admission of California into the Union.
+
+This is not the place to discuss Clay's proposed compromise, which was
+not satisfactory to the extreme Southerners, and still less so to the
+Unionists and anti-slavery men. It consisted of five different parts,
+relating to the recovery of fugitive slaves, the suppression of the
+slave-trade in the District of Columbia, the admission of California as
+a state, and the territorial condition of Utah and New Mexico. Benton
+opposed it as mixing up incongruous measures; as being unjust to
+California, inasmuch as it confounded the question of her admission with
+the general slavery agitation in the United States; and above all as
+being a concession or capitulation to the spirit of disunion and
+secession, and therefore a repetition of the error of 1833. Benton
+always desired to meet and check any disunion movement at the very
+outset, and, if he had had his way, would have carried matters with a
+high hand whenever it came to dealing with threats of such a proceeding;
+and therein he was perfectly right. In regard to the proposed compromise
+he believed in dealing with each question as it arose, beginning with
+the admission of California, and refusing to have any compromise at all
+with those who threatened secession.
+
+The slavery extensionists endeavored to have the Missouri compromise
+line stretched on to the Pacific. Benton, avowing his belief that
+slavery was an evil, opposed this, and gave his reasons why he did not
+wish to see the line which had been used to divide free and slave soil
+in the French or Louisiana purchase extended into the lands won from
+Mexico. Slavery had always existed in Louisiana, while it had been long
+abolished in Mexico. "The Missouri compromise line, extending to New
+Mexico and California, though astronomically the same as that in
+Louisiana, would be politically directly the opposite. One went through
+a territory all slave, and made one half free; the other would go
+through territory all free, and make one half slave." In fact Benton, as
+he grew older, unlike most of his compatriots, gained a clearer insight
+into the effects of slavery. This was shown in his comments upon
+Calhoun's statement, made in the latter's last speech, in reference to
+the unequal development of the North and South; which, Benton said, was
+partly owing to the existence of "slavery itself, which he (Calhoun) was
+so anxious to extend." It was in this same speech that Calhoun hinted at
+his plan for a dual executive,--one president from the Free and one from
+the Slave States,--a childish proposition, that Benton properly treated
+as a simple absurdity.
+
+In his speech against the compromise, Benton discussed it, section by
+section, with great force, and with his usual blunt truthfulness. His
+main count was the injustice done to California by delaying her
+admittance, and making it dependent upon other issues; but he made
+almost as strong a point against the effort to settle the claims of
+Texas to New Mexican territory. The Texan threats to use force he
+treated with cavalier indifference, remarking that as long as New Mexico
+was a territory, and therefore belonged to the United States, any
+controversy with her was a controversy with the federal government,
+which would know how to play her part by "defending her territory from
+invasion, and her people from violence,"--a hint that had a salutary
+effect upon the Texans; in fact the disunionists, generally, were not
+apt to do much more than threaten while a Whig like Taylor was backed up
+by a Democrat like Benton. He also pointed out that it was not
+necessary, however desirable, to make a compact with Texas about the
+boundaries, as they could always be settled, whether she wished it or
+not, by a suit before the Supreme Court; and again intimated that a
+little show of firmness would remove all danger of a collision. "As to
+anything that Texas or New Mexico may do in taking or relinquishing
+possession, that is all moonshine. New Mexico is the property of the
+United States, and she cannot dispose of herself or any part of
+herself, nor can Texas take her or any part of her." He showed a
+thorough acquaintance with New Mexican geography and history, and
+alluded to the bills he had already brought in, in 1844 and 1850, to
+establish a divisional line between the territory and Texas, on the
+longitude first of one hundred and then of one hundred and two degrees.
+He recalled the fact that before the annexation of Texas, and in a bill
+proposing to settle all questions with her, he had inserted a provision
+forever prohibiting slavery in all parts of the annexed territory lying
+west of the hundredth degree of longitude. He also took the opportunity
+of formally stating his opposition to any form of slavery extension,
+remarking that it was no new idea with him, but dated from the time when
+in 1804, while a law student in Tennessee, he had studied Blackstone as
+edited by the learned Virginian, Judge Tucker, who, in an appendix,
+treated of, and totally condemned, black slavery in the United States.
+The very difficulty, or, as he deemed it, the impossibility, of getting
+rid of the evil, made Benton all the more determined in opposing its
+extension. "The incurability of the evil is the greatest objection to
+the extension of slavery. If it is wrong for the legislator to inflict
+an evil which can be cured, how much more to inflict one that is
+incurable, and against the will of the people who are to endure it
+forever! I quarrel with no one for deeming slavery a blessing; I deem it
+an evil, and would neither adopt it nor impose it on others." The
+solution of the problem of disposing of existent slavery, he confessed,
+seemed beyond human wisdom; but "there is a wisdom above human, and to
+that we must look. In the mean time, do not extend the evil." In
+justification of his position he quoted previous actions of Congress,
+done under the lead of Southern men, in refusing again and again, down
+to 1807, to allow slavery to be introduced into Indiana, when that
+community petitioned for it. He also repudiated strongly the whole
+spirit in which Clay had gotten up his compromise bill, stating that he
+did not believe in geographical parties; that he knew no North and no
+South, and utterly rejected any slavery compromises except those to be
+found in the Constitution. Altogether it was a great speech, and his
+opposition was one of the main causes of the defeat of Clay's measure.
+
+Benton's position on the Wilmot Proviso is worth giving in his own
+words: "That measure was rejected again as heretofore, and by the votes
+of those who were opposed to extending slavery into the territories,
+because it was unnecessary and inoperative,--irritating to the Slave
+States, without benefit to the Free States, a mere work of
+supererogation, of which the fruit was discontent. It was rejected, not
+on the principle of non-intervention; not on the principle of leaving to
+the territories to do as they pleased on the question, but because there
+had been intervention; because Mexican law and constitution had
+intervened, had abolished slavery by law in those dominions; which law
+would remain in force until repealed by Congress. All that the opponents
+to the extension of slavery had to do, then, was to do nothing. And they
+did nothing."
+
+Before California was admitted into the Union old Zachary Taylor had
+died, leaving behind him a name that will always be remembered among our
+people. He was neither a great statesman nor yet a great commander; but
+he was an able and gallant soldier, a loyal and upright public servant,
+and a most kindly, honest, and truthful man. His death was a greater
+loss to the country than perhaps the people ever knew.
+
+The bill for the admission of California as a free state, heartily
+sustained by Benton, was made a test question by the Southern
+disunionists; but on this occasion they were thoroughly beaten. The
+great struggle was made over a proposition to limit the southern
+boundary of the state to the line of 36 deg. 30', and to extend the Missouri
+line through to the Pacific, so as to authorize the existence of slavery
+in all the territory south of that latitude. This was defeated by a vote
+of thirty-two to twenty-four. Not only Benton, but also Spruance and
+Wales of Delaware, and Underwood of Kentucky, joined with the
+representatives from the Free States in opposing it. Had it not been for
+the action of these four slave-state senators in leaving their
+associates, the vote would have been a tie; and their courage and
+patriotism should be remembered. The bill was then passed by a vote of
+thirty-four to eighteen, two other Southern senators, Houston of Texas,
+and Bell of Tennessee, voting for it, in addition to the four already
+mentioned. After its passage, ten of the senators who had voted against
+it, including, of course, Jefferson Davis, and also Benton's own
+colleague from Missouri, Atchison, joined in a protest against what had
+been done, ending with a thinly veiled threat of disunion,--"dissolution
+of the confederacy," as they styled it. Benton stoutly and successfully
+opposed allowing this protest to be received or entered upon the
+journal, condemning it, with a frankness that very few of his
+fellow-senators would have dared to copy, as being sectional and
+disunion in form, and therefore unfit even for preservation on the
+records.
+
+When the Fugitive Slave Act of 1850 was passed, through the help of some
+Northern votes, Benton refused to support it; and this was the last act
+of importance that he performed as United States Senator. He had risen
+and grown steadily all through his long term of service; and during its
+last period he did greater service to the nation than any of his
+fellow-senators. Compare his stand against the slavery extremists and
+disunionists, such as Calhoun, with the position of Webster at the time
+of his famous seventh of March speech, or with that of Clay when he
+brought in his compromise bill! In fact, as the times grew more
+troublesome, he grew steadily better able to do good work in them.
+
+It is this fact of growth that especially marks his career. No other
+American statesman, except John Quincy Adams,--certainly neither of his
+great contemporaries, Webster and Clay,--kept doing continually better
+work throughout his term of public service, or showed himself able to
+rise to a higher level at the very end than at the beginning. Yet such
+was the case with Benton. He always rose to meet a really great
+emergency; and his services to the nation grew steadily in importance
+to the very close of his life. Whereas Webster and Clay passed their
+zenith and fell, he kept rising all the time.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV.
+
+THE LOSING FIGHT.
+
+
+Benton had now finished his fifth and last term in the United States
+Senate. He had been chosen senator from Missouri before she was admitted
+into the Union, and had remained such for thirty years. During all that
+time the state had been steadily Democratic, the large Whig minority
+never being able to get control; but on the question of the extension of
+slavery the dominant party itself began at this time to break into two
+factions. Hitherto Benton had been the undisputed leader of the
+Democracy, but now the pro-slavery and disunionist Democrats organized a
+very powerful opposition to him; while he still received the
+enthusiastic support of an almost equally numerous body of followers.
+Although the extension of slavery and the preservation of the Union were
+the two chief and vital points on which the factions differed, yet the
+names by which they designated each other were adopted in consequence of
+their differing also on a third and only less important one. Benton was
+such a firm believer in hard money, and a currency of gold and silver,
+as to have received the nickname of "Old Bullion," and his followers
+were called "hards;" his opponents were soft money men, in addition to
+being secessionists and pro-slavery fanatics, and took the name of
+"softs." The principles of the Bentonians were right, and those of their
+opponents wrong; but for all that the latter gradually gained upon the
+former. Finally, in the midst of Benton's fight against the extension of
+slavery into the territories, the "softs" carried the Missouri
+legislature, and passed a series of resolutions based upon those of
+Calhoun. These were most truculent and disloyal in tone, demanding that
+slavery be permitted to exist in all the new states to be admitted, and
+instructing their senators to vote accordingly. These resolutions were
+presented in the senate by Benton's colleague from Missouri, Atchison,
+who was rather hostile to him and to every other friend of the Union,
+and later on achieved disreputable notoriety as a leader of the "border
+ruffians" in the affrays on the soil of Kansas. Benton at once picked up
+the glove that had been flung down. He utterly refused to obey the
+resolutions, denounced them savagely as being treasonable and offensive
+in the highest degree, asserted that they did not express the true
+opinions of the voters of the state, and appealed from the Missouri
+legislature to the Missouri people.
+
+The issue between the two sides was now sharply brought out, and, as
+this took place towards the end of Benton's fifth term, the struggle to
+command the legislature which should reelect him or give him a successor
+was most exciting. Benton himself took an active part in the preliminary
+canvass. Neither faction was able to get a majority of the members, and
+the deadlock was finally broken by the "softs" coming to the support of
+the Whigs, and helping them to elect Benton's rival. Thus, after serving
+his state faithfully and ably for thirty years, he was finally turned
+out of the position which he so worthily filled, because he had
+committed the crime of standing loyally by the Union.
+
+But the stout old Nationalist was not in the least cast down or even
+shaken by his defeat. He kept up the fight as bitterly as ever, though
+now an old man, and in 1852 went to Congress as a representative Union
+Democrat. For thirty years he had been the autocrat of Missouri
+politics, and had at one time wielded throughout his own state a power
+as great as Calhoun possessed in South Carolina; greater than Webster
+held in Massachusetts, or Clay in Kentucky. But the tide which had so
+long flowed in his favor now turned, and for the few remaining years of
+his life set as steadily against him; yet at no time of his long public
+career did he stand forth as honorably and prominently as during his
+last days, when he was showing so stern a front to his victorious foes.
+His love for work was so great that, when out of the Senate, he did not
+find even his incessant political occupations enough for him. During his
+contest for the senatorship his hands had been full, for he had spoken
+again and again throughout the entire state, his carefully prepared
+speeches showing remarkable power, and filled with scathing denunciation
+and invective and biting and caustic sarcasm. But so soon as his defeat
+was assured he turned his attention immediately to literature, setting
+to work on his great "Thirty Years' View," of which the first volume was
+printed during his congressional term, and was quoted on the floor of
+the House, both by his friends and foes, during the debates in which he
+was taking part.
+
+In 1852, when he was elected to Congress as a member of the House, he
+had supported Pierce for the presidency against Scott, a good general,
+but otherwise a wholly absurd and flatulent personage, who was the Whig
+nominee. But it soon became evident that Pierce was completely under
+the control of the secession wing of the party, and Benton
+thereafterwards treated him with contemptuous hostility, despising him,
+and seeing him exactly as he was,--a small politician, of low capacity
+and mean surroundings, proud to act as the servile tool of men worse
+than himself but also stronger and abler. He was ever ready to do any
+work the slavery leaders set him, and to act as their attorney in
+arguing in its favor,--to quote Benton's phrase, with "undaunted
+mendacity, moral callosity [and] mental obliquity." His last message to
+Congress in the slavery interest Benton spoke of as characteristic, and
+exemplifying "all the modes of conveying untruths which long ages have
+invented,--direct assertion, fallacious inference, equivocal phrase, and
+false innuendo." As he entertained such views of the head of the
+Democratic party, and as this same head was in hearty accord with, and a
+good representative of the mass of the rank and file politicians of the
+organization, it is small wonder that Benton found himself, on every
+important question that came up while he was in Congress, opposed to the
+mass of his fellow-Democrats.
+
+Although the great questions to which he devoted himself, while a
+representative in Congress, were those relating to the extension of
+slavery, yet he also found time to give to certain other subjects,
+working as usual with indomitable energy, and retaining his marvelous
+memory to the last. The idea of desponding or giving up, for any cause
+whatever, simply never entered his head. When his house, containing all
+the manuscript and papers of the nearly completed second volume of his
+"Thirty Years' View," was burned up, he did not delay a minute in
+recommencing his work, and the very next day spoke in Congress as usual.
+
+His speeches were showing a steady improvement; they were not
+masterpieces, even at the last, but in every way, especially in style,
+they were infinitely superior to those that he had made on his first
+entrance into public life. Of course, a man with his intense pride in
+his country, and characterized by such a desire to see her become
+greater and more united in every way, would naturally support the
+proposal to build a Pacific Railroad, and accordingly he argued for it
+at great length and with force and justness, at the same time opposing
+the propositions to build northern and southern trans-continental roads
+as substitutes for the proposed central route. He showed the character
+of the land through which the road would run, and the easiness of the
+passes across the Rockies, and prophesied a rapid increase of states as
+one of the results attendant upon its building. At the end of his speech
+he made an elaborate comparison of the courses of trade and commerce at
+different periods of the world's history, and showed that, as we had
+reached the Pacific coast, we had finally taken a position where our
+trade with the Oriental kingdoms, backed up by our own enormous internal
+development, rendered us more than ever independent of Europe.
+
+In another speech he discussed very intelligently, and with his usual
+complete command of the facts of the case, some of the contemporary
+Indian uprisings in the far West. He attacked our whole Indian policy,
+showing that the corruption of the Indian agents, coupled with astute
+aggressions, were the usual causes of our wars. Further, he criticised
+our regular troops as being unfit to cope with the savages, and
+advocated the formation of companies of frontier rangers, who should
+also be settlers, and should receive from the government a bounty in
+land as part reward for their service. Many of his remarks on our Indian
+policy apply quite as well now as they did then, and our regular
+soldiers are certainly not the proper opponents for the Indians; but
+Benton's military views were, as a rule, the reverse of sensible, and we
+cannot accept his denunciations of the army, and especially of West
+Point, as being worth serious consideration. His belief in the marvelous
+efficacy of a raw militia, especially as regards war with European
+powers, was childish, and much of his feeling against the regular army
+officer was dictated by jealousy. He was, by all the peculiarities of
+his habits and education, utterly unfitted for military command; and it
+would have been an evil day for his good fame if Polk had succeeded in
+having him made lieutenant-general of our forces in Mexico.
+
+His remarks upon our Indian policy were not the only ones he made that
+would bear study even yet. Certain of his speeches upon the different
+land-bounty and pension bills, passed nominally in the interests of
+veterans, but really through demagogy and the machination of
+speculators, could be read with profit by not a few Congressmen at the
+present time. One of his utterances was: "I am a friend to old soldiers
+... but not to old speculators;" and while favoring proper pension bills
+he showed the foolishness and criminality of certain others very
+clearly, together with the fact that, when passed long after the
+services have been rendered, they always fail to relieve the real
+sufferers, and work in the interests of unworthy outsiders.
+
+But his great speech, and one of the best and greatest that he ever
+made, was the one in opposition to the Kansas-Nebraska bill, which was
+being pushed through Congress by the fire-eaters and their Northern
+pro-slavery followers. His own position upon the measure was best
+expressed by the words he used in commenting on the remarks of a
+Georgian member: "He votes as a Southern man, and votes sectionally; I
+also am a Southern man, but vote nationally on national questions."
+
+The Missouri Compromise of 1820 had expressly abolished slavery in the
+territory out of which Kansas and Nebraska were carved. By the proposed
+bill this compromise was to be repealed, and the famous doctrine of
+non-intervention, or "squatter sovereignty," was to take its place, the
+people of each territory being allowed to choose for themselves whether
+they did or did not wish slavery. Benton attacked the proposal with all
+the strength of his frank, open nature as "a bungling attempt to smuggle
+slavery into the territory, and throughout all the country, up to the
+Canada line and out to the Rocky Mountains." He showed exhaustively the
+real nature of the original Missouri Compromise, which, as he said, was
+forced by the South upon the North, and which the South now proposed to
+repeal, that it might humiliate the North still further. The compromise
+of 1820 was, he justly contended, right; it was like the original
+compromises of the Constitution, by which the Slave States were admitted
+to the formation of the Union; no greater concession of principle was
+involved in the one case than in the other; and, had either compromise
+failed, the Union would not now be in existence. But the day when
+compromises had been necessary, or even harmless, had passed. The time
+had come when the extension of slavery was to be opposed in every
+constitutional way; and it was an outrage to propose to extend its
+domain by repealing all that part of a compromise measure which worked
+against it, when the South had already long taken advantage of such
+parts of the law as worked in its favor. Said Benton: "The South divided
+and took half, and now it will not do to claim the other half." Exactly
+as a proposition to destroy the slavery compromises of the Constitution
+would be an open attempt to destroy the Union, so, he said, the attempt
+to abrogate the compromise of 1820 would be a preparation for the same
+ending. "I have stood upon the Missouri Compromise for about thirty
+years, and mean to stand upon it to the end of my life ... [it is] a
+binding covenant upon both parties, and the more so upon the South, as
+she imposed it."
+
+The squatter sovereignty theories of Douglas he treated with deserved
+ridicule, laughing at the idea that the territories were not the actual
+property of the nation, to be treated as the latter wished, and having
+none of the rights of sovereign states; and he condemned even more
+severely the theory advanced to the effect that Congress had no power to
+legislate on slavery in the territories. Thus, he pointed out that to
+admit any such theories was directly to reverse the principles upon
+which we had acted for seventy years in regard to the various
+territories that from time to time grew to such size as entitled them to
+come into the Union as states. After showing that there was no excuse
+for bringing in the bill on the plea of settling the slavery question,
+since there was not a foot of territory in the United States where the
+subject of slavery was not already settled by law, he closed with an
+earnest appeal against such an attempt to break up the Union and outrage
+the North by forcing slavery into a land where its existence was already
+forbidden by law. His speech exceeded the hour allotted to it, and he
+was allowed to go on only by the courtesy of a member from Illinois,
+who, when some of the Southerners protested against his being heard
+farther, gave up part of his own time to the grand old Missourian, and
+asked the House to hear him, if only "as the oldest living man in
+Congress, the only man in Congress who was present at the passage of
+the Missouri Compromise bill." Many a man at the North, ashamed and
+indignant at seeing the politicians of his own section cower at the
+crack of the Southern whip, felt a glow of sincere gratitude and
+admiration for the rugged Westerner, who so boldly bade defiance to the
+ruling slave party that held the reins not only in his own section, but
+also in his own state, and to oppose which was almost certain political
+death.
+
+The Gadsden treaty was also strongly opposed and condemned by Benton,
+who considered it to be part of a great scheme or movement in the
+interests of the slavery disunionists, of which he also believed the
+Kansas-Nebraska bill to be the first development,--the "thin end of the
+wedge." He opposed the acquirement even of the small piece of territory
+we were actually able to purchase from Mexico; and showed good grounds
+for his belief that the administration, acting as usual only in the
+interest of the secessionists, had tried to get enough North-Mexican
+territory to form several new states, and had also attempted to purchase
+Cuba, both efforts being for the purpose of enabling the South either to
+become again dominant in the Union or else to set up a separate
+confederacy of her own. For it must be kept in mind that Benton always
+believed that the Southern disunion movements were largely due to
+conspiracies among ambitious politicians, who used the slavery question
+as a handle by which to influence the mass of the people. This view has
+certainly more truth in it than it is now the fashion to admit. His
+objection to the actual treaty was mainly based on its having been done
+by the executive without the consent of the legislature, and he also
+criticised it for the secrecy with which it had been put through. In
+bringing forward the first objection, however, he was confronted with
+Jefferson's conduct in acquiring Louisiana, which he endeavored, not
+very successfully, to show had nothing in common with the actions of
+Pierce, who, he said, simply demanded a check from the House with which
+to complete a purchase undertaken on his own responsibility.
+
+Throughout his congressional term of service, Benton acted so as to
+deserve well of the Union as a whole, and most well of Missouri in
+particular. But he could not stem the tide of folly and madness in this
+state, and was defeated when he was a candidate for reelection. The
+Whigs had now disappeared from the political arena, and the
+Know-nothings were running through their short and crooked lease of
+life; they foolishly nominated a third candidate in Benton's district,
+who drew off enough votes from him to enable his pro-slavery Democratic
+competitor to win.
+
+No sooner had he lost his seat in Congress than Benton, indefatigable as
+ever, set to work to finish his "Thirty Years' View," and produced the
+second volume in 1856, the year when he made his last attempt to regain
+his hold in politics, and to win Missouri back to the old Union
+standard. Although his own son-in-law, Fremont, the daring western
+explorer, was running as the first presidential candidate ever nominated
+by the Republicans, the old partisan voted for the Democrat, Buchanan.
+He did not like Buchanan, considering him weak and unsuitable, but the
+Republican party he believed to be entirely too sectional in character
+for him to give it his support. For governor there was a triangular
+fight, the Know-nothings having nominated one candidate, the
+secessionist Democrats a second, while Benton himself ran as the choice
+of the Union Democracy. He was now seventy-four years old, but his mind
+was as vigorous as ever, and his iron will kept up a frame that had
+hardly even yet begun to give way. During the course of the campaign he
+traveled throughout the state, going in all twelve hundred miles, and
+making forty speeches, each one of two or three hours' length. This was
+a remarkable feat for so old a man; indeed, it has very rarely been
+paralleled, except by Gladstone's recent performances. The vote was
+quite evenly divided between the three candidates; but Benton came in
+third, and the extreme pro-slavery men carried the day. After this,
+during the few months of life he yet had left, he did not again mingle
+in the politics of Missouri.
+
+But in the days of his defeat at home, the regard and respect in which
+he was held in the other states, especially at the North, increased
+steadily; and in the fall of 1856 he made by request a lecturing tour in
+New England, speaking on the danger of the political situation and the
+imperative necessity of preserving the Union, which he now clearly saw
+to be gravely threatened. He was well received, for the North was
+learning to respect him, and he had gotten over his early hostility to
+New England,--a hostility originally shared by the whole West. The New
+Englanders were not yet aware, however, of the importance of the
+secession movements, and paid little heed to the warnings that were to
+be so fully justified by the events of the next few years. But Benton,
+in spite of his great age, saw distinctly the changes that were taking
+place, and the dangers that were impending,--an unusual thing for a man
+whose active life has already been lived out under widely different
+conditions.
+
+He again turned his attention to literature, and produced another great
+work, the "Abridgment of the Debates of Congress from 1787 to 1856," in
+sixteen volumes, besides writing a valuable pamphlet on the Dred Scott
+decision, which he severely criticised. The amount of labor all this
+required was immense, and his health completely gave way; yet he
+continued working to the very end, dictating the closing portion of the
+"Abridgment" in a whisper as he lay on his death-bed. When he once began
+to fail his advanced years made him succumb rapidly; and on April 10,
+1858, he died, in the city of Washington. As soon as the news reached
+Missouri, a great revulsion of feeling took place, and all classes of
+the people united to do honor to the memory of the dead statesman,
+realizing that they had lost a man who towered head and shoulders above
+both friends and foes. The body was taken to St. Louis, and after lying
+in state was buried in Bellefontaine Cemetery, more than forty thousand
+people witnessing the funeral. All the public buildings were draped in
+mourning; all places of business were closed, and the flags everywhere
+were at half-mast. Thus at the very end the great city of the West at
+last again paid fit homage to the West's mightiest son.
+
+Benton's most important writings are those mentioned above. The "Thirty
+Years' View" ("a history of the working of the American government for
+thirty years, from 1820 to 1850") will always be indispensable to every
+student of American history. It deals with the deeds of both houses of
+Congress, and of some of the higher federal officials during his thirty
+years' term of service in the Senate, and is valuable alike for the
+original data it contains, and because it is so complete a record of our
+public life at that time. The book is also remarkable for its courteous
+and equable tone, even towards bitter personal and political enemies. It
+shows a vanity on the part of the author that is too frank and free from
+malice to be anything but amusing; the style is rather ponderous, and
+the English not always good, for Benton began life, and, in fact,
+largely passed it, in an age of ornate periods, when grandiloquence was
+considered more essential than grammar. In much of the Mississippi
+valley the people had their own canons of literary taste; indeed, in a
+recent book by one of Benton's admirers, there is a fond allusion to his
+statement, anent the expunging resolution, that "solitary and alone" he
+had set the ball in motion,--the pleonasm being evidently looked upon in
+the light of a rather fine oratorical outburst.
+
+"The Abridgment of the Debates of Congress from 1789 to 1856" he was
+only able to bring down to 1850. Sixteen volumes were published. It was
+a compilation needing infinite labor, and is invaluable to the
+historian. While in the midst of the vast work he also found time to
+write his "Examination of the Dred Scott case," in so far as it decided
+the Missouri Compromise law to be unconstitutional, and asserted the
+self-extension of the Constitution into the territories, carrying
+slavery with it,--the decision in this case promulgated by Judge Taney,
+of unhappy fame, having been the last step taken in the interests of
+slavery and for the overthrow of freedom. The pamphlet contained nearly
+two hundred pages, and showed, as was invariably the case with anything
+Benton did, the effects of laborious research and wide historical and
+legal learning. His summing up was, "that the decision conflicts with
+the uniform action of all the departments of the federal government from
+its foundation to the present time, and cannot be accepted as a rule to
+govern Congress and the people, without severing that act and admitting
+the political supremacy of the court and accepting an altered
+constitution from its hands, and taking a new and portentous point of
+departure in the working of the government." He denounced the new party
+theories of the Democracy, which had abandoned the old belief of the
+founders of the Republic, that Congress had power to legislate upon
+slavery in territories, and which had gone on "from the abrogation of
+the Missouri Compromise, which saved the Union, to squatter sovereignty,
+which killed the compromise, and thence to the decisions of the supreme
+court, which kill both." In closing he touched briefly on the history of
+the pro-slavery agitation. "Up to Mr. Pierce's administration the plan
+had been defensive, that is to say, to make the secession of the South a
+measure of self-defense against the abolition encroachments and crusades
+of the North. In the time of Mr. Pierce the plan became offensive, that
+is to say, to commence the expansion of slavery, and the acquisition of
+territory to spread it over, so as to overpower the North with new Slave
+States, and drive them out of the Union.... The rising in the Free
+States, in consequence of the abrogation of the Missouri Compromise,
+checked these schemes, and limited the success of the disunionists to
+the revival of the agitation which enables them to wield the South
+against the North in all the federal elections and all federal
+legislation. Accidents and events have given the party a strange
+preeminence,--under Jackson's administration proclaimed for treason;
+since at the head of the government and of the Democratic party. The
+death of Harrison, and the accession of Tyler, was their first great
+lift; the election of Mr. Pierce was their culminating point." This was
+the last protest of the last of the old Jacksonian leaders against that
+new generation of Democrats, whose delight it had become to bow down to
+strange gods.
+
+In his private life Benton's relations were of the pleasantest. He was a
+religious man, although, like his great political chief, he could on
+occasions swear roundly. He was rigidly moral, and he was too fond of
+work ever to make social life a business. But he liked small dinners,
+with just a few intimate friends or noted and brilliant public men, and
+always shone at such an entertainment. Although he had not traveled
+much, he gave the impression of having done so, by reason of his wide
+reading, and because he always made a point of knowing all explorers,
+especially those who had penetrated our great western wilds. His
+geographical knowledge was wonderful; and his good nature, as well as
+his delight in work for work's sake, made him of more use than any
+library of reference, if his friends needed information upon some
+abstruse matter,--Webster himself acknowledging his indebtedness to him
+on one occasion, and being the authority for the statement that Benton
+knew more political facts than any other man he had ever met, even than
+John Quincy Adams, and possessed a wonderful fund of general knowledge.
+Although very gentle in his dealings with those for whom he cared,
+Benton originally was rather quarrelsome and revengeful in character.
+His personal and political prejudices were bitter, and he denounced his
+enemies freely in public and from the stump; yet he always declined to
+take part in joint political debates, on account of the personal
+discourtesy with which they were usually conducted. He gave his whole
+time to public life, rarely or never attending to his law practice after
+he had fairly entered the political field.
+
+Benton was one of those who were present and escaped death at the time
+of the terrible accident on board the Princeton, during Tyler's
+administration, when the bursting of her great gun killed so many
+prominent men. Benton was saved owing to the fact that,
+characteristically enough, he had stepped to one side the better to note
+the marksmanship of the gunner. Ex-Governor Gilmer, of Virginia, who had
+taken his place, was instantly killed. Tyler, who was also on board, was
+likewise saved in consequence of the exhibition of a characteristic
+trait; for, just as the gun was about to be fired, something occurred in
+another part of the ship which distracted the attention of the fussy,
+fidgety president, who accordingly ran off to see what it was, and thus
+escaped the fatal explosion. The tragic nature of the accident and his
+own narrow escape made a deep impression upon Benton; and it was noticed
+that ever afterwards he was far more forbearing and forgiving than of
+old. He became good friends with Webster and other political opponents,
+with whom he had formerly hardly been on speaking terms. Calhoun alone
+he would never forgive. It was not in his nature to do anything by
+halves; and accordingly, when he once forgave an opponent, he could not
+do enough to show him that the forgiveness was real. A Missourian named
+Wilson, who had been his bitter and malignant political foe for years,
+finally becoming broken in fortune and desirous of bettering himself by
+going to California, where Benton's influence, through his son-in-law,
+Fremont, was supreme, was persuaded by Webster to throw himself on the
+generosity of his old enemy. The latter not only met him half-way, but
+helped him with a lavish kindness that would hardly have been warranted
+by less than a life-long friendship. Webster has left on record the
+fact that, when once they had come to be on good terms with each other,
+there was no man in the whole Senate of whom he would more freely have
+asked any favor that could properly be granted.
+
+He was a most loving father. At his death he left four surviving
+daughters,--Mrs. William Carey Jones, Mrs. Sarah Benton Jacobs, Madame
+Susan Benton Boilleau, and Mrs. Jessie Ann Benton Fremont, the wife of
+the great explorer, whose wonderful feats and adventures, ending with
+the conquest of California, where he became a sort of viceroy in point
+of power, made him an especial favorite with his father-in-law, who
+loved daring and hardihood. Benton took the keenest delight in Fremont's
+remarkable successes, and was never tired of talking of them, both
+within and without the Senate. He records with very natural pride the
+fact that it was only the courage and judgment displayed in a trying
+crisis by his own gifted daughter, Fremont's wife, which enabled the
+adventurous young explorer to prosecute one of the most important of his
+expeditions, when threatened with fatal interference from jealous
+governmental superiors.
+
+He was an exceptionally devoted husband. His wife was Miss Elizabeth
+McDowell, of Virginia, whom he married after he had entered the Senate.
+Their life was most happy until 1844, when she was struck by paralysis.
+From that time till her death in 1854, he never went out to a public
+place of amusement, spending all his time not occupied with public
+duties in writing by her bedside. It is scant praise to say that, while
+mere acquiescence on his part would have enabled him to become rich
+through government influence, he nevertheless died a poor man. In
+public, as in private life, he was a man of sensitive purity of
+character; he would never permit any person connected with him by blood
+or marriage to accept office under the government, nor would he ever
+favor any applicant for a government contract on political grounds.
+
+During his last years, when his sturdy independence and devotion to the
+Union had caused him the loss of his political influence in his own
+state and with his own party, he nevertheless stood higher with the
+country at large than ever before. He was a faithful friend and a bitter
+foe; he was vain, proud, utterly fearless, and quite unable to
+comprehend such emotions as are expressed by the terms despondency and
+yielding. Without being a great orator or writer, or even an original
+thinker, he yet possessed marked ability; and his abounding vitality and
+marvelous memory, his indomitable energy and industry, and his
+tenacious persistency and personal courage, all combined to give him a
+position and influence such as few American statesmen have ever held.
+His character grew steadily to the very last; he made better speeches
+and was better able to face new problems when past three score and ten
+than in his early youth or middle age. He possessed a rich fund of
+political, legal, and historical learning, and every subject that he
+ever handled showed the traces of careful and thorough study. He was
+very courteous, except when provoked; his courage was proof against all
+fear, and he shrank from no contest, personal or political. He was
+sometimes narrow-minded, and always wilful and passionate; but he was
+honest and truthful. At all times and in all places he held every good
+gift he had completely at the service of the American Federal Union.
+
+
+
+
+INDEX.
+
+
+ Adams, John Quincy:
+ In presidential election of 1824-5, 59-61;
+ makes Clay secretary of state, 61;
+ and is assailed therefor, 62;
+ outlines Whig policy in his inaugural, 63;
+ on the Panama mission, 64;
+ in election of 1828, 69;
+ preserves purity of civil service, 81;
+ on recognition of Texas, 180.
+
+ "Albany Regency," the, adopts "spoils system," 81.
+
+ Arnold, Benedict:
+ compared with Burr and J. Davis, 163.
+
+ Atchison, protests against admission of California, 338.
+
+
+ Benton, town of, founded, 25.
+
+ Benton, Thomas Hart:--
+ local character of his statesmanship, 13;
+ birth, 23;
+ boyhood and education, 24 _et seq._;
+ religious training, 26;
+ fights a duel, 27;
+ affray with Jackson, 28;
+ admitted to the bar, 29;
+ in legislature of Tennessee, 29;
+ on the Hartford Convention, 31;
+ a slave-holder, 31;
+ favors war of 1812, 32, in service, 32; befriends Jackson, 32;
+ associations in Tennessee, 33 _et seq._;
+ some traits of character, 34;
+ settles in Missouri, 35;
+ surroundings and influences there, 40;
+ speech on treaty with Spain concerning Florida, 41;
+ first position concerning slavery, 43;
+ enters U. S. Senate, 44;
+ honorable financial sacrifice, 45;
+ position on the Oregon question, 50-53, 65, 263-270, 273-279,
+ 281-289;
+ bill to establish a trading road through Missouri, 53;
+ on the removal of the Indians, 55;
+ votes for Clay's protective tariff bill, 58;
+ opposes internal improvements and Cumberland Road bill, 58;
+ condemns election of John Q. Adams to Presidency, 60;
+ supports Clay, then Jackson, 61;
+ will not join outcry against Adams and Clay, 61;
+ a leader of the opposition to Adams in the Senate, 63;
+ represents ultra-Southern feeling concerning revolted
+ Spanish colonies, 65;
+ vote on the protective tariff of 1828, 66, 91, 102;
+ efforts concerning disposal of public land, 68, 77, 149, 154, 217;
+ hostility to the Northeastern States, 76;
+ in the Webster-Hayne debate, 78;
+ opposes Jackson's "spoils system," 79-85;
+ leader of the Jacksonians in the Senate, 85, 86;
+ shows that protective tariff has not helped the West, 91;
+ urges repeal of the tax on salt, 92, 227;
+ vigorously sustains Jackson in the nullification troubles, 100-105;
+ sustains the Force bill, 105;
+ opposes Clay's compromise measure, 107-109;
+ remarks on his position at this period, 112;
+ campaign against the Bank of the United States, 114, 130, 136, 143;
+ speech on the currency, 122, 136-138, 253;
+ conflict with Clay, 129;
+ on the removal of the deposits, 131;
+ opposes the resolution of censure against Jackson, 133;
+ and pushes through his own expunging resolution, 134-136, 139-142;
+ advocates establishment of mints at the South, 144;
+ opposes distribution of surplus, 145, 149;
+ wishes it used for fortifications, 146, 150-153;
+ advocates insisting on our claims against France, 147;
+ but opposes paying claims of American citizens, 148;
+ opposes the so-called specie circulars, 154;
+ views concerning Southern slavery politicians, 162;
+ opposed to the Abolitionists, 165;
+ criticises Calhoun, 167, 168;
+ aids to defeat bill prohibiting circulation of abolition
+ documents through U. S. mails, 169;
+ carries bill extending boundaries of Missouri, 170;
+ urges admission of Michigan, 171;
+ carries through treaty with Cherokees, 171;
+ defends governmental treatment of Indians, 172;
+ condemns treaty establishing Southwestern boundary, 175;
+ position concerning annexation of Texas, 180-183;
+ hostility to separatist doctrines, 188;
+ blames bankers and politicians for financial crisis of 1837, 190,
+ 194;
+ his forebodings of this trouble, 191-193;
+ demeanor in the crisis, 197;
+ supports issue of Treasury notes, 198;
+ opposes payment of further installment of surplus, 199;
+ supports scheme for independent Treasury, 200, 207;
+ action concerning resumption by bonds, 203;
+ a supporter of the administration in these times, 263;
+ his knowledge, 204;
+ hostile to paper currency, 206;
+ defends administration in matters of Seminole war, 212;
+ theory for conducting this war, 215;
+ advocates; homestead law, 217;
+ opposes assumption of State debts by national government, 220;
+ explains greater rapidity of progress at North than at South, 222;
+ on the tariff of 1833, 224-230;
+ defends Jackson and Van Buren against charges of squandering
+ public moneys, 230;
+ in the Harrison campaign, 233;
+ holds the Democrats for the Union, 234;
+ feeling concerning slavery about Van Buren's time, 235;
+ leads the Democrats in struggle between President Tyler and Clay,
+ 240-244;
+ exalts the "Democratic idea," 241;
+ comments on Tyler's first message to Congress, 245;
+ opposes sub-Treasury bill, 246;
+ also the bank, distribution and bankruptcy bills, 246-249;
+ opposes the hour limit for speeches in the Senate, 250-252;
+ speech concerning the district banks and the currency, 253;
+ opposes effort to establish a national bank during Tyler's
+ administration, 255-258;
+ opposes new form of Treasury notes, 258;
+ opposes subsidizing steamship lines, 258;
+ also the abuse of the pension system, 258;
+ always an advocate of extending the national boundaries, 263, 267;
+ opposes the Ashburton treaty, 269, 273-279;
+ remarks concerning the Caroline imbroglio, 270;
+ opposes making an efficient navy, 272;
+ references to slavery in speeches on the Ashburton treaty, 274, 280;
+ on the Oregon question, 281-289;
+ position concerning annexation of Texas in time of Polk, 299-317;
+ opposes the South, 301;
+ opposes Calhoun's treaty, 306-310;
+ hoodwinked by the annexationists, 313;
+ attacks Calhoun and opposes the Mexican war, 315;
+ offered the command of the army, 318;
+ awakes to importance of slavery question, 318;
+ his later position concerning it, 320, 333-336;
+ contests with pro-slavery Senators, 322, 323;
+ opposes Calhoun as to power of Congress over slavery in territories,
+ 323-327;
+ and as to admission of Oregon, 328;
+ criticises Polk's administration, 328;
+ visits New York in presidential campaign in 1848, 329;
+ defends Taylor's message, 331;
+ opposes Clay's compromise, 332, 333-336;
+ more antagonism towards Calhoun, 333;
+ position on the Wilmot Proviso, 336;
+ advocates admission of California as a Free State, 337;
+ refuses to support Fugitive Slave Act, 339;
+ nickname of "Old Bullion," 342;
+ opposition to him in Missouri, 342;
+ defeated, 343;
+ goes to House of Representatives, 343;
+ begins work on the "Thirty Years' View," 344;
+ supports Pierce for Presidency, 344;
+ but later goes into opposition, 345;
+ supports scheme for Pacific Railroad, 346;
+ discusses the Indian policy, 347;
+ speeches on land-bounty and pension bills, 348;
+ opposes Kansas-Nebraska bill, 349-352;
+ discusses historically the Missouri Compromise, 349;
+ ridicules squatter sovereignty, 350;
+ opposes the Gladstone treaty, 352;
+ view of Southern disunion scheme, 352;
+ again defeated in Missouri elections, 353;
+ returns to labor on "Thirty Years' View," 354;
+ votes for Buchanan, 354;
+ candidate for governorship, 354;
+ stumps the State, 354;
+ respected at the North, 355;
+ prepares his "Abridgment of the Debates of Congress," 356;
+ death, 356;
+ value of his works 357;
+ criticism of the Dred Scott case, 358;
+ and of the new Democratic theories, 358;
+ domestic relations, 360;
+ extensive knowledge, 360;
+ on board the Princeton at time of explosion of great gun, 361;
+ generous temper, 362.
+
+ Biddle, Nicholas:
+ president of Bank of United States, 116;
+ his errors, 124;
+ his bank goes to pieces, 208.
+
+ Birney, James G.:
+ abolitionist candidate for Presidency, 291, 292;
+ folly of nominating him, 293, 294, 310.
+
+ Blair, Francis C., displaced, 317.
+
+ Buchanan, James:
+ on annexation of Texas, 310;
+ Benton votes for him, 354.
+
+ Burr, Aaron:
+ introduces "spoils system" in New York, 81;
+ compared with Benedict Arnold, 163.
+
+
+ Calhoun, John C.:
+ rupture with Jackson, resignation from Vice-Presidency, 86;
+ position concerning tariff in 1816, 89;
+ position as a nullifier, 96;
+ introduces nullification resolutions, 103;
+ threatened with hanging, 104;
+ arranges compromise with Clay, 106;
+ subsequent quarrel with Clay concerning this, 110;
+ his purposes at this time, 111;
+ assails Jackson, 132;
+ opposes Webster's bill for rechartering bank, 133;
+ on the expunging resolution, 141;
+ proposes constitutional amendment for distribution of Treasury
+ surplus, 144;
+ opposes appropriating Treasury surplus for fortifications, 146;
+ attack on President Pierce, 166;
+ his honesty, 168;
+ on admission of Texas 180;
+ in connection with trouble with Mexico, 260;
+ on the Oregon question, 285;
+ instrumental in election of Polk, 292;
+ letter to Lord Aberdeen, 300;
+ assailed by Benton as to annexation of Texas, 307, 309;
+ action as to legislation about Texas, 313;
+ relations as to Mexican war, 314;
+ and the Wilmot Proviso, 323;
+ resolution as to power of Congress over slavery in the territories,
+ 323-326;
+ not a "Union man," 326;
+ on the admission of Oregon, 326, 327, 328;
+ dislikes Taylor's message to Congress, 331.
+
+ California, admission of, 337.
+
+ Caroline, affair of the, 270.
+
+ Cartwright, Peter, 33.
+
+ Cass, Lewis: nominated for Presidency, 329.
+
+ Cherokees, treaty for their removal, 171.
+
+ Clay, Henry:
+ introduces his first tariff bill, 58;
+ secretary of state under Adams, 61;
+ assailed therefor, and fights Randolph, 62;
+ devises the Panama mission, 63;
+ leader of National Republican or Whig party, 86;
+ defies "the South, the President, and the devil," 90;
+ erroneous statement as to effect of tariff in the West, 91;
+ angers the nullifiers, 99;
+ defeated in presidential election in 1832, 100;
+ alarmed at position of Calhoun, 106;
+ and prepares compromise, 106;
+ afterward quarrels about it with Calhoun, 110;
+ befriends Bank of the United States, 124, 127, 129;
+ effect on his political fortunes, 125;
+ introduces resolution for return of deposits, 131;
+ also for censuring President Jackson, 132;
+ opposes Webster's bill for rechartering Bank, 136;
+ on the expunging resolution, 141;
+ opposes establishment of mints at the South, 144;
+ also appropriating surplus for fortifications, 146;
+ in financial crisis of 1837, 200;
+ on the sub-Treasury bill, 201, 205;
+ on resumption, 202, 203;
+ opposes payment of state debts by national government, 221;
+ prepares financial measures upon Tyler's accession, 240, 244;
+ construction of a presidential election, 241;
+ programme for legislation under Tyler, 245;
+ attempts to introduce hour-limits for speeches in Senate, 250-252;
+ lectures Tyler in the Bank debate, 256;
+ defeated by Polk, 290;
+ causes thereof, 310;
+ attacks Taylor's message to Congress, 331;
+ proposes compromise of slavery controversy, 331;
+ defeated by Benton, 336;
+ compared with Benton, 339.
+
+ Crawford, William H.:
+ adopts the "spoils system," 80.
+
+ Crockett, David, 27, 33;
+ berates Jackson, 113.
+
+ Cumberland Road, Benton votes against bill for, 58.
+
+
+ Davis, Jefferson:
+ compared with Benedict Arnold, 163;
+ a repudiator, 220;
+ and Calhoun's resolution as to slavery in the territories, 325;
+ protests against admission of California, 338.
+
+ Drayton, family, loyalty of the family in South Carolina, 96.
+
+
+ Florida, the treaty securing it to the United States, 41.
+
+ Foote, Senator from Mississippi, opposition to his public land scheme
+ by Benton and Webster, 77.
+
+ Fremont, John C.:
+ explores Rocky Mountains, 283;
+ Benton will not vote for, 354;
+ Benton's interest in his explorations, 363.
+
+
+ Giddings, Joshua R., sound policy of, 294.
+
+
+ Harrison, Wm. Henry:
+ election not affected by slavery question, 235;
+ death and character, 237.
+
+ Hartford Convention, criticised by Benton, 31, 78;
+ causes of, 49.
+
+ Houston, Samuel, 34:
+ wins victory of San Jacinto, 180;
+ hates Van Buren, 188; description of, 327;
+ votes to admit California, 338.
+
+
+ Indian tribes, Benton on the removal of, 55;
+ criticism on treatment of, 57, 172, 347;
+ removal of Cherokees in 1836, 171.
+
+
+ Jackson, Andrew:
+ affray with Benton, 28;
+ befriended by Benton at Washington, 32;
+ in presidential election of 1824, 29, 60;
+ incensed against Adams and Clay, 61;
+ success in election of 1828, 59;
+ character of his following, 71, 74, 75;
+ his opponents, 72;
+ his victory compared with Jefferson's, 73;
+ compared with Wellington, 73;
+ foster-father of the "spoils system," 79, 82;
+ inferior character of his cabinet, 86;
+ relations of his followers with those of Clay and Calhoun, 86;
+ struggles with the Bank and the nullifiers, 88;
+ expected to support nullification, 96;
+ but does not, 97;
+ repudiates Calhoun and adopts Van Buren, 97;
+ at the Jefferson birthday banquet, 98;
+ again defines his position, 99;
+ signs new tariff bill, 99;
+ reelected in 1832, 100;
+ issues proclamation against nullification, 101;
+ special message on nullification, 102;
+ opinion on tariff, 102;
+ threatens to hang Calhoun, 104;
+ signs "Force Bill," also Clay's compromise bill, 108;
+ behaves badly in case of Georgia, 112;
+ attack on U. S. Bank, 114 _et seq._;
+ reasons of his political success, 116;
+ opposes re-charter
+ of Bank in message of 1829, 117;
+ vetoes bill for re-charter, 127;
+ reelected, 130;
+ removes the deposits, 130;
+ protests against Clay's resolution of censure, 133;
+ continued
+ assaults on the Bank, 139;
+ gives a dinner to the expungers, 141;
+ signs bill for distributing Treasury surplus, 153;
+ issues Treasury order concerning payments for public lands, 155;
+ Kitchen Cabinet and "machine politics," 184, 185;
+ liking for Van Buren, 186;
+ his nationalism, 234;
+ praised by Benton for hanging Arbuthnot and Ambrister, 272;
+ favors annexation of Texas, 298;
+ and Van Buren, 299.
+
+ Jefferson, Thomas:
+ character of his following, 70, 71;
+ his victory compared with Jackson's, 73;
+ his pseudo-classicism, 92;
+ quoted as authority for nullification, 95;
+ celebration of birthday of, 97.
+
+
+ Lee, Robert E.:
+ military standing of, 38.
+
+ Lincoln, Abraham:
+ services in anti-slavery cause, 159.
+
+ Livingston, Edward:
+ aids in preparing proclamation against nullification, 101.
+
+ Lucas, Benton's duel with, 28.
+
+
+ Madison, James, quoted, 163.
+
+ Marcy, Wm. L., adopts "spoils system," 81;
+ cringes to the South, 108.
+
+ McDuffie, passage at arms with Benton, 304, 305;
+ deceives Benton as to taxes, 313.
+
+ McLeod, Alexander, case of, 271.
+
+ Missouri, character of its population, 39;
+ admission to the Union, 43, 47;
+ land titles in, 45.
+
+ Missouri Compromise bill, 43;
+ not the beginning of the slavery and anti-slavery divisions in the
+ Union, 48;
+ Benton concerning repeal of, 349.
+
+ Monroe, James, remarks, 47, 58, 59;
+ signs bill for trading road, 53.
+
+
+ New Orleans, Benton's astonishing description of, 93.
+
+
+ Oregon, disputed between Great Britain and the United States, 50;
+ Benton's remarks concerning, 51;
+ comes into notice again in J. Q. Adams's term, 65;
+ final settlement of the matter, 260-273;
+ neglected in Ashburton treaty, 278,
+ and by Calhoun, 278,
+ and others, 279;
+ Benton's feeling about, 281, 284;
+ bill for settlement of, 284;
+ Calhoun on the admission of, 326-328.
+
+
+ Panama mission, disputes concerning, 63-65.
+
+ Phillips, Wendell, estimate of, 160.
+
+ Pierce, Franklin, assailed by Calhoun, 166;
+ relations with Benton, 344, 345;
+ a valuation of, 345;
+ Benton upon pro-slavery tendencies of, 359.
+
+ Polk, James K., character of his following, 234;
+ and the Southwestern boundary, 287;
+ elected President, 290, 310;
+ estimate of, 292;
+ deceives Benton as to Texas, 313;
+ displaces Blair, 317;
+ relations with various portions of Democratic party, 317, 318.
+
+
+ Randolph, John:
+ duel with Clay, 62.
+
+ Rynders, Isaiah, a type, 291, 292.
+
+
+ Seminoles, war with, 209-216.
+
+
+ Taney, Roger B., removes the deposits, 130;
+ afterward made chief justice, 131;
+ criticised by Benton for his opinion in Dred Scott case, 358.
+
+ Taylor, Zachary, elected President, 329;
+ character, 330, 337;
+ message to Congress, 331;
+ dies, 337.
+
+ Tyler, John, opposes "Force Bill," 105;
+ estimate of, on his accession, 237;
+ his political affiliations, 238-240;
+ first message to Congress, 245;
+ conduct concerning bill for establishing a bank, 254-257;
+ his cabinet resigns, 257;
+ identifies himself with the separatist Democrats, 298;
+ schemes for annexation of Texas, 300, 306;
+ assailed by Benton, 307, 309;
+ behavior at time of explosion of gun on board the Princeton, 361.
+
+
+ Van Buren, Martin, supports Crawford for Presidency in 1824, 61;
+ adopts "spoils system," 81;
+ adopted by Jackson as his heir, 97;
+ Vice-President, 100;
+ product of "machine politics," 184;
+ befriended by Jackson, 186;
+ sketch of, and causes of his elevation, 186-188;
+ his inaugural, 188;
+ financial crisis and his doings therein, 189 _et seq._,
+ 194, 196, 197;
+ financial measures, 200;
+ has to deal with the Seminoles, 209;
+ public dishonesty under, 219;
+ charged with squandering the public money, 230;
+ significance of his defeat, 234;
+ slavery question did not arise in his administration, 235;
+ champion of old-style Union Democrats, and opposed to annexation
+ of Texas, 298;
+ candidate for Presidency, 299, 310;
+ and the Free Soil party, 329.
+
+
+ War of 1812, a cause of the, 7;
+ political influence on Benton, 30.
+
+ Warsaw, social habits of the town, 36.
+
+ Webster, Daniel, position of, concerning Clay's first tariff bill, 58;
+ position on the tariff question in 1828, 67;
+ in the debate on Foote's resolution concerning sales of public land,
+ 77, 97;
+ leader of National Republican, or Whig, party, 86;
+ aids Jackson in nullification troubles, 103, 104;
+ advocates the "Force Bill," 105;
+ resolute in opposition to the South, 106, 107, 108;
+ remarks as to his services, 111;
+ befriends Bank of United States, 124, 126, 127, 129;
+ personal relations with the Jacksonians, 131;
+ introduces bill for re-charter of Bank, 136;
+ on the expunging resolution, 142;
+ supports establishment of mints at the South, 144;
+ opposes appropriating Treasury surplus for fortifications, 146;
+ in financial crisis of 1837, 200;
+ on sub-Treasury scheme, 201, 205;
+ opposes payment of state debt by national government, 221;
+ remains in Tyler's cabinet, 257;
+ negotiates treaty with England, settling boundaries between United
+ States and British possessions, 260, 262, 268;
+ criticised by Benton, 273-277, 280;
+ neglects Oregon controversy, 278;
+ compared with Benton on the slavery question, 320, 339;
+ compliments Benton's knowledge, 360;
+ on friendly terms with Benton, 362.
+
+ Wellington, Duke of, compared with Washington and Jackson, 73.
+
+ Wilmot Proviso, Benton's remarks upon, 323, 336.
+
+ Wright, Silas, adopts "spoils system," 81;
+ expresses the "dough face" sentiment at time of nullification
+ troubles, 107.
+
+
+
+
+American Statesmen
+
+Edited by John T. Morse, Jr.
+
+Each, 16mo, cloth, gilt top, $1.25; half morocco, $2.50.
+
+The set, 31 volumes, half levant, $77.50.
+
+
+ BENJAMIN FRANKLIN. By John T. Morse, Jr.
+ SAMUEL ADAMS. By James K. Hosmer.
+ PATRICK HENRY. By Moses Coit Tyler.
+ GEORGE WASHINGTON. By Henry Cabot Lodge. 2 vols.
+ JOHN ADAMS. By John T. Morse, Jr.
+ ALEXANDER HAMILTON. By Henry Cabot Lodge.
+ GOUVERNEUR MORRIS. By Theodore Roosevelt.
+ JOHN JAY. By George Pellew.
+ JOHN MARSHALL. By Allan B. Magruder.
+ THOMAS JEFFERSON. By John T. Morse, Jr.
+ JAMES MADISON. By Sydney Howard Gay.
+ ALBERT GALLATIN. By John Austin Stevens.
+ JAMES MONROE. By President D. C. Gilman.
+ JOHN QUINCY ADAMS. By John T. Morse, Jr.
+ JOHN RANDOLPH. By Henry Adams.
+ ANDREW JACKSON. By Prof. William G. Sumner.
+ MARTIN VAN BUREN. By Edward M. Shepard.
+ HENRY CLAY. By Carl Schurz. 2 vols.
+ DANIEL WEBSTER. By Henry Cabot Lodge.
+ JOHN C. CALHOUN. By Dr. H. Von Holst.
+ THOMAS HART BENTON. By Theodore Roosevelt.
+ LEWIS CASS. By Prof. Andrew C. McLaughlin.
+ ABRAHAM LINCOLN. By John T. Morse, Jr. With Portrait and Map. 2 vols.
+ WILLIAM H. SEWARD. By Thornton K. Lothrop.
+ SALMON P. CHASE. By Prof. A. B. Hart.
+ CHARLES FRANCIS ADAMS. By C. F. Adams.
+ CHARLES SUMNER. By Moorfield Storey.
+ THADDEUS STEVENS. By Samuel W. McCall.
+
+
+_CRITICAL NOTICES._
+
+_FRANKLIN._ He has managed to condense the whole mass of matter gleaned
+from all sources into his volume without losing in a single sentence the
+freedom or lightness of his style or giving his book in any part the
+crowded look of an epitome.--_The Independent_ (New York).
+
+_SAMUEL ADAMS._ Thoroughly appreciative and sympathetic, yet fair and
+critical.... This biography is a piece of good work--a clear and simple
+presentation of a noble man and pure patriot; it is written in a spirit
+of candor and humanity.--_Worcester Spy._
+
+_HENRY._ Professor Tyler has not only made one of the best and most
+readable of American biographies; he may fairly be said to have
+reconstructed the life of Patrick Henry, and to have vindicated the
+memory of that great man from the unappreciative and injurious estimate
+which has been placed upon it.--_New York Evening Post._
+
+_WASHINGTON._ Mr. Lodge has written an admirable biography, and one
+which cannot but confirm the American people in the prevailing estimate
+concerning the Father of his Country.--_New York Tribune._
+
+_JOHN ADAMS._ A good piece of literary work.... It covers the ground
+thoroughly, and gives just the sort of simple and succinct account that
+is wanted.--_New York Evening Post._
+
+_HAMILTON._ Mr. Lodge has done his work with conscientious care, and the
+biography of Hamilton is a book which cannot have too many readers. It
+is more than a biography; it is a study in the science of
+government.--_St. Paul Pioneer Press._
+
+_MORRIS._ Mr. Roosevelt has produced an animated and intensely
+interesting biographical volume.... Mr. Roosevelt never loses sight of
+the picturesque background of politics, war-governments, and
+diplomacy.--_Magazine of American History_ (New York).
+
+_JAY._ It is an important addition to the admirable series of "American
+Statesmen," and elevates yet higher the character of a man whom all
+American patriots most delight to honor.--_New York Tribune._
+
+_MARSHALL._ Well done, with simplicity, clearness, precision, and
+judgment, and in a spirit of moderation and equity. A valuable addition
+to the series.--_New York Tribune._
+
+_JEFFERSON._ A singularly just, well-proportioned, and interesting
+sketch of the personal and political career of the author of the
+Declaration of Independence.--_Boston Journal._
+
+_MADISON._ The execution of the work deserves the highest praise. It is
+very readable, in a bright and vigorous style, and is marked by unity
+and consecutiveness of plan.--_The Nation_ (New York).
+
+_GALLATIN._ It is one of the most carefully prepared of these very
+valuable volumes, ... abounding in information not so readily
+accessible as is that pertaining to men more often treated by the
+biographer.--_Boston Correspondent Hartford Courant._
+
+_MONROE._ President Gilman has made the most of his hero, without the
+least hero-worship, and has done full justice to Mr. Monroe's "relations
+to the public service during half a century." ... The appendix is
+peculiarly valuable for its synopsis of Monroe's Presidential Messages,
+and its extensive Bibliography of Monroe and the Monroe Doctrine.--_N.
+Y. Christian Intelligencer._
+
+_JOHN QUINCY ADAMS._ That Mr. Morse's conclusions will in the main be
+those of posterity we have very little doubt, and he has set an
+admirable example to his coadjutors in respect of interesting narrative,
+just proportion, and judicial candor.--_New York Evening Post._
+
+_RANDOLPH._ The book has been to me intensely interesting.... It is rich
+in new facts and side lights, and is worthy of its place in the already
+brilliant series of monographs on American Statesmen.--Prof. MOSES COIT
+TYLER.
+
+_JACKSON._ Professor Sumner has ... all in all, made the justest long
+estimate of Jackson that has had itself put between the covers of a
+book.--_New York Times._
+
+_VAN BUREN._ This absorbing book.... To give any adequate idea of the
+personal interest of the book, or its intimate bearing on nearly the
+whole course of our political history, would be equivalent to quoting
+the larger part of it.--_Brooklyn Eagle._
+
+_CLAY._ We have in this life of Henry Clay a biography of one of the
+most distinguished of American statesmen, and a political history of the
+United States for the first half of the nineteenth century. Indeed, it
+is not too much to say that, for the period covered, we have no other
+book which equals or begins to equal this life of Henry Clay as an
+introduction to the study of American politics.--_Political Science
+Quarterly_ (New York).
+
+_WEBSTER._ It will be read by students of history; it will be invaluable
+as a work of reference; it will be an authority as regards matters of
+fact and criticism; it hits the key-note of Webster's durable and
+ever-growing fame; it is adequate, calm, impartial; it is
+admirable.--_Philadelphia Press._
+
+_CALHOUN._ Nothing can exceed the skill with which the political career
+of the great South Carolinian is portrayed in these pages.... The whole
+discussion in relation to Calhoun's position is eminently philosophical
+and just.--_The Dial_ (Chicago).
+
+_BENTON._ An interesting addition to our political literature, and will
+be of great service if it spread an admiration for that austere public
+morality which was one of the marked characteristics of its chief
+figure.--_The Epoch_ (New York).
+
+_CASS._ Professor McLaughlin has given us one of the most satisfactory
+volumes in this able and important series.... The early life of Cass was
+devoted to the Northwest, and in the transformation which overtook it
+the work of Cass was the work of a national statesman.--_New York
+Times._
+
+_LINCOLN._ As a life of Lincoln it has no competitors; as a political
+history of the Union side during the Civil War, it is the most
+comprehensive, and, in proportion to its range, the most
+compact.--_Harvard Graduates' Magazine._
+
+_SEWARD._ The public will be grateful for his conscientious efforts to
+write a popular vindication of one of the ablest, most brilliant,
+fascinating, energetic, ambitious, and patriotic men in American
+history.--_New York Evening Post._
+
+_CHASE._ His great career as anti-slavery leader, United States Senator,
+Governor of Ohio, Secretary of the Treasury, and Chief Justice of the
+United States, is described in an adequate and effective manner by
+Professor Hart.
+
+_CHARLES FRANCIS ADAMS._ His wise statesmanship before the Civil War,
+and the masterly ability and consummate diplomatic skill displayed by
+him while Minister to Great Britain, are judiciously set forth by his
+eminent son.
+
+_SUMNER._ The majestic devotion of Sumner to the highest political
+ideals before and during his long term of lofty service to freedom in
+the United States Senate is fittingly delineated by Mr. Storey.
+
+_STEVENS._ Thaddeus Stevens was unquestionably one of the most
+conspicuous figures of his time.... The book shows him the eccentric,
+fiery, and masterful congressional leader that he was.--_City and State_
+(Philadelphia).
+
+ HOUGHTON, MIFFLIN & CO.
+ 4 PARK ST., BOSTON; 85 FIFTH AVENUE, NEW YORK
+ 378-388 WABASH AVE., CHICAGO
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+Transcriber's Notes: Minor typographical errors and inconsistencies
+have been silently normalized.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's Thomas Hart Benton, by Theodore Roosevelt
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THOMAS HART BENTON ***
+
+***** This file should be named 37656.txt or 37656.zip *****
+This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
+ http://www.gutenberg.org/3/7/6/5/37656/
+
+Produced by Julia Neufeld, Curtis Weyant and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
+file was produced from images generously made available
+by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
+
+
+Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions
+will be renamed.
+
+Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no
+one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation
+(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without
+permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules,
+set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to
+copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to
+protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. Project
+Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you
+charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission. If you
+do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the
+rules is very easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose
+such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and
+research. They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do
+practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks. Redistribution is
+subject to the trademark license, especially commercial
+redistribution.
+
+
+
+*** START: FULL LICENSE ***
+
+THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
+PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
+
+To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
+distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
+(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License (available with this file or online at
+http://gutenberg.org/license).
+
+
+Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic works
+
+1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
+and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
+(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
+the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy
+all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession.
+If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the
+terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or
+entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.
+
+1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
+used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
+agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
+things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
+even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
+paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement
+and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works. See paragraph 1.E below.
+
+1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the Foundation"
+or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual works in the
+collection are in the public domain in the United States. If an
+individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are
+located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from
+copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative
+works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg
+are removed. Of course, we hope that you will support the Project
+Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by
+freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of
+this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with
+the work. You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by
+keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others.
+
+1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
+what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in
+a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, check
+the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement
+before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or
+creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project
+Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no representations concerning
+the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United
+States.
+
+1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
+
+1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate
+access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently
+whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the
+phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed,
+copied or distributed:
+
+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
+
+1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived
+from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is
+posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied
+and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees
+or charges. If you are redistributing or providing access to a work
+with the phrase "Project Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the
+work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1
+through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the
+Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or
+1.E.9.
+
+1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
+with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
+must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional
+terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms will be linked
+to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the
+permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work.
+
+1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
+work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
+
+1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
+electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
+prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
+active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm License.
+
+1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
+compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any
+word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or
+distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than
+"Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official version
+posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org),
+you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a
+copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon
+request, of the work in its original "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other
+form. Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
+
+1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
+performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
+unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
+
+1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
+access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided
+that
+
+- You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
+ the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
+ you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is
+ owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he
+ has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the
+ Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments
+ must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you
+ prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax
+ returns. Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and
+ sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the
+ address specified in Section 4, "Information about donations to
+ the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."
+
+- You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
+ you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
+ does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+ License. You must require such a user to return or
+ destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium
+ and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of
+ Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+- You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any
+ money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
+ electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days
+ of receipt of the work.
+
+- You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
+ distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set
+forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from
+both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael
+Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the
+Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
+
+1.F.
+
+1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
+effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
+public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm
+collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain
+"Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or
+corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual
+property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a
+computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by
+your equipment.
+
+1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
+of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
+liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
+fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
+LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
+PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
+TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
+LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
+INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
+DAMAGE.
+
+1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
+defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
+receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
+written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
+received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with
+your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you with
+the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a
+refund. If you received the work electronically, the person or entity
+providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to
+receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If the second copy
+is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further
+opportunities to fix the problem.
+
+1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
+in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS' WITH NO OTHER
+WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO
+WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
+
+1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
+warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages.
+If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the
+law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be
+interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by
+the applicable state law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any
+provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions.
+
+1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
+trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
+providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance
+with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production,
+promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works,
+harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees,
+that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do
+or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm
+work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any
+Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause.
+
+
+Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
+electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers
+including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It exists
+because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from
+people in all walks of life.
+
+Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
+assistance they need, are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
+goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
+remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
+and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations.
+To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
+and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4
+and the Foundation web page at http://www.pglaf.org.
+
+
+Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive
+Foundation
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
+501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
+state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
+Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
+number is 64-6221541. Its 501(c)(3) letter is posted at
+http://pglaf.org/fundraising. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent
+permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
+
+The Foundation's principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S.
+Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered
+throughout numerous locations. Its business office is located at
+809 North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887, email
+business@pglaf.org. Email contact links and up to date contact
+information can be found at the Foundation's web site and official
+page at http://pglaf.org
+
+For additional contact information:
+ Dr. Gregory B. Newby
+ Chief Executive and Director
+ gbnewby@pglaf.org
+
+
+Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
+spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
+increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
+freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
+array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
+($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
+status with the IRS.
+
+The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
+charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
+States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
+considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
+with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
+where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To
+SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any
+particular state visit http://pglaf.org
+
+While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
+have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
+against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
+approach us with offers to donate.
+
+International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
+any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
+outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
+
+Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
+methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
+ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations.
+To donate, please visit: http://pglaf.org/donate
+
+
+Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works.
+
+Professor Michael S. Hart is the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm
+concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared
+with anyone. For thirty years, he produced and distributed Project
+Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support.
+
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
+editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S.
+unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily
+keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.
+
+
+Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility:
+
+ http://www.gutenberg.org
+
+This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
+including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
+subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
diff --git a/37656.zip b/37656.zip
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..d9a2bf5
--- /dev/null
+++ b/37656.zip
Binary files differ
diff --git a/LICENSE.txt b/LICENSE.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6312041
--- /dev/null
+++ b/LICENSE.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,11 @@
+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
diff --git a/README.md b/README.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..88d721b
--- /dev/null
+++ b/README.md
@@ -0,0 +1,2 @@
+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #37656 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/37656)